Java – Basic Introduction, Classes and Objects

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Transcript Java – Basic Introduction, Classes and Objects

Java – Basic Introduction,
Classes and Objects
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Writing Classes
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Now we will begin to design programs
that rely on classes that we write
ourselves
The class that contains the main
method is just the starting point of a
program
True object-oriented programming is
based on defining classes that
represent objects with well-defined
characteristics and functionality
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Designing Classes and Objects
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An object has state and behavior
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Consider a six-sided die (singular of dice)
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It’s state can be defined as which face is showing
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It’s primary behavior is that it can be rolled
We can represent a die in software by
designing a class called Die that models this
state and behavior
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The class serves as the blueprint for a die object
We can then instantiate as many die objects
as we need for any particular program
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Classes
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A class can contain data declarations and
method declarations
int size, weight;
char category;
Data declarations
Method declarations
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Classes
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The values of the data define the state of an
object created from the class
The functionality of the methods define the
behaviors of the object
For our Die class, we might declare an integer
that represents the current value showing on
the face
One of the methods would “roll” the die by
setting that value to a random number between
one and six
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Classes
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In general, a class share some similarities with
structures in C
Recall that a structure in C is a user-defined
data type composed of some data fields and
each field belongs to a certain data type or
another structure type
A class is also composed of some data fields. In
addition to it, a class is also associated with
some methods
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General
Design
of
Objects
and
Classes
• In general, we should first declare an object reference
• Then, we allocate memory for the object
AClass obj1;
obj1 = new AClass();
obj1
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The first line declares an object reference
obj1 belonging to a class called AClass
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The second line uses the new operator to
allocate some memory for an object (under
the class AClass) and lets obj1 points to it
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The second line also invokes the AClass
constructor, if exists, to initialize the data in
the object
Data fields for obj1
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General Design of Objects and Classes
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Similar to structures in C, one can access the data fields of
an object via the dot operator
For example, suppose in the class AClass, there are some
data fields declared such as field1 and field2.
Then, we can access field1 in obj1 via:
obj1.field1 = 100;
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We can process an object by a method specified in the corresponding
class via dot operator
Suppose in the class AClass, there are some methods declared such
as method1 and method2
Then we can process the object obj1 by method1 via:
a_value = obj1.method1();
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Creating Objects – Another Example
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A variable holds either a primitive type or a reference to
an object
A class name can be used as a type to declare an object
reference variable
String title;
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An object reference variable holds the address of an
object
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The object itself must be created separately
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Generally, we use the new operator to create an object
title = new String ("Java Software Solutions");
This calls the String constructor, which is
a special method that sets up the object
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Creating Objects - Instantiation
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Creating an object is called instantiation
An object is an instance of a particular
class
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Invoking Methods
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We've seen that once an object has been
instantiated, we can use the dot operator to
invoke its methods
count = title.length()
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A method may return a value, which can be
used in an assignment or expression
A method invocation can be thought of as
asking an object to perform a service
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Object References
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Note that a primitive variable contains the value
itself, but an object variable contains the
address of the object
An object reference can be thought of as a
pointer to the location of the object
Rather than dealing with arbitrary addresses,
we often depict a reference graphically
num1 38
title1
"Steve Jobs"
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A Complete Example of Classes and Objects
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Return to the example of our Die class
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For our Die class, we might declare an integer that
represents the current value showing on the face
One of the methods would “roll” the die by setting
that value to a random number between one and six
We’ll want to design the Die class with other
data and methods to make it a versatile and
reusable resource
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A Complete Example of Classes and Objects
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Download the java source files with command
Open the terminal, and input the command
below
“wget
http://www.se.cuhk.edu.hk/~seem3460/tu
torial/lab/RollingDice.java”
“wget
http://www.se.cuhk.edu.hk/~seem3460/tutorial/l
ab/Die.java”
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//*************************************************************
// RollingDice.java
//
// Demonstrates the creation and use of a user-defined class.
