Due on Wednesday, March 2nd (by the end of the day, U.S. Eastern Time).
In this lab, you will write a linked list data structure in C++. You will then write a program that uses the linked list to play a video using text.
A significant part of the credit for this lab is assigned to the correctness of your linked list. For that reason, be sure to develop your linked list and ensure it passes all tests before working on the main application.
ASCII is an abbreviation for the American Standard Code for Information Interchange. In brief, the ASCII table picks a numeric representation for each of a set of characters; for instance, the letter 'A'
is given the code 65, 'B'
is 66, and '^'
is 94. Text is stored in a computer as a sequence of numbers and then, when displayed, is translated from these numbers into visual representations of characters by tables like the ASCII table.
(ASCII art is a term for the practice of using text to create images. For instance, the following text may be (generously) viewed as a picture of a flower:
/\/^/^\_^ /\
| \ | \/ |
| ' / |
\ ' /
. \ . / ,
-~`~ `~'~-
||
||
||
||
The use of printed text to form pictures is older than the ASCII standard. The term "ASCII art" gained popularity as the practice found its way onto computerized devices which used the ASCII table to standardize text representation.
ASCIImation is the practice of using a repeated sequence of these textual images to create an animation using ASCII art. For this lab, you will be writing an ASCIImation player.
You can find a link to your repository on Teammaker, a web application we will use to form teams.
Your starting repository will contain the following files. Bolded filenames indicate files you will need to change:
adts/list.h
: The C++ declaration for the List
ADT.
linkedList.h
: The LinkedList
class declaration.
linkedList-inl.h
: The LinkedList
class definition using templates.
asciimationFunctions.h
and asciimationFunctions.cpp
: The functions for loading and playing ASCIImation videos.
asciimation.cpp
: The main asciimation
program.
manualTests.cpp
: A sandbox test program for you to use while you develop your program.
tests.cpp
: Unit tests for your data structure. These tests have already been written. You will not have to write your own tests for this assignment, but you should definitely run the ones you’ve been given!
Makefile
: The build instructions for your project.
test_data/
: A directory containing several ASCIImation files. The format is described below.
The first (and most important) part of this assignment is to implement the LinkedList
class; the declaration of that class appears in linkedList.h
. You will implement all of the templated linked list methods in linkedList-inl.h
. This implementation requires you to do some things a bit differently from how you’ve written previous labs:
You’ll need to implement a constructor for the LinkedList
class that does more than just copy constructor arguments into the object’s fields. Your LinkedList
constructor must set up the fields of its own object in a coherent way.
You’ll need to use the LinkedListNode
class in the operation of the LinkedList
. As elements are added and removed, you’ll need to create and destroy the nodes.
You’ll need to do a lot of your own memory management. That is, your program must use new
and delete
correctly. You should delete
nodes as you remove them from your list and your LinkedList
destructor should clean all of the nodes up. (You can run valgrind
to find out if you’re leaking any memory.) Your grade is not heavily affected by memory leaks, but your code must be completely free of memory errors (e.g. using uninitialized pointers or pointers to memory you have deleted).
Every data structure we build in this class will include a special method called checkInvariants()
. When called, this method will ensure that fundamental aspects of the data structure are sound, and if not, it will throw a runtime_error
indicating the problem. For example, in the case of a LinkedList
, we expect that if we count the nodes we can reach by walking down the linked list from the head to the tail, it should match the current value in the size
data member.
Your implementation of the LinkedList
class must meet the following complexity requirements:
getFirst
and getLast
: \(O(1)\) time
insertFirst
and insertLast
: \(O(1)\) time
removeFirst
: \(O(1)\) time
getSize
and isEmpty
: \(O(1)\) time
The second part of your lab is to implement the asciimation
program, which will read ASCIImation videos from a file and play them. Your program may be run in one of two ways. If there is a single command line argument, the program will load and play the video in that file. For instance, this command plays the smiley video:
./asciimation test_data/smiley.asciimation
If the user provides an additional command-line argument, then the first argument must be --reverse
and the second argument must be the name of an ASCIImation file. This plays the movie in reverse (which you can accomplish simply by reversing the contents of your list before you play the video). For instance, the following command plays the smiley video in reverse:
./asciimation --reverse test_data/smiley.asciimation
Any other combination of command-line arguments should produce an error.
The ASCIImation program implementation will be done in three files. The
helper functions for loading and playing the video are to be defined in the
asciimationFunctions.h
and asciimationFunctions.cpp
files. The main program
will be implemented in asciimation.cpp
.
Click on the image below to see the expected behavior when running ./asciimation test_data/scene3.asciimation
:
Here’s an example of the same scene running in reverse (./asciimation --reverse test_data/scene3.asciimation
):
Your test_data
directory contains several ASCIImation files with the file extension .asciimation
. These files contain the text representing different scenes in the animation. Our animations will run at 15 frames per second; that is, your program will need to display a frame, wait for \(\frac{1}{15}\) of a second, and then clear the screen and display the next frame.
One way to accomplish this is to use the usleep
function from the library unistd.h
(that is, #include <unistd.h>
). The usleep
function takes a single argument: the number of microseconds to sleep. For instance, usleep(1000000/15)
will sleep for about \(\frac{1}{15}\) of a second. After sleeping, you can clear the screen using system("clear");
The bulk of this work should be in your playMovie()
function in asciimationFunctions.cpp
.
Your loadMovie()
function will parse the input file into a series of frames. The .asciimation
files themselves contain groups of 14 lines each. The first line of each group indicates a frame count while the remaining lines are the contents of the frame. (That is, each frame is 13 lines tall.) The frame count exists to reduce the size of the file, since we often want frames which do not change for a second or more. For instance, the following .asciimation
file would display a smiley face for two seconds (30 frames). The smiley would then close its eyes for the next second (15 frames).
