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JK VB - NET - 4 - Input Output Variables DataTypes

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views

JK VB - NET - 4 - Input Output Variables DataTypes

Uploaded by

curtisandrea242
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 45

Input, Output, Variables, DataTypes, and

Calculations
Introduction
 This presentation will covers the use of text
boxes to gather input from users
 It also discusses the use of
 Variables

 Named constants

 Common Arithmetic Operators

Slide 3- 2
Class Exercise
write these question down
1. Write a program that capture your name through
a textbox and display the name entered on the
textbox through a label after clicking on a button.

2. Adjust the program above to attach the word


Hello to any name captured through the textbox
(eg Hello Mary)
3. Write a program that make use of textboxes to
capture two numbers and sums them and finally
displays the results through a label.
Slide 3- 3
Gathering Text Input

In This Section, We Use the


Textbox Control to Gather Input
That the User Has Typed on the
Keyboard
The TextBox Control
 A text box is a rectangular area on a form that
accepts input from a keyboard
 Tutorial 3-1 provides an example in the use of a
text box

txtUserName
lblGreeting
btnClose
btnShowGreeting

Slide 3- 5
The Text Property of a TextBox
 A user can change the text property of a text box
simply by typing in the text box
 A programmer can change the text property of a
text box with an assignment statement
 Uses the form Object.Property similar to

working with the text property of a label


 The following code assigns the text to the right

of the equal sign to the text property of a


TextBox box txtInput left of the equal sign
 txtInput.Text = “Type your name”

Slide 3- 6
The Text Property of a TextBox
 We can also use the text property of a text box to
retrieve something the user has typed
 The following code assigns the text in txtInput

to the text property of the label lblSet


 lblSet.Text = txtInput.Text

 Once again we use the form Object.Property

 This is the standard format to refer to any

property of any object

Slide 3- 7
Clearing a TextBox
 Can be done with an assignment statement:
 txtInput.Text = ""

 Two adjacent quote marks yields a null string

 So this replaces whatever text was in txtInput

with "nothing" -- a string with no characters


 Can also be done with a method:
 txtInput.Clear()

 Clear is a Method, not a Property

 Methods are actions – as in clearing the text

 Uses the form Object.Method

Slide 3- 8
String Concatenation
 We often need to combine two or more strings
into a longer one
 This operation is called Concatenation
 Concatenation is signaled by the '&' operator in
the same way addition is signaled by a '+'

Slide 3- 9
String Concatenation
 Assume the user has entered their name into the
TextBox txtName
 Label lblGreeting can say, “Hello” to any name
found in the TextBox
 lblGreeting.Text = "Hello " & txtName.Text
 Appends user name in txtName.Text to “Hello ” and
stores result in text property of lblGreeting

Slide 3- 10
String Concatenation
 Tutorial 3-2 provides another example of how to
concatenate strings from text boxes

txtDayOfWeek

txtMonth

txtDayOfMonth

txtYear

lblDateString

btnExit
btnClear
btnShowDate

Slide 3- 11
Aligning Controls in Design Mode
 When dragging a control to a form, it can be
aligned with a control already on the form
 Guide lines automatically appear
 Blue guide lines appear for vertical alignment

 Lavender guide lines for horizontal alignment

 Horizontal alignment example

Slide 3- 12
'&' Has Special Meaning in a Button
 Note that the '&' in "&Save"
does not display in the
button control on the form
 It simply establishes the Alt
Key access
 In order to actually display
an '&' on a button, it must
be entered as "&&“
 Button text Save & Exit is

entered as Save && Exit


Slide 3- 13
Variables and Data Types

Variables Hold Information That May Be


Manipulated, Used to Manipulate Other
Information, or Remembered for Later Use
Why Have Variables?
 A variable is a storage location in the computer’s
memory, used for holding information while the
program is running
 The information that is stored in a variable may
change, hence the name “variable”
 A variable is a named memory location that can
change dynamically during program execution

Slide 3- 15
What Can You Do With Variables?
 Copy and store values entered by the user, so
they may be manipulated
 Perform arithmetic on values
 Test values to determine that they meet some
criterion
 Temporarily hold and manipulate the value of a
control property
 Remember information for later use in the
program

Slide 3- 16
How to Think About Variables
 You the programmer make up a name for the
variable
 Visual Basic associates that name with a location
in the computer's RAM
 The value currently associated with the variable
is stored in that memory location

Slide 3- 17
Declaring Variables
 A variable declaration is a statement that creates
a variable in memory
 The syntax is
Dim VariableName As DataType
 Dim (short for Dimension) is a keyword
 VariableName is the programmer designated name
 As is a keyword
 DataType is one of many possible keywords for the
type of value the variable will contain
 Example: Dim intLength as Integer
Slide 3- 18
Declaring Multiple Variables
 Several variables may be declared in one
statement if they all hold the same type of value

