I am getting the error "Line 54, illegal start of expression". Line 54 is where my "for" starts. It was running ok earlier, now I can't get this error to go away?
Lines 7 , 10 ,13 .... All have a Illegal Start of Expression error.
[color=blue]private void jButton1ActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) { Random rd = new Random(); int random = 0; random=rd.nextInt(6)+1; switch(random){
why the complier is giving the following error message "illegal start of expression" once it reach the countSpaces method.The way I see it (and I am obviously seeing it wrong), the code is public since why not, int since it returns an int # and the method has return int in it, and static I am not too sure but I get the same error message whether or not it is included
public static void main (String args[]) { Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in); String sentence; System.out.println("type a sentence"); sentence = in.nextLine(); countSpaces (sentence);
Why does this not work? I get an ']' expected at the y in the fourth line of code and an illegal start of an expression at the actual ] in the same line
int y = 0; JTextField response[] = new JTextField[10]; while(y < 10) { JTextField response[y] = new JTextField(7); add(response[y]); response[y].addItemListener(this); ++y; }
Here is my program and results and I am having a error on line 38 which is "public static long fib01(long paramLong)" The program does give me my results but I am trying to correct there error.
public static void main(String[] args) { { System.out.print("
" + String.format("%-10s", new Object[] { "Index" })); System.out.print(String.format("%-15s", new Object[] { "Fibonacci01" })); System.out.print(String.format("%-15s", new Object[] { "Fibonacci02" })); System.out.println(String.format("%-15s", new Object[] { "Fibonacci01" }));
I'm working on a program and can't seem to fix my for loop error.I get an error at the for loop line saying illegal start of expression and i don't know how to fix it:
/* * To change this license header, choose License Headers in Project Properties. * To change this template file, choose Tools | Templates * and open the template in the editor. */
I need to know why this program is giving me error (illegal start of expression). What must i do to stop the error?
//Read a character from keyboard class Kbin{ public static void main(String[]args){ throws java.io.IOException{ char ch;
System.out.print( " Press a key followed by ENTER: "); ch = (char) System.in.read();//read character from keyboard System.out.println( "Your key is: " + ch); } } }
public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner Keyboard = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.print("Please enter your name."); String name = Keyboard.next(); name = "name";
I'm attempting to create a program that employs a method to count the number of 7s a user puts as an input into the program. I'm just getting started, but I'm getting an error when I try to implement a main method that says "Illegal start of expression"
What adjustments could I make to eliminate this error message?
// Add a main method here. public static void main(String[] args) { //Error occurs here public static int countSevens(int n) { // 0. Clean-up. Get rid of any minus signs as that is not a digit. n = Math.abs(n);
I'm working through Head First Java, and I'm struggling with the chapter 6 magnet exercise on page 161. I've checked my answer countless times, and it appears to match the book's code, but when I try to run it on my computer I'm getting an error. It says:
error: <identifier> expected System.out.println^(" "); and
error: illegal start of type System.out.println(^" ");, both for line 32.
I cannot seem to figure out what is different about my code!!
import java.util.*;
public class ArrayListMagnet { public static void main (String [] args) { ArrayList<String> a = new ArrayList<String>(); a.add (0, "zero"); a.add(1, "one"); a.add(2, "two"); a.add(3, "three");
[Code] .....
Also, I'm not sure if this has anything to do with the above errors, but I'm getting a third error message for line 34 saying:
I accidentally wrote a code differently than what I should've, and I got these errors :
"Illegal modifier for parameter a; only final is permitted" "Illegal modifier for parameter b; only final is permitted" "Illegal modifier for parameter c; only final is permitted"
The code that I wrote and gave these errors:
Java Code:
class Math { public static void main(String[] args) { static int a = 11; static int b = 35; static int c = 29; //the rest of the code below
[Code] ....
I noticed that I can declare "static int" only under "class Math" and not under "public static void main".(I had to remove "static" if declaring int under "public static void main");
I have a enum class which contains some string which i am comparing to a string i get from a user
Java Code:
public enum Compare { a, b, c, d, e, f } class SomeClass { String method(String letter){ Compare word= Compare.valueOf(letter); } } mh_sh_highlight_all('java');
Everything works fine but when I added a new word to it like "g" it throws the IllegalArgumentException ?
I am attempting to create a very simple game where two squares move around and each can see the other square moving. This is a multi-player game over a TCP network using JavaFX. I am getting an illegal state exception when I call requestFocus(). This is my server:
public class GameServer extends Application { ObjectOutputStream p1out; ObjectOutputStream p2out; int PLAYER1 = 1; int PLAYER2 = 2;
I understand that the following is an example of valid reference in java. I also understand that at class creation, first i and j are initialized to 0. j is then re-initialized to 5, as a result of which i's value is 0 and j's is 5 inside main.
class J { static int test() { return j; } static int i = test();
[Code] ....
But why is the same not true for the following ? Why is it that i and j are not initialized to the default value of 0 in this case and gives an illegal forward reference?
class test { static int i = j; static int j=5; public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(i); System.out.println(j); } }
Why is it legal forward reference when using a method, and illegal when pretty much the same thing is done using a variable ?
I've come across an interesting problem when using a Jcombobox as a custom cell editor(and renderer) in a jtable. I was hoping to add a keybinding in order to display the dropdown of the combobox instead of having to click on it however, when I make a call to showPopup() I get:
Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" java.awt.IllegalComponentStateException: component must be showing on the screen to determine its location Which is strange as my jtable is visible and the editor/renderer seems to be working fine.
Here's the cell editor + renderer I'm using:
class MyComboBoxRenderer extends JComboBox implements TableCellRenderer { public MyComboBoxRenderer(String[] items) { super(items); } public Component getTableCellRendererComponent(JTable table, Object value, boolean isSelected, boolean hasFocus, int row, int column) { if (isSelected) { setForeground(table.getSelectionForeground());
public class pracDraw extends JFrame { private Color red=Color.red; public int i; private Color white = Color.white; JPanel pr=new JPanel(); JTextField t=new JTextField();
[code]....
If u run it you can see that the JTextField (t1) is drawn on the panel along the line but it does so with a gray border. How do i eliminate that grey border and only draw the text field along the line and finally make the text field green after it reaches the end of line?
So, I have a gameOver() method that should when oval goes out of bounds abort game but, as soon as I start the game it runs the gameOver method. I've been looking over it for a while trying different things. I think what stood out to me is removing the abort sequence the game runs mostly as it should after, popup is closed and that if I replace game.gameOver(); with ya = -1 the ball bounces off the wall.