CIE Pseudocode Guide
CIE Pseudocode Guide
Introduction 4
1.2 Indentation 5
1.4 Comments 6
2.2 Literals 7
2.3 Identifiers 7
2.4 Assignments 7
3. Arrays 9
4. Common operations 10
5. Selection 11
5.1 IF statements 11
6. Iteration 13
The following information sets out how pseudocode will appear within the examined components and is
provided to allow you to give learners familiarity before the exam.
1.2 Indentation
Lines are indented by four spaces to indicate that they are contained within a statement in a previous line.
Where it is not possible to fit a statement on one line any continuation lines are indented by two spaces. In
cases where line numbering is used, this indentation may be omitted. Every effort will be made to make
sure that code statements are not longer than a line of code, unless this is absolutely necessary.
Note that the THEN and ELSE clauses of an IF statement are indented by only two spaces (see Section
5.1). Cases in CASE statements are also indented by only two places (see Section 5.2).
Identifiers are in mixed case (sometimes referred to as camelCase or Pascal case) with uppercase letters
indicating the beginning of new words, for example NumberOfPlayers.
Meta-variables – symbols in the pseudocode that should be substituted by other symbols – are enclosed in
angled brackets < > (as in Backus-Naur Form). This is also used in this guide.
Example – meta-variables
REPEAT
<Statements>
UNTIL <condition>
Line numbers are consecutive, unless numbers are skipped to indicate that part of the code is missing. This
will also be clearly stated.
1.4 Comments
Comments are preceded by two forward slashes // . The comment continues until the end of the line. For
multi-line comments, each line is preceded by //.
Normally the comment is on a separate line before, and at the same level of indentation as, the code it
refers to. Occasionally, however, a short comment that refers to a single line may be at the end of the line to
which it refers.
2.2 Literals
Literals of the above data types are written as follows:
• Real : Always written with at least one digit on either side of the decimal point, zeros being added if
necessary, e.g. 4.7, 0.3, -4.0, 0.0
• Char: A single character delimited by single quotes, e.g. ꞌxꞌ, ꞌCꞌ, ꞌ@ꞌ
• String: Delimited by double quotes. A string may contain no characters (i.e. the empty string) e.g.
"This is a string", ""
2.3 Identifiers
Identifiers (the names given to variables, constants, procedures and functions) are in mix case. They can
only contain letters (A–Z, a–z) and digits (0–9). They must start with a letter and not a digit. Accented
letters and other characters, including the underscore, should not be used.
As in programming, it is good practice to use identifier names that describe the variable, procedure or
function they refer to. Single letters may be used where these are conventional (such as i and j when
Identifiers should be considered case insensitive, for example, Countdown and CountDown should not
be used as separate variables.
2.4 Assignments
The assignment operator is ←.
<identifier> ← <value>
The identifier must refer to a variable (this can be an individual element in a data structure such as an array
or an abstract data type). The value may be any expression that evaluates to a value of the same data type
as the variable.
Example – assignments
Counter ← 0
Counter ← Counter + 1
TotalToPay ← NumberOfHours * HourlyRate
StudentNames[1] ← "Ali"
NoughtsAndCrosses[2] ← 'X'
StudentNames[n+1] ← StudentNames[n]
Arrays can be used in assignment statements (provided they have same size and data type). The
following is therefore allowed:
SavedGame ← NoughtsAndCrosses
A statement should not, however, refer to a group of array elements individually. For example, the
following construction should not be used.
Instead, an appropriate loop structure is used to assign the elements individually. For example:
FOR Index ← 1 TO 30
StudentNames[Index] ← ""
NEXT Index
4. Common operations
INPUT <identifier>
The identifier should be a variable (that may be an individual element of a data structure such as an
array, or a custom data type).
Values are output using the OUTPUT command as follows:
OUTPUT <value(s)>
Several values, separated by commas, can be output using the same command.
INPUT Answer
OUTPUT Score
OUTPUT "You have ", Lives, " lives left"
Note that the syllabus for IGCSE (0478) gives READ and PRINT as examples for INPUT
and OUTPUT, respectively.
• + Addition
• - Subtraction
• * Multiplication
• / Division
Care should be taken with the division operation: the resulting value should be of data type REAL,
even if the operands are integers.
