3

I have a class defined as follows...

public class df {
    String dt;
    String datestring;

    public String df(String dtstring) throws Exception {
        dt=dtstring;
        SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
        Date inpdate = formatter.parse(dt);
        datestring = formatter.format(inpdate);
        Date outpdate = formatter.parse(datestring);
        SimpleDateFormat newformatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy");
        datestring = newformatter.format(outpdate);
        return datestring;
    }
}

I create instances of this class as follows, where rsnpos.getString(1) contains a date in yyyy-MM-dd format (e.g. 2010-01-01)...

new df(rsnpos.getString(1))

During compilation, I am getting the following error...

cannot find symbol
symbol  : constructor df(java.lang.String)
location: class df

I don't understand why this is happening, as I have defined a constructor as shown in my code. Could someone please assist me with this problem.

0

2 Answers 2

1

That's not a constructor... (constructors have an implicit "return type", the type of the class). That has an explicit return type, and is thus not a constructor, but a normal method named df.

Thus it is invalid when used as new df(...), which is exactly what the error message says. On the other hand, new df().df("x") would still "work" because of the default parameterless constructor and the method String df(String).

Note the updates to change it into a constructor:

public class df 
{

  String dt;
  String datestring;
  // Remove return type (and keep matched name) to make it a constructor.
  public df(String dtstring) throws Exception
  {
    dt=dtstring;
    ...
    datestring = newformatter.format(outpdate);
    // Constructors cannot "return"
    // return datestring;
  }

}

Please work on variable names and naming conventions and mutability redux :-)

0
1
public class df
     {
 String dt;
 String datestring;
 public df(String dtstring) throws Exception
        {
                dt=dtstring;
                SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
                Date inpdate = formatter.parse(dt);
                datestring = formatter.format(inpdate);
                Date outpdate = formatter.parse(datestring);
                SimpleDateFormat newformatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy");
                datestring = newformatter.format(outpdate);
        }
    }

See http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/constructors.html .

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.