Difference between revisions of "Basic Pascal Tutorial/Chapter 1/Constants"

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* <tt>high_value</tt> is the upper bound of the array;
 
* <tt>high_value</tt> is the upper bound of the array;
 
* <tt>type</tt> is the type of value stored in the elements of the array (char, integer, real, string, etc.) and
 
* <tt>type</tt> is the type of value stored in the elements of the array (char, integer, real, string, etc.) and
* <tt>values</tt> is a list of values with each item in the list separated from the next itwm by a comma.
+
* <tt>values</tt> is a list of values with each item in the list separated from the next item by a comma.
  
 
Here's a simple one, the alphabet:
 
Here's a simple one, the alphabet:

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1C - Constants (author: Tao Yue, state: changed)

(update 2019-12-22 Paul Robinson to add record, array constants)

Constants are referenced by identifiers, and can be assigned one value at the beginning of the program. The value stored in a constant cannot be changed.

Constants come in three flavors: Scalars, records, and arrays. A scalar constant is a single identifier which is assigned a single value. A record constant is a single identifier holding one or more separate values in a structured form. An array constant holds multiple values. They will be explained in greater detail in separate sections below.

A constant, whether a scalar, a record field, or an array subscript, may be used in place of a literal of the same type, or may be used anywhere a variable may be used with two exceptions. They cannot be used as the target of an assignment statement, and they cannot be passed as a VAR parameter in a call to a procedure, function, method or property.

Scalar constants

Scalar constants are defined in the Const (constant) section of the program:

const
  Identifier1 = value;
  Identifier2 = value;
  Identifier3 = value;

For example, let's define some constants of various data types: strings, characters, integers, reals, and Booleans. These data types will be further explained in the next section.

const
  Name = 'Tao Yue';
  FirstLetter = 'a';
  Year = 1997;
  pi = 3.1415926535897932;
  UsingNCSAMosaic = TRUE;

Note that in Pascal, single characters are enclosed in single quotes, or apostrophes (')! This contrasts with newer languages which often use or allow double quotes or Heredoc notation. Standard Pascal does not use or allow double quotes to mark characters or strings.

Constants are useful for defining a value which is used throughout your program but may change in the future. Instead of changing every instance of the value, you can change just the constant definition.

Typed constants force a constant to be of a particular data type. For example,

const
  a : real = 12;

would yield an identifier a which contains a real value 12.0 instead of the integer value 12.

Record constants

Record constants are created by creating a record type with one or more fields, then creating a constant that references that record type, filling the field(s) with values.

For record constants, the general format is

const
identifier: record_type = ( field_values );
identifier

Where

  • identifier is the name of the record constant;
  • record_type is the name of the record type used to describe this record constant and
  • field_values is a list consisting of a field name from the record_type referenced earlier, a colon, and the value to be assigned to that field, separated from the next field:value pair by a semi colon.

Lets try a simple example, a complex number constant.

type
    complex= record
                R,I: real;
              end;
const
     Pi = 3.14159267;
     C1: Complex = ( R:3; I: 1783.5 );
     C2: complex = ( r: 9.6; I:1.62);
     C3: COMPLEX = ( r:17; i:115);
     C4: complex = ( r:1.9e56; i:72.43);
     C5: Complex=( R: 22.1 ; I: Pi );

Note that fields must be initialized in the same order that they are declared (or the compiler will flag an error). If a record value is missing the compiler will warn of an uninitialized value. The values assigned can be literals or may be a scalar constant.

For how to describe a constant array of record, see the section below.

Array constants

Array constants work much the same as scalar constants, except multiple values can be specified. All of the values must be the same type, whether it is a number (byte, word, integer. real, etc.) or character based (char, string, ansistring, etc.)

One-dimensional arrays

For one-dimensional array constants. the general format is:

const
identifier: array[low_value .. high_value] of type = ( values );
identifier

Where

  • identifier is the name of the array;
  • low_value is the lower bound of the array;
  • high_value is the upper bound of the array;
  • type is the type of value stored in the elements of the array (char, integer, real, string, etc.) and
  • values is a list of values with each item in the list separated from the next item by a comma.

