I am looking for a way to create a method with the initial state in while loop, which will count the length of each word in a string using I want the output to be something along the lines of:
hello world how are you
There are 0 words of length 0
There are 0 words of length 1
There are 0 words of length 2
There are 3 words of length 3
There are 0 words of length 4
There are 2 words of length 5
This is my code so far it sort of does the job but not the way i want it too
import java.util.Scanner;
import java.util.StringTokenizer;
public class Brown_Matthew_13117002{
public static int count(String s, int len){
int result=0;
StringTokenizer st=new StringTokenizer(s,"[ ,;]");
[Code] ....
The output would end up being
hello
There are 0 words of lenghth 0
world
There are 0 words of lenghth 1
how
There are 0 words of lenghth 2
are
There are 3 words of lenghth 3
you
There are 0 words of lenghth 4
I think I need to use string.split instead of stringtokenizer and the while loop is incorrect it needs to loop equal to the number of letters in the longest word. But how to do either of these ?
I am looking for a way to create a method with the initial state in while loop, which will count the length of each word in a string using I want the output to be something along the lines of:
hello world how are you There are 0 words of length 0 There are 0 words of length 1 There are 0 words of length 2 There are 3 words of length 3 There are 0 words of length 4 There are 2 words of length 5
This is my code so far it sort of does the job but not the way i want it too
import java.util.Scanner; import java.util.StringTokenizer; public class Brown_Matthew_13117002{ public static int count(String s, int len){ int result=0; StringTokenizer st=new StringTokenizer(s,"[ ,;]");
[Code] ....
The output would end up being :
hello There are 0 words of length 0 world There are 0 words of length 1 how There are 0 words of length 2 are There are 3 words of length 3 you There are 0 words of length 4
I am looking for a way to create a method with the initial state in while loop, which will count the length of each word in a string using I want the output to be something along the lines of:
hello world how are you There are 0 words of length 0 There are 0 words of length 1 There are 0 words of length 2 There are 3 words of length 3 There are 0 words of length 4 There are 2 words of length 5
ithis is my code so far it sort of does the job but not the way i want it too
import java.util.Scanner; import java.util.StringTokenizer; public class Brown_Matthew_13117002{
The goal of this code was to create a program using main method java to analysis a piece text which has been entered from a user.
They do this by entering the text into a scanner which is then analysed by the program. The analysis is to produce word frequency, for example " This is a test" produces this results:
This is a test
1 letter words: 1 2 letter words: 1 3 letter words: 0 4 letter words: 2 5 letter words: 0
The bit that I'm stuck on is producing a mean/average, My mind telling to divide
counts.length by str.length
But I'm not the Best at java and I've tried to implement this but all I get are errors.
Code:
import java.util.Scanner; public class While_Loop { public static void main (String[] args) { while(true){
import java.awt.*; import java.applet.*; import java.awt.event.*; public class Assignment extends Applet implements ActionListener { TextArea textInput = new TextArea(); // user input Button analyzebutton = new Button("Analyze"); Button resetbutton = new Button("Reset"); Label lbloutput = new Label ("Please enter text into the textbox!");
I am trying to make a java program which should count the occurrences of a specific character in a string. I have 1 error - "cannot find method charAt(int)". Here is what I have.
import java.util.Scanner; public class ch4q5 { public static void main(String[] args) { String input ; String t ; int c = 0;
I have built a binary tree, from a file. In each node, I am storing each word as a string, and an int frequency for each time the word occurs. For the assignment, I need to find how many words occur only once in the file. I wrote the program, but for some reason I am getting a number different from what my professor is expecting.
As far as I know, this file has loaded into the tree correctly, because all of my other answers in the assignment are correct. What am I doing wrong?
public void findUnique() { System.out.println("There are " + findUniqueWords(root, 0) + " unique words."); } private int findUniqueWords(Node subTree, int uniqueCount) { // Base Case: At the end of the branch if(subTree == null){ return uniqueCount;
I am trying to split a string based on length(example length 5) of the string. But I am having a issues with this substring(start, end) method. I get all substring which are of length 5. But if the last substring is less than 5 then I am not getting that last substring. But I need the last substring even if it is less than 5.
I have to take a user's input and count the number of vowels in a String. If I start with a lowercase vowel it gets counted, but if I start with an uppercase or different letter I get nothing. Either way, I can not get the counter to go higher than 1.
import java.util.Scanner; public class countVowels { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner kb=new Scanner(System.in); System.out.println("Enter a sequence of letters:"); String letters=kb.next();
The problem asks me to write an expression whose value is the number of characters in a specific string. Normally, it would be a simple task of using the String.length() method, but that is not allowed. In fact, no variable declaration is allowed (it's a MyProgrammingLab assignment, if any are familiar).
Simply put, if I have a String "This is a sample string." is it possible to find the length without assigning it to anything?
In other words, the code must be able to go into the parentheses of System.out.println( ); and correctly print the length of said string.
The answer, for those curious:
System.out.println("This is a sample string.".length());
I didn't know the .length() method could be called on a literal. Now if only I could find out how to close this thread...
The String class stores the characters of the string internally as a private char[] and calling someString.length() results in getting the length field from the character array. I am looking to get the details on how the length is implemented. I understand it is a field, but in the original question I provide sample code and really want to know if/how the resulting byte code may differ when compiled, perhaps I am just not seeing the simple answer through my confusion.
