Programming with C

Course

In Edinburgh

£ 1,300 + VAT

Description

  • Type

    Course

  • Location

    Edinburgh (Scotland)

  • Duration

    4 Days

Whilst covering the basics of C programming and how it is used, this Course also aims to give an insight into structuring C programs, C verbs, manipulating data,using functions and testing C programs. On completion of this Course the student will be able to: Develop Structured C Programs,Understand and Use C Verbs,Develop C programs using the available verbs,Develop and use C Functions. Suitable for: Target Audience The course is aimed at developers' not familiar C program development. This course covers all aspects of Programming with C. The course teaches the design, writing and testing of C programs. Many exercises are performed by the developer to ensure that the statements taught are fully understood and practical experience is gained.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Edinburgh (Midlothian/Edinburghshire)
16 St. Mary'S Street, EH1 1SU

Start date

On request

About this course

Knowledge of the host environment is required (either z/OS or Windows).

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Course programme

Course Objectives
Whilst covering the basics of C programming and how it is used, this Course also aims to give an insight into structuring C programs, C verbs, manipulating data,using functions and testing C programs. On completion of this Course the student will be able to:

  • Develop Structured C Programs
  • Understand and Use C Verbs
  • Develop C programs using the available verbs
  • Develop and use C Functions
  • Develop and Test C programs accessing different types of files

Course Details
GETTING STARTED
What Is C?
Program Example
Commencing A Program - Include
C Functions
Comments
Variable Declaration
Coding C Statements
Compiling And Linking
Running The Program
VARIABLES, DATA TYPES AND CONSTANTS
Declaration Of Variables
Reserved Words
Variable Declaration
Data Types
Unsigned Data Types
Global And Local Variables
Variable Initialisation - The Static Keyword
Assigning Values To Variables
Working With Characters
Special Escape Characters
Working With Floating Point Numbers
Specifying Numeric Values
Constants
Setting Up Symbolic Constants - The #Define Statement
EXPRESSIONS, ASSIGNMENTS AND OPERATORS
Operator Introduction
Operators
Arithmetic Operators
Postfix And Prefix Unary Operators
Bitwise Operators
Assignment Operators
Expressions
Data Type Conversion In Assignments
Casting
Relational Operators
Conditional Operators
The Tertiary Operator
Summary Example
CONTROL AND FLOW
Control Flow Statements
The If Statement
Nested If Statements
The Switch Statement
The While Statement
The Do While Statement
The For Statement
Nested Loops
Unconditional / Endless Loops
The Break Statement
The Continue Statement
The Goto Statement
Conditional Expressions
The Comma Operator
FUNCTIONS
Overview
Internal Functions
Function Prototypes
Passing Arguments To Functions
Returning Arguments From Functions - Return
Global And Local Variables - Variable Scope
'Call By Value' Function Invocation
Storage Classes
'Call By Reference' Function Invocation
Calling External Functions
Passing Arguments To The Main Function
ARRAYS / STRINGS
Basic Data Types
Array Definition
Array Initialisation
Accessing Array Elements
Array Operations
Arrays With Functions
Using Arrays As Arguments
Character Strings
String Literals / Manipulation
Character String Comparisons
Multi - Dimensional Arrays
STRUCTURES AND UNIONS
Structure Definition
Accessing Members Using A Variable
Structure Level Operations
Structure Lengths
Using Typedef To Provide A Type Alias
Nesting Data Structures
Structure Arrays
Using Structures With Functions
Unions
ADDRESSES AND POINTERS
Declaring Pointers
Examples Of Pointer Manipulation
Pointer Manipulation
Pointers To Pointers
Passing Pointers To Functions
Returning Pointers From Functions
Pointers And Arrays
Pointer Comparison
Using Pointers To Pass Arrays To Functions
Dynamic Memory Allocation
Pointers And Structures
Pointers To Structure Arrays
Pointer Conversion
Linked Lists
THE PREPROCESSOR
Pre-Processor Directives
The #Define Directive
#Define Macros
The #Include Statement
The #If Statement
The #Ifdef Statement
DATA INPUT / OUTPUT
Data Input / Output
Standard I/O Streams
File Access
The File Handle Statement
File Open And Close
Reading And Writing To A File
Fscanf
Fprintf
Fgets
Fputs
Fread
Fwrite
Getc And Putc (or Fgetc and Fputc)
Redirection Of Input / Output
System File Pointers
Rewinding A File
Direct Access / Updating Records
File Positioning - Fseek
Ftell - Determining the Current Position
C SUPPLIED FUNCTIONS
Writing To The Terminal - Printf
Printf Conversion Specifications
Reading Data From The Terminal - Scanf
Scanf Conversion Specifications
Using Scanf to Split at a Given Character
Using Scanf to Read Until a Given Character is Found
Scanf Problems When Receiving Unexpected Data
The Getchar Function
The Putchar Function
The Sizeof Function
The Malloc Function
The Toupper / Tolower Functions
Date And Time Functions - Time / Localtime
The Strftime Function
The Asctime Function
STRING FUNCTIONS
The Gets Function
The Puts Function
The Sprintf Function
The Sscanf Function
The Strcat Function
The Strchr Function
The Strcmp Function
The Strcpy Function
The Strcspn Function
The Strlen Function
The Strncat Function
The Strncmp Function
The Strncpy Function
The Strpbrk Function
The Strrchr Function
The Strspn Function
The Strstr Function
Character String Data Conversion
Course Environment Development will be performed using either:

  • IBM Mainframe
  • Visual C++ running on a Windows platform


Course Format: Practical sessions make up a large part of the course, allowing delegates to demonstrate and reinforce the lectures given. During these sessions the delegate will gain experience of writing and testing different types of C programs using the various C verbs available. Examples are used extensively, ranging from simple code snippets to full applications with complete 'real world' functionality. These are supplied at the start of the course and it is encouraged that the delegates execute and 'experiment' with these under the instructor's guidance as they are introduced. These examples are available to take away, along with the delegate's own work. The comprehensive Student Guide supplied is fully indexed serving as a useful reference tool long after the course has finished. Delegates will also be able to access a free help-line with technical questions relating to topics covered on the course.

Programming with C

£ 1,300 + VAT