//*************************************************************
public class RollingDice
{
//----------------------------------------------------------------// Creates two Die objects and rolls them several times.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public static void main (String[] args)
{
Die die1, die2;
int sum;
die1 = new Die();
die2 = new Die();
die1.roll();
die2.roll();
System.out.println ("Die One: " + die1 + ", Die Two: " + die2);
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die1.roll();
die2.setFaceValue(4);
System.out.println ("Die One: " + die1 + ", Die Two: " + die2);
sum = die1.getFaceValue() + die2.getFaceValue();
System.out.println ("Sum: " + sum);
}
}
sum = die1.roll() + die2.roll();
System.out.println ("Die One: " + die1 + ", Die Two: " + die2);
System.out.println ("New sum: " + sum);
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//*************************************************************
// Die.java
//
// Represents one die (singular of dice) with faces showing values
// between 1 and 6.
//*************************************************************
public class Die
{
private final int MAX = 6; // maximum face value
private int faceValue; // current value showing on the die
//----------------------------------------------------------------// Constructor: Sets the initial face value.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public Die()
{
faceValue = 1;
}
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//----------------------------------------------------------------// Rolls the die and returns the result.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public int roll()
{
faceValue = (int)(Math.random() * MAX) + 1;
return faceValue;
}
//----------------------------------------------------------------// Face value mutator.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public void setFaceValue (int value)
{
faceValue = value;
}
//----------------------------------------------------------------// Face value accessor.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public int getFaceValue()
{
return faceValue;
}
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//----------------------------------------------------------------// Returns a string representation of this die.
//----------------------------------------------------------------public String toString()
{
String result = Integer.toString(faceValue);
}
}
return result;
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The Die Class
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The Die class contains two data values
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a constant MAX that represents the maximum face
value
an integer faceValue that represents the current face
value
The roll method uses the random method of the
Math class to determine a new face value
There are also methods to explicitly set and
retrieve the current face value at any time
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Data Scope
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The scope of data is the area in a program in which that
data can be referenced (used)
Data declared at the class level can be referenced by all
methods in that class
Data declared within a method can be used only in that
method
Data declared within a method is called local data
In the Die class, the variable result is declared inside the
toString method -- it is local to that method and cannot
be referenced anywhere else
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Instance Data
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The faceValue variable in the Die class is called
instance data because each instance (object) that is
created has its own version of it
A class declares the type of the data, but it does not
reserve any memory space for it
Every time a Die object is created, a new faceValue
variable is created as well
The objects of a class share the method definitions,
but each object has its own data space
That's the only way two objects can have different
states
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Instance Data
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We can depict the two Die objects from the
RollingDice program as follows:
die1
faceValue
5
die2
faceValue
2
Each object maintains its own faceValue
variable, and thus its own state
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The toString Method
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All classes that represent objects should define
a toString method
The toString method returns a character string
that represents the object in some way
It is called automatically when an object is
concatenated to a string or when it is passed
to the println method
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Constructors
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A constructor is a special method that is used
to set up an object when it is initially created
A constructor has the same name as the
class and it has no return data type
The Die constructor is used to set the initial
face value of each new die object to one
We examine constructors in more detail later
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RollingDice.java - Compilation
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Assume that both RollingDice.java and Die.java are stored
under the same directory in an Unix account
To compile under Unix platform, we can simply compile the
RollingDice.java:
cuse93> javac RollingDice.java
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The compiler will first compile RollingDice.java. When it finds out
that it needs to make use of the class Die.java. It will
automatically compile Die.java
If the compilation is successful, you can find two bytecodes,
namely, RollingDice.class and Die.class
If there is compilation error, the error message will be displayed
on the terminal.
If you wish to make the error message be displayed screen by
screen, you can compile in the following way:
cuse93> javac RollingDice.java |& more
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RollingDice.java - Sample
Execution
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The following is a sample execution of
RollingDice.class
cuse93> java RollingDice
Die One: 6, Die Two: 1
Die One: 4, Die Two: 4
Sum: 8
Die One: 3, Die Two: 2
New sum: 5
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