Transcript slides

The break And continue Statements
• a break statement can be used to abnormally terminate a loop.
• use of the break statement in loops bypasses the normal
mechanisms and makes the code hard to read and maintain.
• considered bad form to use the break statement in this manner.
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The continue Statement
• a continue statement will cause the currently executing iteration of a
loop to terminate and the next iteration will begin.
• a continue statement will cause the evaluation of the condition in while
and for loops.
• as with the break statement, the continue statement should be avoided
because it makes the code hard to read and debug.
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Deciding Which Loops to Use
• The while loop:
• Pretest loop
• Use it where you do not want the statements to execute if the
condition is false in the beginning.
• The do-while loop:
• Post-test loop
• Use it where you want the statements to execute at least one time.
• The for loop:
• Pretest loop
• Use it where there is some type of counting variable that can be
evaluated.
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Files
• Input … reading (we’ll focus on reading files first)
• Output … writing
• Errors can occur
• Attempting to read a file that does not exist
• Writing to a file that is protected
• These types of errors need to be provided for
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Exceptions
• When something unexpected happens in a Java program,
an exception is thrown.
• The method currently executing when the exception is
thrown must either handle the exception, or, pass it up the
line.
• Handling the exception is discussed later.
• To pass it up the line, the method needs a throws clause in
the method header.
• For now just accept that this must be done
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Exceptions
• To insert a throws clause in a method header, simply add the word throws
and the name of the expected exception.
• The class Exception can be used to catch all exceptions.
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException{…}
• File I/O is a checked exception (meaning the exception must be handled or
passed up).
• A program with file I/O will generate a compile-time error if the exception
is not handled or passed up.
• Example: FileWriteDemo.java
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Reading Data From a File
• Java provides several classes to read data from a file.
• FileReader
• Open an existing file for reading and establish a
connection with it.
• BufferedReader
• Uses a buffer to allow the reading of full lines of text at a
time rather than one byte at a time.
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Detecting The End of a File
• The readLine() method of the BufferedReader class will return null if the end
of the file has been reached.
FileReader freader = new FileReader(filename);
BufferedReader inputFile = new BufferedReader(freader);
// Read the first item.
String str = inputFile.readLine();
// If an item was read, display it
// and read the remaining items.
while (str != null)
We say end-of-file occurs when we
{
read a line, but there are no more
System.out.println(str);
lines left to read. End-of-file is
str = inputFile.readLine();
detected by checking for a null line.
}
inputFile.close();// close the file when done.
At this time you need to know that we can read files one line at a
time, until end-of-file, and each line is available as a string
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String Value Conversion
• The readLine() method of the BufferedReader class only
reads in text as a String object.
• Strings that represent numbers can be converted and stored
into primitive variables.
• Java provides wrapper classes that make conversion easy.
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String Value Conversion
Method
Description
Integer.parseInt(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as an int.
Short.parseShort(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as a short.
Byte.parseByte(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as a byte.
Long.parseLong(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as a long.
Float.parseFloat(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as a float.
Double.parseDouble(str)
This method accepts a string that contains a number and
returns the number as a double.
Example: FileSum.java
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The Random Class
• Some applications, such as games and simulations, require
the use of randomly generated numbers.
• The Java API has a class, Random, for this purpose. To use
the Random class, use the import statement and create an
instance of the class.
import java.util.Random;
Random randomNumbers = new Random();
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Some Methods of the
Random Class
Method
Description
nextDouble()
Returns the next random number as a double. The number will be within the
range of 0.0 and 1.0.
nextFloat()
Returns the next random number as a float. The number will be within the
range of 0.0 and 1.0.
nextInt()
Returns the next random number as an int. The number will be within the
range of an int, which is –2,147,483,648 to +2,147,483,648.
nextInt(int n)
This method accepts an integer argument, n. It returns a random number as an
int. The number will be within the range of 0 to n.
Example: MathTutor.java
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Example
Suppose we want to program a game that involves two dice. Die will be a class from which
we can instantiate two objects (one for each die).
We can toss the pair of dice 1,000,000 times and see what the average throw is.
A UML class diagram showing the classes the program has, each of their attributes and
methods, and the relationships between classes:
2
DiceGame
die1
numberSides
die2
generator
main()
toss()
A dicegame is
played with
two dice
Java code: DiceGame.java
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Die
Random
nextInt()
A die uses a
random number
generator
Die.java
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A UML sequence diagram showing how the objects interact
Die is a class from which we instantiate two objects.
We toss the pair of dice 1,000,000 times.
System.out
DiceGame
main()
printLn()
new()
new()
die1:Die
new()
: Random
die2:Die
new()
Loop [1,000,000 times]
toss()
:Random
nextInt()
toss()
nextInt()
printLn()
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