Here's a simple one, the alphabet:

const
  Alphabet: array [1..26] of char =
       ('A','B','C','D','E','F','G','H','I',
        'J','K','L','M','N','O','P','Q','R',
        'S','T','U','V','W','X','Y','Z'   ) ;

There are two rules to remember. As was said before, all the values given have to be of the same type, and you have to specify as many values as there are elements in the array. While the example given above is okay, there will be other parts of the program that reference this array, such as for loops. etc. Instead of using the literal 26 for the size of the array, let's use a scalar constant instead:

Const
   LetterCount = 26;
   Alphabet: array [1..LetterCount] of char =
       ('A','B','C','D','E','F','G','H','I',
        'J','K','L','M','N','O','P','Q','R',
        'S','T','U','V','W','X','Y','Z'   ) ;

Now, any place you need to reference the size of the array, you can just use LetterCount.

Here's a more interesting example, in which several data types are used. This example, which is probably from a calendar program, has all sorts of types: char, string, and integer.

Const
  MonthStart = 0 ; // could be 1 and
  MonthEnd   = 11; // 12 if desired
  DayStart   = 0 ; // same,could be 1 and
  DayEnd     = 6;  // 7
  DayNameCh: array [DayStart .. DayEnd] of char =(
        'S','M','T','W','H','F','A');
  DayNameShort: array [DayStart .. DayEnd] of string=
    ( 'Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu',
      'Fri','Sat' ) ;
  DayNameLong: array DayStart .. DayEnd] of 
    string = ( 'Sunday', 'Monday','Tuesday','Wednesday',
               'Thursday', 'Friday', 'Saturday' );
     MonthNameLong: array[MonthStart ..MonthEnd] of string = (
  'January','February','March','April',
  'May','June','July','August',
  'September','October','November'.
  'December'  
             );
   MomthDays: ARRAY [ MonthStart .. MonthEnd ] of
    integer = ( 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30,
                31, 31, 30. 31, 30, 31 );

Notice that for the items indicated as type string, while every value had to be a string, they were not required to all be the same size.

One-dimensional array of record

An array constant may consist of records. To describe them, we use the parentheses ( ) around each record. Using the complex type defined in the section on record constants, we can create a constant array of complex records, as follows:

type
    complex= record
                R,I: real;
              end;
const
     Pi = 3.14159267;
     C2: complex = ( r: 96; I:1.62);
     C_Low = 1;  C_High = 5;
     C: array [ c_low .. c_high] of complex = (
     ( R:3; I:1783.5 ),
     ( r: 96;  I:1.62),
     ( r:17; i:115),
     ( r:1.9e56; i:72.43),
     ( R: 102.1;I: Pi )
     );

As before, values need not be literals, they can be other scalar constants. Also, values must be given in the same order as defined in the record.

Now for a more (pun unintentional) complex example, we use an enumerated type and a set to define a record constant array:

type
    MONTH = ( January, February, March,
              April, May, June,
              July, August, September,
              October, November, December);
    MonthSet = Set of Month;
    EachMonth=Record
         Name, Short: String;
         Count: Integer;
    end;

Const
     Months: array [ January .. December ] of EachMonth = (
       (Name: 'January';  Short: 'Jan'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'February'; Short: 'Feb'; Count: 28 ),
       (Name: 'March';    Short: 'Mar'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'April';    Short: 'Apr'; Count: 30 ),
       (Name: 'May';      Short: 'May'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'June';     Short: 'Jun'; Count: 30 ),
       (Name: 'July';     Short: 'Jul'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'August';   Short: 'Aug'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'September';Short: 'Sep'; Count: 30 ),
       (Name: 'October';  Short: 'Oct'; Count: 31 ),
       (Name: 'November'; Short: 'Nov'; Count: 30 ),
       (Name: 'December'; Short: 'Dec'; Count: 31 )
        );

Take notice of how the items are delimited (separated). Elements in the record are delimited by semi colons, while elements of the array are delimited by commas.

Two-dimensional array constant

As used in the example of array of record, two-dimensional arrays are described by encapsulating each of the second dimension in parentheses. To make it easier to understand, the entries in the array have been identified by number, e.g. 13 is the first row, third column, while 21 is the second row, first column. Here is the format:

const
   DemoArray: array [1..2,1..3] of integer =
     (
      (11,12,13),
      (21,22,23)
      );

Three-dimensional array constant

Three-dimensional arrays are rare, and you might never use one, but you should know how to construct a three-dimensional constant array if you need it. Again, each level of array is encapsulated by parentheses. Here is a three-dimensional constant array, and the values represent their position in the array.

const
   Demo3: array [1..2, 1..3, 1..4] of integer=
     (
      (
       (111,112,113,114),
       (121,122,123,124),
       (131,132,133,134)
       ),
      (
       (211,212,213,214),
       (221,222,223,224),
       (231,232,233,234)
      )
     );


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