1 / 17

Flow Charting

Flow Charting. Goals. Create Algorithms using Flow Charting procedures. Distinguish between Flow Charting and Pseudocode . Top-Down Design Bottom-up Design. Symbols used for Flow Charting. Practice problems involving flow charting. Flow Charting Symbols. Oval – Terminals

vivien-kidd
Download Presentation

Flow Charting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Flow Charting

  2. Goals • Create Algorithms using Flow Charting procedures. • Distinguish between Flow Charting and Pseudocode. • Top-Down Design • Bottom-up Design. • Symbols used for Flow Charting. • Practice problems involving flow charting.

  3. Flow Charting Symbols • Oval – Terminals • Oval symbol represents Start & Stop. Begins all Flow Chart and Ends all Flow Charts.

  4. Subprocess • Used 2 different ways. • Represent your declaration where all variables are declared. • Represents a method or procedure in a Top Down design in which each subprocess will have it’s own flowchart.

  5. Input/Output • Input/Output – Represents where user either inputs a value usually from keyboard or outputs to the monitor.

  6. Process or Sequence • Process box represents where a calculation or action is happening. • Use one action per Box

  7. Decision • The decision symbol usually represents a loop or an if statement. You have 2 directions to choose from depending if the expression or variable is true or false.

  8. Connectors • Connectors are use to join flow charts where you may go to another sheet. Usually has a number in it to match it with the other connector.

  9. Arrows • Arrows are used to show the flow of the program .

  10. Do – While Loop

  11. While Loop

  12. If Statement

  13. If – Else Statement

  14. Flow Chart Example

  15. Rules for Flow Charting • Every flow chart has a START symbol and a STOP symbol • The flow of sequence is generally from the top of the page to the bottom of the page. This can vary with loops which need to flow back to an entry point. • Use arrow-heads on connectors where flow direction may not be obvious. • There is only one flow chart per page • A page should have a page number and a title • A flow chart on one page should not break and jump to another page • A flow chart should have no more than around 15 symbols (not including START and STOP)

  16. Top Down Design

  17. Wrapping it up • A well designed flow chart will make programming easier. • Learning the code is not hard. What is hard is applying the code to solve a problem. • The more you plan the less time you spend fixing errors.

More Related