rina zviel-girshin @arc1 system development with java instructor: rina zviel-girshin lecture 2
TRANSCRIPT
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 1
System development with Java
Instructor: Rina Zviel-Girshin
Lecture 2
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 2
Java types
• Primitive (basic) types• Boolean • String• Object references
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 3
Basic types • Exist several basic types.• The difference between them is their size, and
therefore the values they can store:Type
byteshortintlong
floatdouble
Storage
8 bits16 bits32 bits64 bits
32 bits64 bits
Min Value
-128-32,768-2,147,483,648< -9 x 1018
+/- 3.4 x 1038 with 7 significant digits+/- 1.7 x 10308 with 15 significant digits
Max Value
12732,7672,147,483,647> 9 x 1018
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 4
Boolean Literals
• The boolean type has two values, represented by the literals true and false
• A boolean literal is always of type boolean. • BooleanLiteral is one of:
true false
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 5
Character Literals
• A character literal is expressed as a character or an escape sequence, enclosed in single quotes.
• A character literal is always of type char.
Examples of char literals:
'a' '%' '\t' '\\' '\u03a9'
'\uFFFF' '\177'
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 6
Variable declaration
• Basic syntax:
(final) type Identifier; or
type Identifier1, Identifier2, .. IdentifierN;
Example:int counter;double num1, num2=5.234;char letter=‘s’;
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 7
Basic assignment
• Syntax:
Identifier=Expression;
where = is assignment operator and result of the expression is stored in Identifier.
Example:
counter=0;
counter=counter+1;
value=(sum*1.05)/12
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 8
Constant• A constant is an identifier that is similar to the
variable except that it holds one value for it's entire lifecycle.
• We use final modifier to declare a constant.
• Syntax:final type Identifier=value;
Example:final int maximal_number_of_students=30;
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 9
String Literals
• A string literal consists of zero or more characters enclosed in double quotes (“).
• A string literal is always of type String.• String is a Java class. So string literal is a java object.
Examples of string literals: "" // the empty string
"This is a string" // a string containing 16 characters
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 10
Escape Sequences for Character and String Literals
Escape Sequence:\ b /* \u0008: backspace BS */\ t /* \u0009: horizontal tab HT */\ n /* \u000a: linefeed LF */\ f /* \u000c: form feed FF */\ r /* \u000d: carriage return CR */\ " /* \u0022: double quote " */\ ' /* \u0027: single quote ' */\ \ /* \u005c: backslash \ */
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 11
String Concatenation
• The ‘+’ operator between strings has the meaning of String concatenation.
“The international “ + “dialing code”
• When we apply ‘+’ upon a String and a value of another type, that value is first converted into a String and the result is the concatenation of the two Strings.
“for Israel is “ + 972
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 12
String Concatenation
class IsraelCode { public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.print(“The international “ + “dialing code”); System.out.println(“for israel is “ + 972); }}
Output: The international dialog code for Israel is 972
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 13
The Null Literal
• The null type has one value, the null reference, represented by the literal null, which is formed from ASCII characters.
• A null literal is always of the null type.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 14
Separators
The following nine ASCII characters are the separators (punctuators):
( ) { } [ ] ; , .
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 15
Operators
The following 37 tokens are the operators, formed from ASCII characters:
= > < ! ~ ? :
== <= >= != && || ++
-- + - * / & |
^ % << >> >>> += -=
*= /= &= |= ^= %=
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 16
Operators • Java operators can be either:
• Unary operator - takes a single value • Binary operator - takes two values
• Java binary operators are written in the infix notation:
operand1 operator operand2 that means - the operator is written inside (between)
the operands.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 17
Arithmetic operators
Arithmetic operators are:+ addition x+y- subtraction x-y* multiplication x*y/ division x/y% remainder x%y
Also unary – for the negation.a = -34;
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 18
Arithmetic operators
• Arithmetic operators depends on types of the operands.
Example: 3.0 / 2.0 1.5 3 / 2.0 1.5 3.0 / 2 1.5 3 / 2 1 -3 / 2 -1
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 19
Increment/decrement operators
• The ++ and -- are the increment and decrement operators.
• j++ is equivalent to j=j+1.• The increment and decrement operators can be
• prefix – can appear before what they operate on
• postfix – can appear after what they operate on
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 20
Increment/decrement operators
The usage of increment and decrement operators:
Example:// usage of increment and decrement operatorsclass IncExample{public static void main(String args[])
{ int j=10; System.out.println(++j +“ “+ j++ +“ “+ j +“ “+ --j );}
} The output is:11 11 12 11 The first value j is printed preincremented to 11.The second value j is printed after the increment, but before it is postincremented to 12.The third value is printed after its postincrement from the middle term.The forth value is printed predecremented to 11.
Operator Use Description
++ j++ increments j by 1
evaluates to the value of j before it was incremented
++ ++j increments j by 1
evaluates to the value of j after it was incremented
-- j-- decrements j by 1
evaluates to the value of j before it was decremented
-- --j decrements j by 1
evaluates to the value of j after it was decremented
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 21
Example
// usage of increment and decrement operatorsclass IncExample{ public static void main(String args[]) { int j=10; System.out.println(++j +“ “+ j++ +“ “+ j +“ “+ --
j ); }}
The output is:
11 11 12 11
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 22
Relational and Conditional operators
A standard set of relational and equality operators is:> greater than
>= greater than or equal to
< less than
<= less than or equal to
= = equal to
! = not equal to
Example:
5 >= 2 3 + 6 = = 2 + 7 5 ! = 8 + 9
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 23
Relational and Conditional operators
• The conditional operators can have two values:• true• false
• Expressions that use conditional operators called boolean expressions.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 24
Binary conditional operators
Operator Use Returns true if
&& op1 && op2 op1 and op2 are both true, conditionally evaluates op2
|| op1 || op2 either op1 or op2 is true, conditionally evaluates op2
! ! op op is false
& op1 & op2 op1 and op2 are both true, always evaluates op1 and op2
| op1 | op2 either op1 or op2 is true, always evaluates op1 and op2
^ op1 ^ op2 if op1 and op2 are different--that is if one or the other of the operands is true but not both
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 25
Flow control statements
• Control structures can be divided into two classes:• loop statements
forwhiledo-while
• branching statementsifswitch
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 26
Blocks• Block is the simplest type of statement.Syntax:
{// statements}
• It implements grouping of a sequence of statements into a single statement.
