Write A String Name Variable To Store Letters / Dotes And Spaces Only In Java?
Apr 5, 2014
I am trying to write a program and the name variable can only store letters,dotes and spaces. But whenever I enter a space, the program doesn't work. Following is my code.
import java.util.Scanner;
import java.util.*;
public class Space {
public static void main(String []args) {
Scanner reader = new Scanner(System.in);
Write a GUI program to convert all lowercase letters in a string to uppercase letters, and vice versa. For example, Alb34eRt will be converted to aLB34ErT.
Write a java program to store employee information in a linked list, the program should implement the following functions:
The program should display the list of functions, and ask the user to enter the number of function that he/she wants to do, then perform the function as it is required in the previous table.
import java.util.*; public class Employee { Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in); String Name; String Address; String Department; int ID; int Salary;
[code]....
this is my out put
Please choose a number: 1-Add a new employee 2-Update employee's info 3-Remove employee's info 4-Exit 1 Enter name: Enter address: 2 Enter department: 3 Enter ID: 4 Enter salary:
now:
1- why are not my adding coming out in the output only the Enter name & Enter address ??
2- how can I add names and ID's and information to test that program
How can I write a method that takes a string with duplicates letters and returns the same string which does not contain duplicates. For example, if you pass it radar, it will return rad. Also i would like to know how can I Write a method that takes as parameters the secret word and the good guesses and returns a string that is the secretword but has dashes in the places where the player has not yet guessed that letter. For example, if the secret word is radar and the player has already guessed the good guesses letters r and d, the method will return r-d-r.
I am trying to split a string into a String[] tokens array to declare variables for an object; however, I'm having an issue getting the string to tokenize correctly. Here's an example of the input:
a : 100 : John Smith : 20 Main St. a : 101 : Mary Jones : 32 Brook Rd.
Here is the basic code I have now, to properly sort each line of text, etc. (without the split() method):
Java Code:
while (scanner.hasNextLine()) { currentLine = scanner.nextLine(); lineScan = new Scanner(currentLine); if (currentLine.startsWith("/") || currentLine.trim().isEmpty()) continue;
[Code] ....
I was able to eliminate the comments and identifiers from the text by trimming the first two characters of the string. For the split, I tried String[] tempArray = currentLine.split("s+"); however, that also took the spaces out of the addresses and names...so the results looked like this:
100 John Smith 20 Main St.
As you can see, it splits via space regardless, including where I replaced all the :'s with spaces. Is there any way to do this?
I am working on a small brain teaser project where I am taking a string input from a Scanner, and turning into ascii. The problem comes into play when the string has a space in it, so if the question is what's your name? and you say Michael Jackson, Michael gets converted then Jackson becomes the answer to the next question, rather then the second portion of the current string.
This is an older version of what I'm doing currently, but it had the same basic problem with spaces.I will say I did my current version entirely different.
nner user_input = new Scanner (System.in); //Creates a string String favoriteFlick; System.out.println("Enter the title of your favorite film?"); favoriteFlick = user_input.next();
double sum = a + b + c; System.out.printf("Sum = %d", sum);
Heres the error I'm getting
Enter three positive integers separated by spaces, then press enter: 15 20 9
Sum = Exception in thread "main" java.util.IllegalFormatConversionException: d != java.lang.Double at java.util.Formatter$FormatSpecifier.failConversion(Unknown Source) at java.util.Formatter$FormatSpecifier.printInteger(Unknown Source) at java.util.Formatter$FormatSpecifier.print(Unknown Source) at java.util.Formatter.format(Unknown Source) at java.io.PrintStream.format(Unknown Source) at java.io.PrintStream.printf(Unknown Source) at project2.main(project2.java:52)
1. The words remain in their places but the letters are reversed. Eg I love you becomes Ievol uoy 2. The words are also reversed. Eg I love you becomes uoy evol IWrite a program that use the java String class methods.