The integer division operators MOD and DIV can be used. However, their use should be explained
explicitly and not assumed.
Multiplication and division have higher precedence over addition and subtraction (this is the
normal mathematical convention). However, it is good practice to make the order of
operations in complex expressions explicit by using parentheses.
In complex expressions it is advisable to use parentheses to make the order of operations explicit.
5. Selection
5.1 IF statements
IF statements may or may not have an ELSE clause.
IF statements without an else clause are written as follows:
IF <condition>
THEN
<statements>
ENDIF
IF <condition>
THEN
<statements>
ELSE
<statements>
ENDIF
Note that the THEN and ELSE clauses are only indented by two spaces. (They are, in a sense, a
continuation of the IF statement rather than separate statements).
When IF statements are nested, the nesting should continue the indentation of two spaces. In
particular, run-on THEN IF and ELSE IF lines should be avoided.
CASE OF <identifier>
<value 1> :
<statement>
<value 2> :
<statement> ...
ENDCASE
CASE OF <identifier>
<value 1> :
<statement>
<value 2> :
<statement> ...
OTHERWISE <statement>
ENDCASE
It is best practice to keep the branches to single statements as this makes the pseudocode more
readable. Similarly single values should be used for each case. If the cases are more complex, the
use of an IF statement, rather than a CASE statement, should be considered.
Each case clause is indented by two spaces. They can be seen as continuations of the CASE
statement rather than new statements.
Note that the case clauses are tested in sequence. When a case that applies is found, its statement
is executed and the CASE statement is complete. Control is passed to the statement after the
ENDCASE. Any remaining cases are not tested.
If present, an OTHERWISE clause must be the last case. Its statement will be executed if none of
the preceding cases apply.
INPUT Move
CASE OF Move
'W': Position ← Position – 10
'S': Position ← Position + 10
'A': Position ← Position – 1
'D': Position ← Position + 1
OTHERWISE : Beep
ENDCASE
6. Iteration
6.1 Count-controlled (FOR) loops
Count-controlled loops are written as follows:
The identifier must be a variable of data type INTEGER, and the values should be expressions that
evaluate to integers.
The variable is assigned each of the integer values from value1 to value2 inclusive, running the
statements inside the FOR loop after each assignment. If value1 = value2 the statements will be
executed once, and if value1 > value2 the statements will not be executed.
It is good practice to repeat the identifier after NEXT, particularly with nested FOR loops.
The increment must be an expression that evaluates to an integer. In this case the identifier will
be assigned the values from value1 in successive increments of increment until it reaches
value2. If it goes past value2, the loop terminates. The increment can be negative.
Total ← 0
FOR Row ← 1 TO MaxRow
RowTotal ← 0
FOR Column ← 1 TO 10
RowTotal ← RowTotal + Amount[Row,Column]
NEXT Column
OUTPUT "Total for Row ", Row, " is ", RowTotal
Total ← Total + RowTotal
NEXT Row
OUTPUT "The grand total is ", Total
REPEAT
<Statements>
UNTIL <condition>
The statements in the loop will be executed at least once. The condition is tested after the statements
are executed and if it evaluates to TRUE the loop terminates, otherwise the statements are executed
again.
Example – REPEAT UNTIL statement
REPEAT
OUTPUT "Please enter the password"
INPUT Password
UNTIL Password = "Secret"
WHILE <condition> DO
<statements>
ENDWHILE
The condition is tested before the statements, and the statements will only be executed if the
condition evaluates to TRUE. After the statements have been executed the condition is tested again.
The loop terminates when the condition evaluates to FALSE.
The statements will not be executed if, on the first test, the condition evaluates to FALSE.
-, 10
*, 10
/, 10
//, 6 +, 10
←, 7
AND, 10
ARRAY, 9
BOOLEAN, 7
CASE OF, 12
CHAR, 7
DIV, 10
ELSE, 5
ENDCASE, 12
ENDIF, 11
FOR ... TO, 13
IF, 5
INPUT, 10
INTEGER, 7
MOD, 10
NEXT, 13
NOT, 10
OR, 10
OTHERWISE, 12
OUTPUT, 13
PRINT, 10
READ, 10
REAL, 7
REPEAT, 5 STEP, 13
STRING, 7
THEN, 5 TRUE, 7
UNTIL, 13
WHILE ... DO, 14