Building Java Programs

Lab 5.5: Random numbers, boolean logic, and midterm practice

Except where otherwise noted, the contents of this document are Copyright 2010 Stuart Reges and Marty Stepp.

lab document created by Whitaker Brand and Marty Stepp

Today's lab

Goals for today:

Recall: Random Methods

To use these methods, you need a variable of type Random in scope:

Random randy = new Random();
int aRandomNumber = randy.nextInt(10);  // 0-9
Method name Returns...
nextInt() a random integer
nextInt(max) a random integer between 0 (inclusive) and max (exclusive)
nextDouble() a random real number between 0.0 and 1.0
nextBoolean() a random boolean value: true or false

Exercise : Random Expressions

Example: a random integer from 1 to 5 inclusive: rand.nextInt(5) + 1
a random integer from 0 to 3 inclusive: rand.nextInt(4)
a random integer from 5 to 10 inclusive: rand.nextInt(6) + 5
a random integer from -4 to 4 inclusive: rand.nextInt(9) - 4
a random even integer from 16 to 28 inclusive:
(Hint: To get only even numbers, scale up.)
rand.nextInt(7) * 2 + 16

Exercise : Boolean Expressions

Write the result of each expression as either true or false, given the following variables. Recall the logical operators: && (and), || (or), ! (not).

int x = 12;
int y = 7;
int z = 28;
String s = "mid term";
x < 14
true
!(x % 2 < 1)
false
x < y || x < z
true
z / x < x / y * x
true
s.length() == y
false
s.toUpperCase().equals("MID TERM")
true
!s.equals("mid term") || x * y != z
true
s.substring(z / x).length() > y
false

Exercise : "Boolean Zen" practice-it

This attempted solution to Self-Check 5.15 (isVowel) has several problems:

// Returns whether the given string represents a vowel:
// a, e, i, o, or u, case insensitively.
public static boolean isVowel(String s) {
    if (s == "a") {
        return true;
    } else if (s == "e") {
        return true;
    } else if (s == "i") {
        return true;
    } else if (s == "o") {
        return true;
    } else if (s == "u") {
        return true;
    } else {
        return false;
    }
}

Open Practice-It from the link above, copy/paste this code into it, then see the next slide.

Exercise - things to fix

Fix the following aspects of the code:

Exercise - answer

public static boolean isVowel(String s) {
    s = s.toLowerCase();
    if (s.equals("a") || s.equals("e") || s.equals("i")
            || s.equals("o") || s.equals("u")) {
        return true;
    } else {
        return false;
    }
}

The above can be improved. "Boolean Zen" version:

public static boolean isVowel(String s) {
    s = s.toLowerCase();
	return s.equals("a") || s.equals("e") || s.equals("i")
	        || s.equals("o") || s.equals("u");
}

Exercise : makeGuesses practice-it

Write a method named makeGuesses that will output random numbers between 1 and 50 inclusive until it outputs one of at least 48. Output each guess and the total number of guesses made. Below is a sample execution:

guess = 43
guess = 47
guess = 45
guess = 27
guess = 49
total guesses = 5

Try solving this problem in Practice-It! from the link above.

Exercise : assertions practice-it

Identify whether each assertion is always/never/sometimes true at each point.

x > y z == 0 x == y
A
B
C
D
E
public static void mystery(int x, int y) {
    int z = 0;

    // Point A
    while (x != y) {
        // Point B
        z++;

        if (x > y) {
            // Point C
            x = x / 10;
        } else {
            // Point D
            y = y / 10;
        }
    }

    // Point E
    System.out.println(x + " " + y + " " + z);
}

Exercise : allDigitsOdd practice-it

Write a method named allDigitsOdd that returns whether every digit of a positive integer is odd. Your method should return true if the number consists entirely of odd digits and false if any of its digits are even. 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 are even digits, and 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 are odd digits.

For example, allDigitsOdd(135319) returns true but allDigitsOdd(9145293) returns false.

Hint: You can pull apart a number into its digits using / 10 and % 10.

Exercise : hopscotch practice-it

Write a method named hopscotch that accepts an integer parameter for a number of "hops" and prints a hopscotch board of that many hops.

For example, the call hopscotch(3); would produce the following output:

   1
2     3
   4
5     6
   7
8     9
   10

Try solving this problem in Practice-It: click on the check-mark above!

Exercise : hasMidpoint practice-it

Write a method hasMidpoint that accepts three integers as parameters, and returns true if one of the numbers is the midpoint of the other two and returns false otherwise.

For example, the call hasMidpoint(3, 7, 5) would return true because one of the parameters (5) is the midpoint of the other two (3 and 7).

Try to solve this problem in Practice-It: click on the check-mark above!

Exercise : longestName practice-it

Write a method named longestName that reads names typed by the user and prints the longest name (the name that contains the most characters) in the format shown below. Your method should accept a console Scanner and an integer n as parameters and should then prompt for n names.

A sample execution of the call longestName(console, 4) might look like the following:

name #1? roy
name #2? DANE
name #3? sTeFaNiE
name #4? Erik
Stefanie's name is longest

Try to solve this problem in Practice-It: click on the check-mark above!

If you finish them all...

If you finish all the exercises, try out our Practice-It web tool. It lets you solve Java problems from our Building Java Programs textbook.

You can view an exercise, type a solution, and submit it to see if you have solved it correctly.

Choose some problems from the Sample Midterm Exams and try to solve them!