1

I'm working on a project to simulate a car. The requirements are to demonstrate the operation of a car by filling it with fuel and then run the car until it has no more fuel. Simulate the process of filling and running the car at different speeds. As the car is running, periodically print out the car’s current mileage, amount of fuel and speed.

I wrote some other classes to hold some methods that I will use to calculate the fuel, speed, and mileage. I'm just having a little trouble on how I should go about making it work like an actual car would, any help would be appreciated.

public class FuelGauge {

protected double fuel;

public FuelGauge()
{
    fuel = 0.0;
}

public double getFuel() 
{
    return fuel;
}

public void setFuel(double fuel) 
{
    this.fuel = fuel;
}

public void fuelUp()
{
    if(fuel<18)
    fuel++;     
}

public void fuelDown()
{
    if(fuel>0)
        fuel--;
}

}

public class Odometer extends FuelGauge {

private int mileage, mpg;
private int economy;


public int getMileage()
{
    return mileage;
}

public void setMileage(int mileage)
{
    this.mileage = mileage;
}

public int getMpg() 
{
    return mpg;
}

public void setMpg(int mpg)
{
    this.mpg = mpg;
}

public void mileUp()
{
    if(mileage<999999)
        mileage++;
}

public void mileReset()
{
    if(mileage>999999)
        mileage = 0;
}

public void decreaseFuel(int fuel)
{
    if(mileage == mpg)
        fuelDown();
}

public int getEconomy()
{
    return (int) (mileage/fuel);
}

public void setEconomy(int economy) 
{
    this.economy = economy;
}

}

public class Car extends Odometer{

private String name;
private int speed;  

 public Car()
    {
        name = "Car";
        getMileage();
        getMpg();
        getEconomy();
        getFuel();
    }

public String getName() 
{
    return name;
}

public void setName(String name)
{
    this.name = name;
}

public int getSpeed() 
{
    return speed;
}

public void setSpeed(int speed) 
{
    this.speed = speed;
}

public void increaseSpeed()
{
    if(speed<=120)
        speed++;
}

public void decreaseSpeed()
{
    if(speed>0)
        speed--;
}

}

1
  • Did you mean to post FuelGauge() twice? I get the feeling one of them should have been Odometer() Nov 21, 2012 at 3:55

3 Answers 3

5

I would more recommend the contains vs isa relationship for the components of your car.

class FuelGauge { ... }
class Odometer { ...}

class Vehicle { ... }

class Car extends Vehicle
{
   private FuelGauge fuelGauge = new FuelGauge();
   private Odometer odometer = new Odometer();

   ...
}
1
  • 1
    precisely. Unless OP think that it is reasonable to think "A car IS A Fuel Gauge" Nov 21, 2012 at 4:31
1

Well, here are some suggestions:

  • Start the car.
  • Pull out from your driveway; if that's not needed, start driving
  • If you plan to drive at a fixed speed, you can calculate how long the ride would take in advantage, and just use a loop to update the distance and fuel; otherwise, you can store a set of speeds in an array, use a loop, and pass the variable speeds on each iteration (this might be a little hard to calculate how much fuel is left)



Hope that helps the inspiration running.

2
  • thanks for the input, I will probably try using a loop and have the car at one constant speed and display the fuel and mileage.
    – Mike
    Nov 21, 2012 at 4:25
  • That's good; do upvote the answer if you feel it helped. Thanks. Nov 21, 2012 at 4:43
0

Here is the design of your car simulator application :

  • Identify Car class which will have odometer reading, current fuel inside tank etc as the instance variables.
  • Write a thread which continuously run with some sleep time of 100 millis or so for every iteration and inside the thread's run method you deal with the logic of incresing the odometer reading and decreasing the fuel in some proportion. make sure that your thread will run till the fuel in tank is greater than 0. if in case you can raise an event or alarm just in cse the fuel is below a certain constant.
  • Write the main class to initiate the class with full tank fuel (may be 40 ltrs a constant) and odometer reading to 0 and then start the thread.

Hope this is helpful.

-KishoreMadina

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.