Introduction to the TURBO Pascal Tutorial Assuming you know nothing at all about Pascal, and in fact, that you may know nothing about programming in general, we will begin to study Pascal. If you are already somewhat familiar with programming and especially Pascal, you will probably want to skip very quickly through the first few chapters. You should at least skim the first few chapters, and you should read the remainder of this introduction. A few comments are in order to get us started in the right direction. The sample programs included on the disks are designed to teach you the basics of Pascal and they do not include any clever or tricky code. Nearly all of the programs are really quite dumb as far as being useful programs, but all will teach one or more principles of Pascal. I have seen one tutorial that included a 12 page program as the first example. In fact there were only 2 example programs in the entire tutorial. I will completely bypass any long programs until the very end of this tutorial in order to illustrate concepts used in Pascal programming. It will then be very easy for you to use the tools learned to build as large a program as you desire. Due to the fundamental design of the Pascal language, certain words are "reserved" and can only be used for their defined purposes. These are listed on page 37 of the TURBO PASCAL manual (version 3.0 will be used in all references). All of the sample programs are written with the reserved words in all capital letters, and the user variables in lower case. Don't worry about what reserved words are yet, they will be completely defined later. Another problem I have noticed in example programs is the use of one word for all definitions. For example, a sort program is stored in a file called SORT, the program is named SORT, and various parts of the program are referred to as SORT1, SORT2, etc. This can be confusing since you have no idea if the program name must be the same as the filename, or if any of the other names were chosen to be the same because of some obscure rule not clearly documented. For this reason, the example programs use completely arbitrary names whenever the choice of a name adds nothing to the readability or clarity of a program. As an illustration of this, the first program is named puppy_dog. This adds nothing to the understanding of the program but does illustrate that the program name means nothing to the Pascal compiler concerning what the program does. What is a compiler? There are two primary methods used in running any computer program that is written in a Page 1 Introduction to the TURBO Pascal Tutorial readable form of English. The first method is an interpreter. An interpreter is a program that looks at each line of the "English" program, decides what the "English" on that line means, and does what it says to do. If one of the lines is executed repeatedly, it must be scanned and analyzed each time, greatly slowing down the solution of the problem at hand. A compiler, on the other hand, is a program that looks at each statement one time and converts it into a code that the computer understands directly. When the compiled program is actually run, the computer does not have to figure out what each statement means, it is already in a form that the computer can run directly, hence a much faster execution of the program. PREPARATION FOR USE OF THIS TUTORIAL. Copy the example files onto your TURBO working disk and you are ready to begin, provided of course that you have already learned how to start the TURBO system and how to edit a Pascal file. Be sure you make a backup copy of the Pascal tutorial disks so you cannot accidentally lose all information on the distribution disks. You should read Chapter 1 of the TURBO Pascal reference manual to be ready to use this tutorial. You should be familiar with use of the editor supplied with TURBO Pascal before beginning. If you are not using TURBO Pascal, you will still be able to compile and execute most of these Pascal files, since most of the examples use "standard" Pascal. There will be some statements used which are unique to TURBO Pascal and will probably not work with your compiler. This will be especially true when you come to the chapter on standard input and output since this is where most compilers differ. Unfortunately, this is one of the most important aspects of any programming language, since it is required to get data into and out of the computer to do anything useful. It is highly suggested that you do the programming exercises after you complete the study for each chapter. They are carefully selected to test your understanding of the material covered in each chapter. If you do not write, enter, debug, and run these programs, you will only be proficient at reading Pascal. If you do the exercises completely, you will have a good start at being a Pascal program writer. It should also be mentioned that this tutorial will not teach you everything you will ever need to know about Pascal. You will continue to learn new techniques as long as you continue to write programs. Experience is the best Page 2 Introduction to the TURBO Pascal Tutorial teacher here just as it is in any endeavor. This tutorial will teach you enough about Pascal that you will feel very comfortable as you search through the reference manual for some topic. You will also be able to read and understand any Pascal program you find in textbooks or magazines. When you are ready, I will meet you in Chapter 1. Page 3