Dim intLength, intWidth, intHeight as Integer

 Or this can be done in 3 separate statements


Dim intLength as Integer
Dim intWidth as Integer
Dim intHeight as Integer

Slide 3- 19
Setting the Value of a Variable
 An assignment statement is used to set the value
of a variable, as in:
 Assign the value 112 to the variable length

length = 112
 Assign the string literal “Good Morning “
followed by the contents of the text box
txtName to the variable greeting
greeting = "Good Morning " & txtName.Text
 An assignment changes only the left operand
 The right operand remains unchanged
Slide 3- 20
Visual Basic Data Types

 Integer types  Other data types


 Byte  Boolean
 Short  Char
 Integer  String
 Long  Date
 Floating-Point types
 Single
 Double
 Decimal

Slide 3- 21
Integer Data Types
 For values that will always be a whole number
 Usually name a variable starting with a 3 or 4
letter prefix indicating the variable’s type

Data Naming Description


Type Prefix
Byte byt Unsigned integer from 0 to 255
Short shrt Signed integer from -32,768 to 32,767
Integer int Signed integer from -2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647
Long lng Signed integer from -9,223,372,036,854,775,808
to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807

Slide 3- 22
Floating-Point Data Types
 For values that may have fractional parts
 Single used most frequently
 Double sometimes used in scientific calculations
 Decimal often used in financial calculations
Data Naming Description
Type Prefix
Single sng As large as 1038 plus or minus, 7 decimal positions
Double dbl As large as 10308 plus or minus,15 decimal positions
Decimal dec As large as 1029 plus or minus, 29 decimal positions

Slide 3- 23
Other Common Data Types
 Boolean – variable naming prefix is bln
 Holds 2 possible values, True or False

 Char – variable naming prefix is chr


 Holds a single character

 Allows for characters from other languages

 String – variable naming prefix is str


 Holds a sequence of up to 2 billion characters

 Date – variable naming prefix is dat


 Can hold date and/or time information

Slide 3- 24
Working with the String Data Type
 A string literal is enclosed in quotation marks
 The following code assigns the name Jose Gonzales to
the variable strName
Dim strName as string
strName = "Jose Gonzales"
 An empty string literal can be coded as:
 Two consecutive quotation marks

strName = ""
 Or by the special identifier String.Empty
strName = String.Empty

Slide 3- 25
Assigning Text to a Variable
 Tutorial 3-6 provides an example of how the
contents of text boxes are assigned to a string
variable
' Declare a string variable to hold the full name.
Dim strFullName As String

' Combine the first and last names


' and copy the result to lblFullName
strFullName = txtFirstName.Text & " " & txtLastName.Text
lblFullName.Text = strFullName

Slide 3- 26
Variable Naming Rules
 The first character of a variable name must be a
letter or an underscore
 Subsequent characters may be a letter,
underscore, or digit
 Thus variable names cannot contain spaces or

periods (or many other kinds of characters)


 Visual Basic keywords cannot be used as
variable names

Slide 3- 27
Variable Naming Conventions
 Naming conventions are a guideline to help
improve readability but not required syntax
 A variable name should describe its use
 Each data type has a recommended prefix, in
lower case, that begins the variable name
 The 1st letter of each subsequent word in the
variable name should be capitalized
 intHoursWorked - an integer variable

 strLastName - a string (or text) variable

Slide 3- 28
Declaring Variables with IntelliSense
 As you enter your program, VB often aids you by
offering a list of choices that could be used at that
point
 After typing "As" in a variable declaration, VB will
offer an alphabetical list of all possible data types
 Type the first few letters of the data type name

 Intellisense box will highlight the matching type

 Press the Tab key to select highlighted choice

 Or just complete typing the entire data type name

Slide 3- 29
Default Values and Initialization
 When a variable is first created in memory, it is
assigned a default value
 numeric types are given a value of zero

 Boolean types are given a value of False

 strings are given a value of Nothing

 dates default to 12:00:00 AM January 1,1

 Good practice to initialize string variables


 Dim strName as String = String.Empty
 String with value Nothing causes error if used

Slide 3- 30
Initialization of Variables
 Can provide a starting or initialization value for
any type of variable in a Dim statement
 Usually want to set an initial value unless
assigning a value prior to using the variable
 Just append = value to the Dim statement where
value is the literal to be assigned to the variable
Dim intMonthsPerYear As Integer = 12

Slide 3- 31
Performing Calculations

Visual Basic Has Powerful Arithmetic Operators That


Perform Calculations With Numeric Variables and
Literals
Common Arithmetic Operators
 Visual Basic provides operators for the common
arithmetic operations:
+ Addition
- Subtraction
* Multiplication
/ Division
^ Exponentiation
Mod Modulus

