-2

So I'm writing this program that store user input on linked list and reverse it, but I'm a bit lost. Is it possible to come up a loop invariants for types of loop where it doesn't return any value? For example a loop that is located inside main.

Here's an example of a loop I use to get user input inside main and store it in a linked list, of course there are more on the code, but I only showed what's relevant.

typedef struct node {
char x; // data
struct node* next; // link to next node
} Node;

int main(void){
char c = ' ';
Node* start = NULL; 
Node* temp; 
while(c!='.'){
    c=getchar();
    temp=(Node*)calloc(1, sizeof(Node));
    temp->x = c; 
    temp->next = start; 
    start = temp; 
}

Is it possible to come up with a loop invariant for this? Also what does it mean by program correctness and how do I proof it in my case?

Thanks!

1
  • yeah but i thought loop invariant is an expression of when should the loop runs and what operation it does during its run time? which I have to proof by relating to its pre, mid and post condition. If I advise loop invariant i=1, just like you said and rewrote my code, I didn't describe what the loop does exactly and has no way of proofing the pre mid and post condition @Gopi
    – Stupid
    Jan 21, 2015 at 6:04

2 Answers 2

0

A loop invariant is a condition that is necessarily true immediately before and immediately after each iteration of a loop

int main(void)
{
    char c = ' ';
    Node* start = NULL; 
    Node* temp = NULL; 

    while(c!='.'){
        /* temp = NULL before each iteration*/

        c=getchar();
        temp=(Node*)calloc(1, sizeof(Node));
        temp->x = c; 
        temp->next = start; 
        start = temp;

        temp = NULL;
        /* temp = NULL after each iteration*/
    }

So in this case temp is NULL before and after each iteration of the loop. You can use this as a proof.

For more details refer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_invariant and What is a loop invariant?

0

A loop invariant is a formal statement about the relationship between variables in your program which holds true just before the loop is ever run (establishing the invariant) and is true again at the bottom of the loop, each time through the loop (maintaining the invariant)

Presuming this is what you wanted. The code shown by you looks good to add a node to the linked list so regarding correctness it should be fine.

char str[100];
int cnt = 0;
int n;
fgets(str,100,stdin);
if(strlen(str) < 99)
str[strlen(str) -1] = '\0';

n = strlen(str);
/* cnt <= n */
while(str[i] != '.')
{
   /* cnt <= n */
   // Do your stuff
   cnt++;
   /* cnt <= n */
}
/* cnt <= n */

The loop invariant will be

cnt <= n

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.