• Block can be empty - contain no statements.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 27
Blocks
{ float k;
k = (k+5)/32;
System.out.println(k);
}• A variable k declared inside a block is completely
inaccessible and invisible from outside that block. • Such a variable is called local to the block.• It can be redefined later.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 28
If statement
• A choice between doing something and not doing it.
Syntax:
if (boolean _condition)
statement;• Boolean_condition is a boolean statement that can
have true or false values.• If the value is true than the statement is performed.• If the value is false than the statement is skipped.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 29
Exampleclass FailTest {
public static void main(String[] args)
{
InputRequestor input = new InputRequestor();
int grade = input.requestInt(“Enter your grade:”);
System.out.println(“Your grade is: ”+grade);
if (grade < 60)
System.out.println(“You failed”);
}
}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 30
If .. else statement• A choice between doing two things.Syntax: if (boolean _condition)
statement1;else
statement2;
• First boolean _condition statement value is evaluated.• The value can be:
true and than statement1 is performed and statement2 is skipped
false and than statement1 is skipped and statement2 is performed.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 31
Exampleclass FailTest{ public static void main(String[] args)
{ InputRequestor input=new InputRequestor(); int grade=input.requestInt(“Enter your grade:”); System.out.println(“Your grade is: ”+grade); if (grade < 60) System.out.println(“You failed”); else
System.out.println(“You passed!!!”);}
}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 32
Switch statement • A choice between doing several things (usually
more then two things).• For each choice we have different set of
instructions to perform. Syntax:switch(x){ case value1: statement1; break;
… case valuen: statementn; break; default: default_ statement; break;}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 33
Switch statement
• x can be an expression but it must evaluate an integer value.
• statementN can be empty or can be a set of instructions.
• The break statement is used to terminate the statement list of each case.It allows you to directly exit a loop.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 34
Switch statement
• The choice is done by value of x.If the value of x equals to value1 the statement1
is performed.…If the value of x equals to valuen the statementn
is performed.If the value of x different from values of
value1,..,valuen then default_statement is performed.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 35
Example
switch(letter){case ‘a’: System.out.println(“The letter was a”);
add();break;
case ‘d’: System.out.println(“The letter was d”); delete();
break;default: System.out.println(“Illegal input”);}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 36
Loops
• Several control structures in Java are loop control structures.
• A loop is a repetition of certain pieces of the code several times.
• Loop can be:– bounded – or “unbounded” depends on number of times we want to perform
it.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 37
For statement
Syntax:
for( start; limit; increment/decrement)
{ statement; }• Start is a statement that initializes the loop.• Limit is a boolean statement that determines when
to terminate the loop. • The limit value is evaluated during each iteration
of the loop.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 38
For statement
• There are two possible values:• true and the statement is performed• false and the loop is terminated
• Increment/decrement is an expression that is invoked after each iteration of the loop and also called step of the loop.
• The for loop often used for counting from start to limit by a step size.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 39
For example
class For_Example{ public static void main(String[] args)
{ int factorial=1; for( int k=1; k<5; k++) factorial*=k; System.out.println(“The factorial of 5 numbers is: “ +
factorial); }}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 40
The for Statement diagram
start
statement
increment/decrement
limitfalse
true
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 41
While statement
Syntax:while( boolean_condition)
statement; • The value of boolean_condition can be:
– true and than the statement is performed– false and than loop terminates
• The statement is executed over and over until the boolean_condition becomes false.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 42
While statement
Example:int sum=0, k=0;
while(sum<100)
{ sum=sum+k;
k++;
System.out.print(“the sum of “ + k + ” elements is ” + sum);
}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 43
Do.. while statement
Syntax:do{ statement; } while (boolean_condition);• The statement performed first of all. • Than the boolean_condition is checked. If it is true
the next iteration of the loop is performed. If it is false than the loop terminates.
• The statement performed at least once.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 44
The do.. while statement diagram
statement
booleancondition
false
true
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 45
Infinite loops
• If boolean_condition in one of loop structures is always true then loop will be executed forever- it is ‘unbounded’.
• Such a loop called infinite loop.• The infinite loop will execute until user interrupts
the program.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 46
Infinite loop example
// this program contains two infinite loopsclass Infinity{ public static void main(String[] args)
{ int count=0; for( ; ; ) System.out.print(“Infinity”); while(count<10) { System.out.println(“Another infinite loop”);
System.out.println(“The counter is “+counter); }}
}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 47
Programming style
• Java is a free-format language. • There are no syntax rules about how the program
has to be arranged on a page. You can write entire program in one line.
• But as a matter of good programming style, you should lay out your program on the page in a way that will make its structure as clear as possible.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 48
Programming style
• Some advises:• Put one statement per line. • Use indentation to indicate statements that
are contained inside control structures. • Write comments.• Give your variables names that make sense.
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 49
Style ExampleBad:
public class
Stam
{ public static void
main(String args[]){System.out.println("Hello!“);}}
Better:
// style example – outputs “Hello!”
public class Hello
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
System.out.println("Hello!");
}
}
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Rina Zviel-Girshin @ARC 50
Any Questions?