30
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/ \
/ ~_~ ~_~ \
/ / \ / \ \
| | * | | * | |
| \_/ \_/ |
| |
| ~~ |
| \ / |
\ \________/ /
\ /
\ /
--------------
15
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/ \
/ ~~~ ~~~ \
/ \
| -===- -===- |
| |
| |
| ~~ |
| \ / |
\ \________/ /
\ /
\ /
--------------
For this and future labs, you should throw a runtime error if the file fails to open e.g. because the file doesn’t exist. You can check this with the ifstream
method is_open()
.
You should read the file in line by line. This can be accomplished with the getline
function as demonstrated below. After each call to getline
, the entire contents of the next line of the file (except the newline "\n
") will be read into the data
variable.
ifstream myFile;
string data;
myFile.open(filename);
if(!myFile.is_open()) {
throw runtime_error("file " + filename + "failed to open ");
}
getline(myFile, data);
while (!myFile.eof()) {
// process the data in the line here
getline(myFile, data);
}
Note that the eof()
method of ifstream
has somewhat surprising behavior. It does not test to see if we have reached the end of the file. It tests to see if we have failed to read a line because of the end of the file. This is why we call getline
before and at the end of the loop (rather than at the beginning of the loop). This initial call to getline
is called a priming read and is common in C, C++, and similar languages when dealing with input and output.
As you read the file, you should build up a list of pairs. The pair
class is discussed below. Your list will have type List<pair<int,string>>
, where the first element of the pair is an int
and the second element is a string
containing all 13 lines of the frame.
pair
ClassThe pair
class is part of the C++ standard template library (STL). It is defined in the the utility
library and acts as a simple container of two values. We write pair<T1,T2>
to create an object of two values. The first value has type T1
; the second has type T2
. For instance, a pair<int,string>
is an object with a field first
of type int
and a field second
of type string
.
Unlike the classes we have been writing, the pair
class knows how to make copies of itself by assignment; that is, you can use =
assignment with a pair just like you would with an int
. Consider the following code:
pair<int,string> p1(4, "apple"); // create a pair between an int and a string
pair<int,string> p2 = p1; // copy the values from p1 into p2
p1.first = 5; // change p1's integer to 5
cout << p2.first << endl; // prints 4, since p2's int is a different variable
pair<int,string>* ptr1 = new pair<int,string>(8,"orange"); // dynamically allocate a pair
pair<int,string>* ptr2 = ptr1; // this copies the *pointer*, not the pair
ptr1->first = 10; // change the dynamically-allocated object's integer to 10
cout << ptr2->first << endl; // prints 10, since both pointers point to the same pair object
In the above, p1
and p2
are statically-allocated objects. Although none of the statically allocated objects we have used so far have been copyable (other than string
objects), pair
objects can be copied. Note how copying a pair
object is different from copying a pair
pointer. In this lab, you won’t need any pair
pointers, so you don’t really need to worry about that case.
Your implementation of the ASCIImation functions must meet the following complexity requirements:
playing a movie: \(O(n)\) time
playing a movie in reverse: \(O(n)\) time
We recommend approaching this lab by doing incremental implementation
and manual testing. Create your own tests within the file
manualTests.cpp
. This allows you to test only those methods you’ve
implemented so far.
Start by implementing the constructor of LinkedList
as well as
getSize
and isEmpty
. Once these methods are implemented, add calls
to these methods in the file manualTests.cpp
. Compile and run your
tests. Fix any issues before moving on.
Next implement the insertFirst
, getFirst
, and checkInvariants
methods. The checkInvariants
method should walk the list from the
head to the tail, counting the number of nodes. This count should
match the size of the list. You should make liberal use of the
checkInvariants
method while you are testing. If you have a bug,
calling checkInvariants
can help you more quickly identify where
things went wrong. Again, before moving on, add calls to these newly
implemented methods in the file manualTests.cpp
. Compile and run
your tests. Fix any issues that you find.
Continue implementing methods on LinkedList
a little at a
time. After each small amount of progress, add more tests to your
manualTests.cpp
file and run your tests to see if your new code
works (and to see if your old code still works).
Once you have manually checked that all of your methods seem to be
working as you expect, then try using the unit tests that we provided
by running make tests
and ./tests
. These will perform more
rigorous tests of your LinkedList
methods and may uncover bugs you
didn’t find in your own tests.
Once your LinkedList
methods are successfully implemented, begin implementing the asciimation
program. Begin by writing the loadMovie
function; use the manualTests
program to experiment with it and see if it works correctly.
Next, implement the playMovie
function. Then, write your main
function to put everything together. Don’t deal with the --reverse
option yet; just assume that the user provides a single command-line argument and wants to play the movie normally. See if your playMovie
works correctly.
Finally, add the behavior for --reverse
to main.
It’s good practice for you to commit and push your code each time you get something new to work. After you get the constructor and first two LinkedList
methods to work, for instance, you can git commit
and git push
your work before you move on to the next part. If something goes wrong when making changes later, you’ll have your old version to fall back on. Please let us know if you need help recovering older, pushed versions of your code.
As with previous labs, you will be required to observe some good coding practices:
Your C++ code must be properly and consistently indented to match the blocks ({…}
) you write.
You must always use blocks for conditions (if
and else
) and loops (for
, while
, etc.).
Throw a runtime error if the movie file fails to open.
For this lab, you must
Write an implementation of a linked list
This implementation should manage its memory properly
Your linked list must meet the complexity requirements
Read the .asciimation
format videos and play them at 15fps
The user should be allowed to play the video from end to beginning with the --reverse
argument
Your program must meet the complexity requirements
Ensure your code complies with the style requirements above