Skip to content

MoonBeeJPG/monty

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

48 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

0x19. C - Stacks, Queues - LIFO, FIFO

Requirements General Allowed editors: vi, vim, emacs All your files will be compiled on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS using gcc, using the options -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 All your files should end with a new line A README.md file, at the root of the folder of the project is mandatory Your code should use the Betty style. It will be checked using betty-style.pl and betty-doc.pl You allowed to use a maximum of one global variable No more than 5 functions per file You are allowed to use the C standard library The prototypes of all your functions should be included in your header file called monty.h Don’t forget to push your header file All your header files should be include guarded You are expected to do the tasks in the order shown in the project

Data structures Please use the following data structures for this project. Don’t forget to include them in your header file.

/**

  • struct stack_s - doubly linked list representation of a stack (or queue)
  • @n: integer
  • @prev: points to the previous element of the stack (or queue)
  • @next: points to the next element of the stack (or queue)
  • Description: doubly linked list node structure
  • for stack, queues, LIFO, FIFO */ typedef struct stack_s { int n; struct stack_s prev; struct stack_s next; } stack_t; /
  • struct instruction_s - opcode and its function
  • @opcode: the opcode
  • @f: function to handle the opcode
  • Description: opcode and its function
  • for stack, queues, LIFO, FIFO */ typedef struct instruction_s { char *opcode; void (*f)(stack_t **stack, unsigned int line_number); } instruction_t; Compilation & Output Your code will be compiled this way: $ gcc -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89 *.c -o monty Any output must be printed on stdout Any error message must be printed on stderr Here is a link to a GitHub repository that could help you making sure your errors are printed on stderr

The Monty language Monty 0.98 is a scripting language that is first compiled into Monty byte codes (Just like Python). It relies on a unique stack, with specific instructions to manipulate it. The goal of this project is to create an interpreter for Monty ByteCodes files.

Monty byte code files

Files containing Monty byte codes usually have the .m extension. Most of the industry uses this standard but it is not required by the specification of the language. There is not more than one instruction per line. There can be any number of spaces before or after the opcode and its argument:

julien@ubuntu:/monty$ cat -e bytecodes/000.m push 0$ push 1$ push 2$ push 3$ pall $ push 4$ push 5 $ push 6 $ pall$ julien@ubuntu:/monty$ Monty byte code files can contain blank lines (empty or made of spaces only, and any additional text after the opcode or its required argument is not taken into account:

julien@ubuntu:/monty$ cat -e bytecodes/001.m push 0 Push 0 onto the stack$ push 1 Push 1 onto the stack$ $ push 2$ push 3$ pall $ $ $ $ push 4$ $ push 5 $ push 6 $ $ pall This is the end of our program. Monty is awesome!$ julien@ubuntu:/monty$ The monty program

Usage: monty file where file is the path to the file containing Monty byte code If the user does not give any file or more than one argument to your program, print the error message USAGE: monty file, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE If, for any reason, it’s not possible to open the file, print the error message Error: Can't open file , followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE where is the name of the file If the file contains an invalid instruction, print the error message L<line_number>: unknown instruction , followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE where is the line number where the instruction appears. Line numbers always start at 1 The monty program runs the bytecodes line by line and stop if either: it executed properly every line of the file it finds an error in the file an error occured If you can’t malloc anymore, print the error message Error: malloc failed, followed by a new line, and exit with status EXIT_FAILURE. You have to use malloc and free and are not allowed to use any other function from man malloc (realloc, calloc, …)

  1. push, pall

Implement the push and pall opcodes.

The push opcode

The opcode push pushes an element to the stack.

Usage: push where is an integer if is not an integer or if there is no argument given to push, print the error message L<line_number>: usage: push integer, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE where is the line number in the file You won’t have to deal with overflows. Use the atoi function The pall opcode

The opcode pall prints all the values on the stack, starting from the top of the stack.

Usage pall Format: see example If the stack is empty, don’t print anything

  1. pint

Implement the pint opcode.

The pint opcode

The opcode pint prints the value at the top of the stack, followed by a new line.

Usage: pint If the stack is empty, print the error message L<line_number>: can't pint, stack empty, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE

  1. pop

Implement the pop opcode.

The pop opcode

The opcode pop removes the top element of the stack.

Usage: pop If the stack is empty, print the error message L<line_number>: can't pop an empty stack, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE

  1. swap

Implement the swap opcode.

The swap opcode

The opcode swap swaps the top two elements of the stack.

Usage: swap If the stack contains less than two elements, print the error message L<line_number>: can't swap, stack too short, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE

  1. add

Implement the add opcode.

The add opcode

The opcode add adds the top two elements of the stack.

Usage: add If the stack contains less than two elements, print the error message L<line_number>: can't add, stack too short, followed by a new line, and exit with the status EXIT_FAILURE The result is stored in the second top element of the stack, and the top element is removed, so that at the end: The top element of the stack contains the result The stack is one element shorter

  1. nop

Implement the nop opcode.

The nop opcode

The opcode nop doesn’t do anything.

Usage: nop

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages