Starting from:

$30

Lab 5: Vegas Blackjack Solution




In this lab we will be writing a text-based computer game based upon a card game, casino blackjack.










Description and Rules of Blackjack




You can find many descriptions of blackjack online. There are several variants of the game. The rules we will use are similar to those used in most American casinos. Your program must adhere to the rules as described below.




Your program will have only a single player (the person running the program) and the dealer, whose actions will be determined by the program. The player is playing against the dealer. Blackjack is played in rounds. The cards held by the player during a round are called the player’s hand. The player’s objective in each round is to obtain a hand value higher than the dealer’s hand value, without exceeding 21. The value of each card is as follows:




Card
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Jack
Queen
King
Ace
Value
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
10
10
10
11


























or 1
(Cards also have ‘suits’: Spades, Clubs, Hearts, or Diamonds, but this is irrelevant to this game.)




The hand value is the sum of the card values in the hand. For example, if the player has a hand consisting of a 6 and a Queen, the player’s hand value is 16. An Ace can have a value of 11 or 1, depending on which value is better for the person holding the hand. For example, if the player or dealer has a hand consisting of a 7 and an Ace, the hand value is 18. However, if the player or dealer has a hand consisting of a 7, an Ace, and a 6, the hand value is 14, because if the Ace’s value were 11 the hand value would exceed 21, which is undesirable.

A round of blackjack is played as follows. Two cards are given (dealt) to the player and two cards to the dealer. The player is shown all of the cards in their hand, but only shown one of the dealer’s cards. If the player’s hand value at this point equals 21, the player has blackjack, and the player automatically wins the round unless the dealer also has blackjack, which results in a tie (known as a push). If the player does not have blackjack, the player may choose to ‘hit’ or ‘stand’. Choosing to hit means one card is added to the player’s hand. The player may continue to hit as many times as they wish, as long as their hand value does not equal or exceed 21. If the player’s hand value exceeds 21, the player has busted, and automatically loses the round regardless of the dealer’s hand. When the player no longer wishes to hit, or has a hand value equal to 21, the player stands, which transfers play to the dealer.




From this point forward, the player is shown all of the dealer’s cards. The dealer’s hand is similar to the player’s, but the dealer has no choices to make. If the dealer’s hand value is 21 with only two cards, the dealer has blackjack, and the player loses (unless the player also has blackjack, as described above). If the dealer does not have blackjack, the dealer must continue to hit as long as the dealer’s hand value is less than 17, and must stand if the dealer’s hand value is equal to or greater than 17. The dealer’s Aces are always taken to have a value of 11 unless doing so would cause the dealer’s hand value to exceed 21 (in casino lingo, we require the dealer to stand on a soft 17). If the dealer’s hand value exceeds 21, the dealer has busted, and the player wins unless the player has also busted (in which case the player loses).




After both player and dealer are done, the hand values are compared. The winning hand has the highest value without exceeding 21. If the hand values are equal, the player and dealer push (tie). As described above, a blackjack (a hand value of 21 with only two cards in the hand) beats any other hand, including a hand with more than two cards whose value is 21.




The player places a monetary bet before each round of blackjack. If the player wins the round with a blackjack, they receive money equal to 1.5 times their bet. If the player wins the round with any hand other than a blackjack, they receive money equal to their bet. If the player pushes with the dealer, no money is received or lost. If the player loses the round, they lose money equal to their bet. For this program, the player will start with 300 dollars, and will be allowed to bet and play rounds until they run out of money or quit the game. Quitting the game will be indicated by the player placing a bet of 0 dollars. Players should not be allowed to place a bet larger than the amount of money they have!




We will assume that the hands are dealt from an infinite deck of cards, so that any card is equally likely to be dealt at any time. (In the real world, some players use ‘card counting’ and exploit the finite size of the deck to determine the relative probability of certain cards being dealt. Casinos often ban players suspected of doing this.) When adding a card to a hand, your program should randomly select a number from 1 to 13, and add the card corresponding to the number selected.




Extra credit




5 points of extra credit will be awarded for correctly implementing ‘double down’. Doubling down is a choice a player may make which is similar to asking for a hit, but with the following conditions:




doubling down can only be done when the player’s hand has only two cards (right after dealing and checking for blackjacks)



the player’s bet on the round is doubled



a single card is added to the player’s hand and then the player is required to stand (the player is not allowed to hit more than once after doubling down).



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dxlbeqeGkQ8






You may choose to implement a more realistic finite-sized card deck from which the hands are dealt. However, you will not receive extra credit for doing so.










Detailed Lab Programming Requirements




Your code must use the classes ‘Card’, ‘Hand’, and ‘Blackjack’ described in Card.h, Hand.h and Blackjack.h files provided by the instructor. The instructor will also provide the main.cpp file. Download these files from t-square.




There are additional requirements described in the comments of these files. Your final code must use all of the above files with no modifications whatsoever, with one exception: you may make additions to Blackjack.h in order to accomplish the extra credit task, if you choose to do it. However, you are welcome to modify these files if desired during the coding and debugging process. You must write three files: Card.cpp, Hand.cpp, and Blackjack.cpp, which will contain all of the member function implementations that you’ve written.




My suggestion is that you perform tasks in the following order:




Write implementations for the Card member functions, and write a small main-card.cpp file to test this class alone. Do not proceed to step 2 until Card class is working.



Write implementations for the Hand member functions, and write a small main-hand.cpp file to test class Hand and Card.



Finally, write implementations for the Blackjack member functions.
Turnin Procedures




You have the choice to use any ONE of the following submission methods for this lab:




You may upload your source code to the deepthought cluster and submit it using the turnin script, as you did for Lab 0. You MUST ensure that your code compiles and runs properly on deepthought if you choose this method.