So the exercise I'm working on says to have the user enter their name and the program will output their name with the last name in all caps. i made it work BUT the only way i could figure it out was to ask for the first and last names separately creating two strings rather than one.
Of course I want to make it work how it's supposed to (with one string) so that I'm learning. I'm just having trouble conceptualizing how exactly (with varying lengths of names) to tell the program to only capitalize the second word... at first I thought create a substring beginning with the first letter of the last name and ending with the last...but again, therein lies the issue of varying name lengths.
is there a way to create a substring that beginIndex's at the first "space"? then i could just leave the endIndex parameter empty and it would take the whole word into a new string. and from there utilize toUpperCase to the new string?
Here's my code asking for the first and last names separately.
import java.util.Scanner; class nameEcho { public static void main ( String [] args ) { Scanner scan = new Scanner( System.in ); String first; String last;
I'm very new to Java, and I'm writing a code to search a string to see how many times the word "dog" is found in it. I'm not sure if this is error-free or the most efficient, but I'd like to keep it simple.
public void run() {
String input = new String("The Dogman was no ordinary dog, nor man, but rather a peculiar dog-like man who barked like a dog, and panted like a dog, he even ate like a dog. He owned a dog named Doglips, and interestingly enough, his favorite food was hotdogs.");
println(input); int index = -1; int count = 0; print("Counting dogs:"); inputarray = input.split(" ");
What I need to do is ask the user to input some text and then turn it into pig latin. I am confused on how to select each word from the string to determine if it ends in a way or ay. I am to assume that the letters are all lowercase and the text ends with a period.
import java.util.Scanner; public class Trial { public static void main(String [ ] args) { Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
i want a simple,beginner program to accept a string from the user and display the longest word in the string.i thought of taking the length of the string and choosing the longest string.but if the user enters a big paragraph,how can i store each word in a variable??
I'm trying to find a word in an array of char.....but I'm stuck. How to formulate the code to step through the array and pick out the word. This is what I have so far...
public static void searchAcross(String string, char[][] puzzle) { // Gets the number of rows in the matrix int rowLength = puzzle.length; //Gets the number of columns in the matrix. int colLength = puzzle[0].length;
I want to make a method that takes a word and then checks if the word can be created from available letters. For example, if a word "johnson" can be created by using letters "jashoqwnon".
Now my goal is to make sure that if available letters contain a letter from the word, that letter is put into a String called result and then erased from the list of given letters. So, "johnson" and "jashoqwn" would produce the result "johns" and leave "aqw" unused.
Now the problem that I am facing is that I can't get Java not to use the same letter twice. So "johnson" and "jashoqwn" still gives "johnson".
I've tried everything in my power but I am missing something. Here is my code.
public static String makeAWord(String word, String letters){ String result = ""; for(int i = 0; i < word.length(); i++){ for(int j = 0; j < letters.length() ; j++){
I'm trying to convert the first letter of every word in a String to uppercase. I've managed to isolate the first letter of every word and then make it uppercase but I don't know how to replace it.
public static StringBuffer makeUpperCase(){ String str = String.valueOf(input2); for(int i = 0; i < str.length(); i++){ if(str.charAt(i) == ' '){ char var = str.charAt(i + 1); var = Character.toUpperCase(var); System.out.println(var); } }
I am trying to do is extract numbers that are in word format in a long String, i.e. a song, and return each of their numerical values, in order to add them all up. So I'd like to calculate the sum of all of the numbers in the text. This has to work for any piece of text and for all numbers up to a trillion.
So I broke the string down into tokens and stored them in a String []. And I divided up the possible numbers in word format into:
I believe that these are the only words that it will need to recognize. I began reading the tokenized string from right to left and then when I came across a unit, special or tens as the first number I hit, I would then set it's numerical value and check if the word before was also a number and whether to add or multiply etc. i.e. First number hit is a two, if the number before is sixty, then I would just add it to sixty and check the word before that and so on.
However, when implementing it, it seems like an extremely long way around it. How I could implement this in a swifter manner? An example of it working would be:
"Nine Million rockets turned Three times and met Twenty Two Aliens", it would extract, Twenty Two as 2, then 20 = 22, then extract Three as 3, and then Nine Million as 1,000,000 x 9 = 9,000,000
Consider in a Document if a String " Hello" is Encoded and stored as "XYZAB"
I want to search the text on document for a word "Hello" and Replace the word with "HelloWorld"
The Program will encrypt the word "Hello" and Search the file then return the encrypted code as "XYZAB" Found
Now i have to replace the word "Hello" with "HelloWorld" in encrypted form so that the Letter "XYZABEFGHI" is replace in the place of Hello where "World" is encoded as "EFGHI"
Now the Problem is If there is more number of occurrence of the word "Helloworld" exist in the file... How can i Replace only one particular occurrence What can be done to select the particular occurrence.
I have attached my java program for Encryption along with this mail for your ease of use.
I have included split() to put a string read from a given file into indexed array. Looking for a word position (not char position number in addition to the line number I have already written. Line number works fine, however word position isn't quite right.Below is my code:
import java.io.*; public class Word implements Comparable, TreeComparable{ String word; int count; int wordpos; ObjectList lines; private SuperOutput so;