While shuffling an array, if I use Collections.shuffle(), there is a chance that an element in a particular index in the input array can be present in the same index in the output array. Is there an existing method that handles that too? If not, how can I best handle it? After shuffling, will swapping every element with the last element work?
I have a couple more (2or3) and I believe I'll be ready to go 8-)This one is about an Army and a list of warriors... for example 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,9,10 .... and the user inputs points for two sequences, for example 1, 5 and 6,10 .... That means I have to take the array from the 1st element, up to the 5th one, and swap it with the elements from 6to10....
The nest list should be:
6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5
Things to keep in mind: The list will always have at least two warriors. The intervals will never interfere, and will at least contain ONE warrior..
It says: be careful when the intervals are next to each other, and when be careful when an interval starts with the first warrior, or finishes with the last warrior.
so my task is to write a code which would ask user to input the year as integer and first three letters of the month with first being an upper case letter. Than the program would determine the number of days for given year and month.
Currently I have a brain crash on how to check, if the user has provided the month with first character being upper Case. If not, than the program would automatically correct the character. Problem starts at line 17.
import java.util.Scanner;
public class DaysOfMonth4_17 { public static void main (String[] args) { //Initiate scanner Scanner input = new Scanner (System.in); //Ask for year input and use is as INT System.out.println("Enter the year");
the number of occurrences of a specified character in a string...i tried to do the program occurrences in a given string and i tried the code as below.
code:
import java.util.*; public class Occurrence { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
I have to create a code that can calculate the number of upper case letters in a string that is entered by the user (below.)
Java Code:
import javax.swing.JOptionPane; public class mainClass { public static void main (String [] args) { String userInput; userInput = JOptionPane.showInputDialog("Enter a string.");
[Code] ....
My issue is that I would like the program to be able to function properly when spaces are entered into the string. As it is right now, I believe it is only processing the first string entered into the input box.
Which string method to search a particular character in a string whether a particular character is there or not . Suppose my String is like............
String s = "Java.";
How I can find the character " . " in above string "Java." is present or not . What is the string method to search that "."
What should be the code if i want to input a different string in case of the typed string. The case is : I have a predefined string S = "Peter,please answer my question" and now when i input another string inside the text field character by character i want characters from the string S to enter instead of the input string. In short, the input string should be disguised as string S.
Here i want to print the String from Starting character which is given by user..Here i given below the image like my concept..here we put .(dot and enter R)eclipse will print the method name which is starting from R..
I have to write some code to take names from the user and then order them in alphabetical order and then print them out which i have managed to do. However, i can't get it to count the characters in the names that the user enters or count the amount of vowels in the names.
This is the code ive written:
import javax.swing.JOptionPane; import java.util.Arrays; String[] names = new String[9]; int i; names[0] = JOptionPane.showInputDialog("Please enter a name"); names[1] = JOptionPane.showInputDialog("Please enter a name");
As you notice, each character is seperated by a hyphen (serving as its delimiter). I want to only go through 10 lines in the text, instead of all 20 of them. So, I wrote the program in such a way that I intend to reach into the indices of each character in the text file. Since there are six characters in each line so that means there are 6 indices - and there are 10 lines I only want to go through. So, 6 indices times 10 lines equals 60 indices. Hence, there are only 60 indices I need to go through. In that manner, it's like I have gone through only 10 lines through that way.
It compiled perfectly fine but upon running it, I ran through an error in the black DOS screen that says
"java.lang.ArrayIndexOutofBoundsException: 6 ".
How do I work around that?
The code I wrote is shown below...
import java.io.*; import java.util.*; public class hotandcoldclusterdeterminer_test { public static void main (String args [])throws IOException {
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.
Write a program using a while-loop (and a for-loop) that asks the user to enter a string, and then asks the user to enter a character. The program should count and display the number of times that the specified character appears in the string. (So, you will have two separate program codes, one using a while-loop and the other one using a for-loop.)
Example: Enter a string: "Hello, JAVA is my favorite programming language." Enter a character: e The number of times the specified character appears in the string: 3
I don't even know where to begin I've only got this
import java.util.Scanner; public class letterCounter { public static void main(String [] args) { Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.println("Enter a string"); String myString = sc.nextLine(); System.out.println("Enter a letter"); String letter = sc.nextLine(); } }
I wrote a program to read a .txt file and return how many times a, e, s, and t occur in the .txt file. I am getting an error that I do not know how to fix. It says Error: FileNotFoundException cannot be resolved to a type...
import java.util.Scanner; import java.io.File; import java.io.IOException; import java.io.BufferedReader; public class Count { public static void main (String[] args) throws FileNotFoundException { String phrase; // a string of characters
I use Eclipse (kepler version, with JDK 7) on MacBook Pro (Lion).I want to overwrite a line printed on my console. I used "" for that. I was expecting the cursor to go to the beginning of the line. Instead, it is going to the next line.