Is it a good idea to use the date and time with the first or last few values of the session ID. Or should I just use the complete session ID value for my "unique id"?
My project is writing a program that generates a series of numbers to appear like a social security number (XXX-XX-XXXX). My code runs.. But any number below 10 it just shows one number (XXX-X-XXXX). What do I need to enter in to my code so that if the number is <10 it will show (00,01,02,03....)?
Java Code:
import java.util.Random; public class IDnumber { public static void main (String[] args) { Random generator = new Random() int num1 = (generator.nextInt(7) + 1) * 100 + (generator.nextInt(8) * 10) + generator.nextInt(8); int num2 = generator.nextInt(74); int num3 = generator.nextInt(10000); String IDnumber = num1 + "-" + num2 + "-" + num3; System.out.println(IDnumber); } } mh_sh_highlight_all('java');
I have a problem in generating reports using java code. I created a report using iReport 5.5.0 with MySql Database connection. In iReports, it shows the correct output while previewing it. Then i copied my .jrxml file and pasted it into my netbeans project folder(..sample/web/WEB-INF/sample.jrxml) and then i added the required jar files in my project's library folder. i am generating the report in netbeans using jsp and servlet. THE REPORT IS GENERATING AND SAVED SUCCESSFULLY IN MY DESKTOP. BUT IT DOESN'T GENERATE THE REPORT FOR FIRST RESULT. For Example.., if i generating report based on a particular date. After executing the query, it returns 4 results. So it has to create the reports in 4 pages. But it generates the report for last 3 pages only. It doesn't generate the report for first page. I have attached my .jrxml file servlet file for your reference.
I have been set this task, which is supposed to make me code using string arrays. The idea is to generate random sentences.This is what i have been able to do so far :
package usingarraysagain; public class sentences { public static void main (String[] args){ String[] NOUNS = { "lizards", "Nikola Tesla",
"which code is best for randomly generating integer 0 or 1". Haven't gotten my grade back yet but in reading these during the test I didn't think any of these would kick out both of those numbers, but there was no "none of the above" option on the test.This is exactly how it appeared on the test:
A) (int)Math.random() + 1 B) (int)(Math.random() + 0.2) C) (int)Math.random() D) (int)(Math.random() + 0.8) E) (int)(Math.random() + 0.5)
I've tried all of them in the cs lab 100 times each and none of them generated both numbers. 'A' kicked out 1 every time. 'B,D and E' kicked out 0.2, 0.8 and 0.5 respectively each time, and 'C' kicked out 0. Did I just not run them enough times for the result to change or am I right in thinking there's a glitch on the test?
I am trying to change this code to use only integers to calculate the compound interest.
// Compound-interest calculations with for.
public class Interest { public static void main( String args[] ) { double amount; // amount on deposit at end of each year double principal = 1000.0; // initial amount before interest double rate = 0.05; // interest rate
[Code] .....
And here is the output I get :
Why do I get the output after year 2? I assume it has something to do with the remainder.
I also have to format this output with the decimal point, etc.. which I think I will be ok with after I get through this part.
I've been trying to find the easiest way to write to generate a number which is between intervals of a arbitrary min and a max value.I've been searching for this but I don't find this particular thing.I've found that this combination works:
I am very new to programming. This is for a college assignment. It says in the brief of the assignment that we will need to convert Math.random to output a random number between 1-1000. How can I do this?
I am working on a bingo project and created random numbers between 1 and 75 to generate. I have it set up that it shows the number in a text box and changes the color on the board if the number is called. When I test the program, some numbers are highlighted in addition to the number called. I believe this is because extra numbers are being chosen, but not being noted in the text box. Below is my code for the unique random numbers.
int CallNo; String CallerTxt = new String(); public void CallNum() { Random RandCall = new Random(); //Generate Caller Random Number CallNo = RandCall.nextInt(75)+1;
The program I'm supposed to create generates a random number between one to ten. Then the program is to ask me if I wish to cross the road.
If you choose to cross, the outcomes for 0-2 are "You crossed safely."
For 3-5, 75% of the time it should say "RIP you got run over", and 35% of the time it should say "You crossed the street."
For 6-8, 60% of the time it should say you made it.", and 40% of the time it should say "You died". For 9-10, it should say "RIP".
So far I have gotten the random number generation part working,
import java.util.Random; public class test4 { public static void main(String[] args) { Random random = new Random(); for(int i =0; i < 1; i++){ int num = random.nextInt(10) + 1; System.out.println("The number of cars on the street are: " + num + " Do you wish to cross the road?"); } } }
After generating a. JAR with Netbeans Java, when I play I see the colors of the components, the design and formatting is lost and the form gets a very basic formatting, for example, if I set a button with the color [0, 40.255] and build the. JAR after this, when I run the. JAR this button turns gray, and it happens with all the layout of the form.