I was wondering how can I calculate total age in months and store it as variable? this is what I have so far:
* * You will ask the user to provide their name (as a single word, assume first name here) * You will ask the user their age in full years (no fraction or months) * You will ask the user how many full months since their last birthday (again, whole numbers here). * * You will use this information to calculate the user's age in months and use that information to print out a greeting. */ import java.util.Scanner;
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++){
How to do this editing the last 3 letters of a string that i retrieve from database.. I have a string "111-222-333-000" here's the sample what i want to happen was to edit the last 3 letters of the string ,,
i insert into database "111-222-333-000" then i retrieve it for editing but what i want to happen is when i retrieve it what i can only edit was the last 3 strings only
I started using Java a couple of days ago, If you haven't guessed I want to see if the user is typing a full name or not, but I'm actually not too concerned with any more complexity than I mentioned in the title. It's ok if an input like "GLba b" comes out positive.
Start with the tree.java program (Listing 8.1) and modify it to create a binary tree from a string of letters (like A, B, and so on) entered by the user. Each letter will be displayed in its own node. Construct the tree so that all the nodes that contain letters are leaves. Parent nodes can contain some non-letter symbol like +. Make sure that every parent node has exactly two children. Don’t worry if the tree is unbalanced. Note that this will not be a search tree; there’s no quick way to find a given node. You may end up with something like this:
It also says all Letters must be Leaves
Now I had it almost similar to that picture, but it wasn't right. So ive been working on it but im getting some very strange (and frustrating) output from the following methods.
Ive included the display method just for reference. The book told me to use it so I haven't edited it. I believe my main issue is with my (incomplete) insert() method. The output goes into an infinite loop despite having a return statement break the while loop when a character is inserted.
The way I see to solve the problem is just add a (+) whenever a new subtree needs to be created. Say I add A and B, then it first creates a subtree at the root with a (+) and afterwards lists A and B as its leaves. If I insert a C, it should be able to simply move to the right child of the root and deposit the C there.
Write a method named secondHalfLetters that accepts a string as its parameter and returns an integer representing how many of letters in the string come from the second half of the alphabet (that is, have values of 'n' through 'z' inclusive). Compare case-insensitively, such that uppercase values of 'N' through 'Z' also count. For example, the call secondHalfLetters("ruminates") should return 5 because the 'r', 'u', 'n', 't', and 's' come from the second half of the alphabet. You may assume that every character in the string is a letter.
I do not know how to read a name which has spaces in Java and I wish to learn. The following is my code
import java.util.*; public class Asking { public static void main(String []args) { Scanner reader = new Scanner(System.in); String [] names = new String[20]; int [] marks = new int[20];
My method below works fine to print a matrix but when it prints every row, it is printing extra 4 white spaces which is not required. How can I delete those extra spaces at the end? when I use
My method below works fine to print a matrix but when it prints every row, it is printing extra 4 white spaces which is not required. How can I delete those extra spaces at the end? when I use
I have a JFrame jf and JPanel jp on it. jp has five TextFields named cel1, cel2.. cel5. I wish to construct a String Cel + for loop index and run a for loop to reset the values of all the text fields using a single statement such as cel1.SetText("abc"). Similar things can be done in foxfro. How does one do it in java?
so i'm following a java tutorial from the book and it has a few challenge questions. and i'm stucked on one. i think i just don't understand what is it that its asking me. heres the question, Write a statement that reads a user's input integer into the defined variable, and a second statement that prints the integer. assuming scanner is given, and i checked my heading code is ok.
Scanner scnr = new Scanner(System.in); int userNum = 0; System.out.println("What is the product of 8 time 2"); userNum = scnr.nextInt();
This is the first time we are using 2 different classes. This is the code I have so far. What I am having trouble is doing the calculations and storing the value into the planet the user selected and keeping it going. I will attach the instructions ....
public class FakeGravity{ // Instance variables private String planet; private int VelocityDecay; private double BouncinessFactor; // default constructor public FakeGravity(){