Depending on your section, from your home directory enter one of the following at the command prompt.




turnin-ece2036a Lab5




or




turnin-ece2036b Lab5




This automatically copies everything in your Lab5 directory to a place that we can access (and grade) it.




You may bring your laptop to the TA’s office hours before the due date and time and demonstrate your code. The TA will check your source code in addition to checking that your code compiles and runs properly. The demonstrations will be conducted on a first-come, first-served basis during the TA’s posted office hours. If the TA’s office hours end while you are still waiting in line, you must either attend another TA office hour before the due date/time to try again, or use submission method 1.
 
Grading Rubric




If a student’s program runs correctly and produces the desired output, the student has the potential to get a 100 on his or her lab; however, TA’s will randomly look through this set of “perfect-output” programs to look for other elements of meeting the lab requirements. The table below shows typical deductions that could occur.




In addition, if a student’s code does not compile, then he or she will have an automatic 30% deduction on the lab. Code that compiles, but does not match the sample output can incur a deduction from 10% to 30% depending on how poorly the output matches the output specified by the lab. This is in addition to the other deductions listed below or due to the student not attempting the entire assignment.













AUTOMATIC GRADING POINT DEDUCTIONS




Element
Percentage
Details


Deduction














Does Not Compile
30%
Program does not compile on deepthought cluster






Does Not Match
10%-30%
The program compiles but doesn’t match all output
Output


exactly





















ADDITIONAL GRADING POINT DEDUCTIONS FOR RANDOMLY SELECTED PROGRAMS




Element
Percentage
Details


Deduction














Implement all Card
10%
Does not fully implement all Card member functions
member functions


described in the provided Card.h file.






Implement all Hand
10%
Does not fully implement all member functions and
member functions and


operator overloads described in the provided Hand.h
operator overloads


file.






Element




Percentage
Details








Deduction




























Implement all
10%
Does fully implement all member functions described in
Blackjack member




the provided Blackjack.h file.
functions














Dynamic allocation


10%
Does not dynamically allocate and delete new Cards










correctly.


























Clear Self-




5%-15%
This can include incorrect indentation, using unclear


Documenting
Coding




variable names, unclear comments, or compiling with
Styles






warnings.









































LATE POLICY




Element


Percentage
Details










Deduction
























First Day
20%
By Monday after the due date






Each Additional Day
20% per day
The weekend (Sat/Sun) will count as one day































Sample output from completed code




bash-3.2$ ./a.out




Player starts with 300 dollars










Round 1




Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 20




Dealer's first card is: Queen




Player's hand is: Six
Jack


Player's hand value is
16


What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Six
Jack
Four
Player's hand value is
20


What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: s



Dealer's hand is: Queen Five




Dealer's hand value is 15




Dealer's hand is: Queen Five Queen Dealer's hand value is 25




Dealer's hand is bust. Player wins!




Player has 320 dollars







Round 2




Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 30




Dealer's first card is: Eight




Player's hand is: Six Ten




Player's hand value is 16




What would you like to do? Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h




Player's hand is: Six Ten Jack

Player's hand value is 26




Dealer's hand is: Eight Four




Dealer's hand value is 12




Dealer's hand is: Eight Four Jack Dealer's hand value is 22




Player's hand is bust.




Player has 290 dollars







Round 3






Enter bet in dollars, 0
to quit:
300
You don't have that much money!
Enter a lower bet.
Enter bet in dollars, 0
to quit:
50
Dealer's first card is:
Queen


Player's hand is: Nine
Ace




Player's hand value is
20




What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Nine
Ace
Five


Player's hand value is
15




What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Nine
Ace
Five
Seven
Player's hand value is
22







Dealer's hand is: Queen Four




Dealer's hand value is 14




Dealer's hand is: Queen Four Queen Dealer's hand value is 24




Player's hand is bust.




Player has 240 dollars







Round 4
Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 100




Dealer's first card is: Six




Player's hand is: Five
King


Player's hand value is
15


What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Five
King
Five
Player's hand value is
20


What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: s
Dealer's hand is: Six
Six


Dealer's hand value is
12


Dealer's hand is: Six
Six
King
Dealer's hand value is
22


Dealer's hand is bust.
Player wins!
Player has 340 dollars










Round 5




Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 200




Dealer's first card is: King




Player's hand is: Queen Seven




Player's hand value is 17




What would you like to do? Enter (h)it or (s)tand: s




Dealer's hand is: King Queen




Dealer's hand value is 20




Dealer wins.




Player has 140 dollars







Round 6




Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 100




Dealer's first card is: Six




Player's hand is: Five Eight




Player's hand value is 13

What would you like to do? Enter (h)it or (s)tand:




h




Player's hand is: Five Eight Queen Player's hand value is 23




Dealer's hand is: Six Nine




Dealer's hand value is 15




Dealer's hand is: Six Nine Four Dealer's hand value is 19




Player's hand is bust.




Player has 40 dollars







Round 7






Enter bet in dollars, 0
to quit:
50
You don't have that much money!
Enter a lower bet.
Enter bet in dollars, 0
to quit:
20
Dealer's first card is:
Six




Player's hand is: Four
Two




Player's hand value is
6




What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Four
Two
Eight
Player's hand value is
14




What would you like to
do?
Enter (h)it or (s)tand: h
Player's hand is: Four
Two
Eight Queen
Player's hand value is
24







Dealer's hand is: Six Three




Dealer's hand value is 9




Dealer's hand is: Six Three Four Dealer's hand value is 13




Dealer's hand is: Six Three Four Four

Dealer's hand value is 17




Player's hand is bust.




Player has 20 dollars







Round 8




Enter bet in dollars, 0 to quit: 0

More products