I am trying to iterate through all combinations of characters given a length n with the added notion that all characters are numerical (0-9).e.g I have been given n = 5. The I want to iterate through all combinations starting with "00000" and ending with "99999". My first instinct was to just have a for loop like the following:
for(int i= 0; i<99999; i++){ // extra code here }
but obviously this does not a account for combinations such as "00010".
After generating a. JAR with Netbeans Java, when I play I see the colors of the components, the design and formatting is lost and the form gets a very basic formatting, for example, if I set a button with the color [0, 40.255] and build the. JAR after this, when I run the. JAR this button turns gray, and it happens with all the layout of the form.
i'm trying to make a random card shuffler but the output would sometimes have same value multiple times. For example it might print out A5 at the fifth index then print out A5 again as the 32 index.
So I an assignment in Java to write a code which will randomly populate squares in a Tic Tac Toe Board. I pretty much have it I think, but I cannot get the 'O' to appear on the board, some squares will be blank. We were told to use the Random utility to generate the squares. I am attaching the .gif's which are used. Here is my code:
import javax.swing.*; import java.awt.*; import java.util.Random; public class LandryTicTacToe extends JFrame { /** * */ private static final long serialVersionUID = -8781512780135301721L; private final int HEIGHT = 450;//Set value for Height private final int WIDTH = 500;//Set value for Width private static JButton [] button = new JButton[9];//Declare array of Buttons
Display a frame that contains nine labels, arranged like a Tic Tac Toe board. A label may display an image icon for X, an image icon for O, or nothing. Display images randomly in each label. Use the Random class to generate 0, 1, or 2, which corresponds to displaying an X image, an O image, or nothing.
I have an EJB project which is deployed in Webaphere 7 and i do not have source code for that project.I know the EJB session bean class name, can i generate the client for this class/project to invoke the session bean?
For part of my program, I am trying to ask the user for input on generating a number of random characters. I have already done this with integers and doubles, how would I do this for characters using ASCII values? Would I use the same format as I did for generating integers (Shown in code)?
import java.util.Random; import java.util.Scanner; public class NewNumberCharacter { public static void main(String[] args) { // Create a Scanner Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
I am designing simple app which would store data about users and generate standard letter and print sun ray card for this user. I know how to build UI, how to validate it etc. I know how to store data in database, but I don't know how to deal printing.
I have MS doc template documents they contain jpg pictures, and unusual formatting Is there a way of actually pulling those templates and do the merge and perform print operation? If it is not easily done, what else I could do? I would need to have option to easily edit those templates in case of any changes.
I'm trying to generate a multicoloured brick wall as part of an assignment using BlueJ.
According to the instructions we've been given, once the wall is set up and we invoke the draw() method, if we invoke the toggleMultiColoured method the bricks will go from being all read to a mix of 6 different colours...
...When I invoke the toggleMultiColoured method, however, the wall I generate is still red.
Here's the source code for the BrickWall class I wrote:
Java Code:
public class BrickWall { private int bWidth; private int bHeight; private int numRows; private int rowLength; private ArrayList<String> colors; private ArrayList<Rectangle> bricks;
I'm stuck with a problem. The code below generates a coloured image.
//Setting the size of the graphics window final int WINDOW_DIMENSION = 200; final int SIZE_FACTOR = 3; EasyGraphics generate = new EasyGraphics(WINDOW_DIMENSION*SIZE_FACTOR,WINDOW_DIMENSION*SIZE_FACTOR);
//Constructing the arrays char[][] firstArray = new char[WINDOW_DIMENSION][WINDOW_DIMENSION]; char[] secondArray = scan.toCharArray();
[Code] ...
What I would like to do is generate a picture which is mostly white but the colour boundaries of the original picture are in black. I tried using the code below but it doesn't produce what I wanted.
for (int a = 1; a < WINDOW_DIMENSION; a++) { for (int b = 1; b < WINDOW_DIMENSION; b++) { generate.setColor(0,0,0); if(firstArray[a][b]!=firstArray[a-1][b] || firstArray[a][b]!=firstArray[a][b-1]) generate.setColor(255,255,255); generate.plot(a,b); } }
Am facing a very strange issue. While trying to compile a very simple Hello World java program, the compilation completes successfully without any error or warning, but it does not generate the class file.
It happens when I compile with a particular jar file, otherwise compiling only the program (or with any other jar) does generate the class file. I am using java 1.7.0_45.