I've been working on my Linked list library implementation. I started by creating the main and trying to get the list to get created. I also decided that this would be what I would be using for Joe Oppenheim's class, so after deciding that I had chosen to use a char data type instead of the int that everyone else seemed to be using. So after half of the class of screwing around with Tyler and Andrew (not to point fingers [point point] >.>) I hacked together a main program named “doublylinkedlib”, original I know. All it does currently is it takes input and puts together a list of the string. I know at some point i need to be able to get it to accept a string from command line so that it works perfectly for Joe's class. But, that's all later down the road. I have plenty of time. The first function I am working on will probably be “append” simply because that will be one of the easiest ones to quickly hack together. Mostly because I only have to work on a simple thing of adding it in, and wholesale copying and pasting the section of the building my list from my main. God only a few more tens of words. I've run out of things to say but I need to get 300 words out for each entry that way the 4 entries will total to the 1200 I need for the month. Oh and for the record, I am TOTALLY not writing this at 10/30/2011 at 10:20 at night. Nope, totally not. How is it that I have no issue doing the work but I have a hard time getting my thoughts onto the opus so that it will be graded?
Here we are, week two into the month and earlier I thought I had finished append. Yet, it turns out that it kept breaking somewhere. That's when Matt had shown me about GDB and how to properly find out the line (and when he went through it, it had seg faulted). After like 20-30 min later I had fixed the line that was getting the error. Somehow tmp was being passed as NULL so when I went to make tmp = tmp → next it would seg fault. I still do not remember what the other functions I need to have made done, and what is this prototype that I need to have in the header file that I have yet to create? Something tells me I should know it and that it is a common sense thing, that's why I am apprehensive about asking anyone in the class what it is, because the last thing I need is for them to think that I can't code. I barely show up let alone let's make me seem like I have no idea what I'm doing. Still, I think I'm going to ask Tyler Monday if he knows what the functions are. If not then there's always the other classmates. Although I think Brad may be my only hope (queue cheesy star wars reference) hopefully not though. So far my project is going good, and it seems a good experiment to try is to try my best to break my code as much as I can. Because from what Andy and I have seen, char takes so many different keystrokes. There's got to be a way to break it, maybe from pressing too many keys at once. You know, inputting more than 1 character at a time. Like entering the full string of “hello world” all at once. Yea, that might work.
This is a sample format for a dated entry. Please substitute the actual date for “Month Day, Year”, and duplicate the level 4 heading to make additional entries.
As an aid, feel free to use the following questions to help you generate content for your entries:
Remember that 4 is just the minimum number of entries. Feel free to have more.
This is a sample format for a dated entry. Please substitute the actual date for “Month Day, Year”, and duplicate the level 4 heading to make additional entries.
As an aid, feel free to use the following questions to help you generate content for your entries:
Remember that 4 is just the minimum number of entries. Feel free to have more.
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you wish to aid your definition with a code sample, you can do so by using a wiki code block, an example follows:
/* * Sample code block */ #include <stdio.h> int main() { return(0); }
Identification and definition of the chosen keyword. Substitute “keyword” with the actual keyword.
If you want to demonstrate something on the command-line, you can do so as follows:
lab46:~$ cd src lab46:~/src$ gcc -o hello hello.c lab46:~/src$ ./hello Hello, World! lab46:~/src$
State the course objective; define what that objective entails.
State the method you will use for measuring successful academic/intellectual achievement of this objective.
Follow your method and obtain a measurement. Document the results here.
Reflect upon your results of the measurement to ascertain your achievement of the particular course objective.
What is the question you'd like to pose for experimentation? State it here.
Collect information and resources (such as URLs of web resources), and comment on knowledge obtained that you think will provide useful background information to aid in performing the experiment.
Based on what you've read with respect to your original posed question, what do you think will be the result of your experiment (ie an educated guess based on the facts known). This is done before actually performing the experiment.
State your rationale.
How are you going to test your hypothesis? What is the structure of your experiment?
Perform your experiment, and collect/document the results here.
Based on the data collected:
What can you ascertain based on the experiment performed and data collected? Document your findings here; make a statement as to any discoveries you've made.
What is the question you'd like to pose for experimentation? State it here.
Collect information and resources (such as URLs of web resources), and comment on knowledge obtained that you think will provide useful background information to aid in performing the experiment.
Based on what you've read with respect to your original posed question, what do you think will be the result of your experiment (ie an educated guess based on the facts known). This is done before actually performing the experiment.
State your rationale.
How are you going to test your hypothesis? What is the structure of your experiment?
Perform your experiment, and collect/document the results here.
Based on the data collected:
What can you ascertain based on the experiment performed and data collected? Document your findings here; make a statement as to any discoveries you've made.
If you're doing an experiment instead of a retest, delete this section.
If you've opted to test the experiment of someone else, delete the experiment section and steps above; perform the following steps:
Whose existing experiment are you going to retest? Prove the URL, note the author, and restate their question.
Evaluate their resources and commentary. Answer the following questions:
State their experiment's hypothesis. Answer the following questions:
Follow the steps given to recreate the original experiment. Answer the following questions:
Publish the data you have gained from your performing of the experiment here.
Answer the following:
Answer the following: