//William Bishop //CST 116 //william.bishop@oit.edu Here I have my name and the different works of what is the contact information. /******************************************************************** * File: CST116-Ch8-Debugging.cpp * * General Instructions: Complete each step before proceeding to the * next. * * Debugging Exercise 1 * * 1) Insert a breakpoint on the lines indicated in the code. * 2) Run to Breakpoint 1. * 3) Place a watch on i. * 4) Execute the while statement by doing a "Step Into". * 5) The execution continues to the cout statement as expected. * 6) Step over the cout statement. * 7) Why didn't the flow of the program return back to the while * statement? i = 0 and that wasn't the calculation from i<0. There also might have been the ; at the end of the while statement. * 8) Fix this problem by removing the ; after the while statement. * 9) Stop debugging and repeat Steps 2 – 5 to verify the correction * worked. * 10) Stop debugging. * * Debugging Exercise 2 * * 1) Run to Breakpoint 1. * 2) Step into the while loop. * 3) Why did the cout not execute? It looks like it wasn't less than 0. That being the value of i. * 4) Check the value of i, now check the condition, does the * condition evaluate to true? Yes it looks like we have the value of i=0. * 5) Change the "< 0" to a "< 10". * 6) Stop debugging and repeat Steps 1 – 4 to verify the correction * worked. I saw it worked. * 7) Stop debugging. * * Debugging Exercise 3 * * 1) Run the program without debugging. * 2) What is happening now is an infinite loop. * 3) End your program by holding down the Ctrl key and pressing C. * 4) Fix the problem by adding a "++" after the i in the cout * statement. * 5) Run the program to Breakpoint 2 and verify that the output * displayed on the screen is 0 – 9. * * Debugging Exercise 4 * * 1) Run to Breakpoint 2. * 2) Add a watch to the variable count. * 3) Verify that the contents of count is garbage. * 4) Step into the loop. * 5) What is the value stored in count now? I saw the number 482. Then if I work into the program I get 10. * 6) Where was 10 assigned to count? I didn't see ten assigned to count until I continue through the function and I get 10. * 7) Fix the problem and re-run to verify. ********************************************************************/ Up above I had the different information for the comments and everything. This is the problems that they wanted me to do inside of the program debugging. #include Here we include the input and output stream of numbers. using std::cout; Here we include the cout statements in the stream. using std::endl; Here we include the endline statements in the work. using std::count; Here I put in the count work inside the program to help us get great outputs. int main() Here is the main function inside the program start. { int i = 0; Here is the integer i being declared and equalling 0. int count; Here we have the work of what is integer count inside the function. // Breakpoint 1 // Put a breakpoint on the following line while (i < 10) Here I have the work of the while function when i is less than ten. cout << i++ << endl; Here we cout the i++ cout while i is less than ten. // Breakpoint 2 // Put a breakpoint on the following line for (count = 0; count < 10; count++); Here I put the different notes of what is the for statement of the for statement when we cout the i. cout << count <