CSCI 1120 (Low-Level Computing), Fall 2018:
Homework 2
- Credit:
- 5 points.
Be sure you have read, or at least skimmed,
the assigned readings for classes through 8/29.
Do the following programming problems.
You will end up with at
least one code file per problem.
Submit your program source (and any other needed files)
by sending mail to
bmassing@cs.trinity.edu with each file as an attachment.
Please use a subject line that mentions the course and
the assignment (e.g.,
``csci 1120 hw 2'' or
``LL hw 2'').
You can develop your programs on any system that provides the
needed functionality, but I will test them on one of the department's
Linux machines, so you should probably make sure they work
in that environment before turning them in.
- (5 points)
Write a C program to convert seconds into
years, days, hours, minutes, and seconds.
Your program should prompt the user for a number of
seconds, get the number entered, and
print the equivalent number of years, days, etc.
(e.g.,
100 seconds is 0 years, 0 days, 0 hours, 1 minute, and 40 seconds,
while 100000000 seconds is
3 years, 62 days, 9 hours, 46 minutes, and 40 seconds).
Assume 365 days in a year (not quite right but makes the
calculations simpler).
For this assignment only, you do not need to do any kind
of checking that what the user enters is actually an integer and
non-negative, since we haven't yet talked about conditional execution.
Just assume it is and do the required calculations.
Hints:
- Probably the best way to do the required calculations is with the
integer-division (/) and remainder (%) operators.
- Be advised that a C-idiomatic way to define constants is with
#define, e.g.,
#define SECONDS_PER_MINUTE 60
usually before the first function that uses them.
This can help make code more human-readable.
Include the Honor Code pledge or just the word ``pledged'',
plus at least one of the following about
collaboration and help (as many as apply).1Text in italics is explanatory or something for you to
fill in.
For programming assignments, this should go in the body of the e-mail
or in a plain-text file honor-code.txt (no word-processor files
please).
- This assignment is entirely my own work.
(Here, ``entirely my own work'' means that it's
your own work except for anything you got from the
assignment itself -- some programming assignments
include ``starter code'', for example -- or
from the course Web site.
In particular, for programming assignments you can
copy freely from anything on the ``sample programs page''.)
- I worked with names of other students on this
assignment.
- I got help with this assignment from
source of help -- ACM
tutoring, another student in the course, the instructor, etc.
(Here, ``help'' means significant help,
beyond a little assistance with tools or compiler errors.)
- I got help from outside source --
a book other than the textbook (give title and author),
a Web site (give its URL), etc..
(Here too, you only need to mention significant help --
you don't need to tell me that you
looked up an error message on the Web, but if you found
an algorithm or a code sketch, tell me about that.)
- I provided help to names of students on this
assignment.
(And here too, you only need to tell me about
significant help.)
Include a brief essay (a sentence or two is fine, though you can write
as much as you like) telling me what about the assignment you
found interesting, difficult, or otherwise noteworthy.
For programming assignments, it should go in the body of the e-mail
or in a plain-text file essay.txt (no word-processor files
please).
Footnotes
- ... apply).1
-
Credit where credit is due:
I based the wording of this list on a posting to a SIGCSE mailing
list. SIGCSE is the ACM's Special Interest Group on CS Education.
Berna Massingill
2018-08-28