Slide 3- 33
Common Arithmetic Operators
 Addition
decTotal = decPrice + decTax
 Subtraction
decNetPrice = decPrice – decDiscount
 Multiplication
dblArea = dblLength * dblWidth
 Division
sngAverage = sngTotal / intItems
 Exponentiation
dblCube = dblSide ^ 3
Slide 3- 34
Special Integer Division Operator
 The backslash (\) is used as an integer division
operator
 Divides one integer by another
 The result is always an integer, created by
discarding any remainder from the division
 If calculating the number of hours in a given
number of minutes
intHours = intMinutes \ 60
 With intMinutes equal to 190, this calculation
will result in the value 3 assigned to intHours

Slide 3- 35
Modulus (MOD) Operator
 This operator can be used in place of the
backslash operator to give the remainder of a
division operation
intRemainder = 17 MOD 3 ‘result is 2
dblRemainder = 17.5 MOD 3 ‘result is 2.5
 Use of the \ or MOD
operator to perform integer
division by zero causes a
DivideByZeroException
runtime error
Slide 3- 36
Retrieving the Current Date/Time
 A series of keywords yields the current date,
current time, or both

Description Keyword Example


Date & Time Now datCurrent=Now
Time only TimeOfDay
datCurrTime=TimeOfDay
Date only Today datCurrDate=Today

 Variables datCurrent, datCurrTime, and


datCurrDate must be declared as Date data types
Slide 3- 37
Scope and Local Variables
 Scope refers to the part of the program where:
 A variable is visible and

 May be accessed by program code

 Variables declared within a procedure are called


local variables and observe these characteristics
 Scope begins where variable is declared

 Extends to end of procedure where declared

 Variable is not visible outside the procedure

 A variable cannot be declared twice in the same


procedure

Slide 3- 38
Class-Level and Global Scope
 A variable declared inside a class but outside any
procedure is a class-level variable
 Scope is throughout all procedures of the class

 A variable declared outside any class or


procedure is a global variable
 Scope is throughout all forms, classes, and

procedures of the project


 Class-level and global scope will be discussed
further in future chapters
 Values in a variable are destroyed when it goes
out of scope
Slide 3- 39
Combined Assignment Operators
 Often need to change the value in a variable and
assign the result back to that variable
 For example: var = var – 5
 Subtracts 5 from the value stored in var

 Other examples:
 x = x + 4 Adds 4 to x
 x = x – 3 Subtracts 3 from x
 x = x * 10 Multiplies x by 10
 VB provides for this common need with combined
assignment operators

Slide 3- 40
Combined Assignment Operators
These special assignment operators provide an easy means
to perform these common operations:

Operator Usage Equivalent to Effect

+= x += 2 x = x + 2 Add to
-= x -= 5 x = x – 5 Subtract from
*= x *= 10 x = x * 10 Multiply by
/= x /= y x = x / y Divide by
\= x \= y x = x \ y Int Divide by
&= name &= last name = name & last Concatenate

Slide 3- 41
Arithmetic Operator Precedence
 Operator precedence tells us the order in which
operations are performed
 From highest to lowest precedence:
 Exponentiation (^)

 Multiplicative (* and /)

 Integer Division (\)

 Modulus (MOD)

 Additive (+ and -)

 Where precedence is the same, operations occur


from left to right

Slide 3- 42
Operator Precedence Examples
The result is very different when the divide by 2 operation
is moved from the end of the calculation to the middle.

6 * 2^3 + 4 / 2 6 / 2 * 2^3 + 4

6* 8 +4/2 6/2 * 8 +4

48 +4/2 3 *8 +4
48 + 2
24 +4
50
28
Slide 3- 43
Grouping with Parentheses
 Parentheses () can be used to force selected parts of an
expression to be evaluated before others
 Assume we’re computing the average of 3 numbers

dblAvg = int1 + int2 + int3 / 3 ‘incorrect

int3 / 3 is evaluated first

That result is added to int1 and int2
 Use parentheses to control order of operations

dblAvg = (int1 + int2 + int3) / 3 ‘correct

int1 + int2 + int3 is evaulated first

That result is divided by 3
 When in doubt, use parentheses!
Slide 3- 44
Named Constants
 Can declare a variable whose value is set at
declaration and cannot be changed later:
Const sngSALES_TAX_RATE As Single = 1.06
 Looks like a normal declaration except:
 Const used instead of Dim

 An initialization value is required

 By convention, entire name capitalized with

underscore characters to separate words


 The objective of our code is now clearer
Const sngSALES_TAX_RATE As Single = 1.06
decTotal *= sngSALES_TAX_RATE

Slide 3- 45

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