0

This class contains list of Rectangles and I need to find rectangle with smallest area.

I've found that need to compare rectangles by area, but it has the double precision. I understand that my comparison remember the last one, but how we can do this checking here?

Code:

   /**
    * Gets the Rectangle with the smallest area
    * @return the rectangle with the smallest area or null if
    * there are no rectangles
    */
   public Rectangle smallestArea()
   {        
       if (list.size() == 0) return null;

       Rectangle smallest = list.get(0);           
       double smallestArea = smallest.getWidth() * smallest.getHeight();

       for (int i = 1; i < list.size(); i++) {
           Rectangle next = list.get(i);
           double nextArea = next.getWidth() * next.getHeight();

           if ((nextArea - smallestArea) < 0) smallest = next;             
       }

       return smallest;
   }

How to solve this issue?

4
  • 1
    why don't you try simple comparative ooperators?
    – rptwsthi
    Aug 30, 2013 at 7:11
  • @rptwsthi this didn't work correctly
    – catch23
    Aug 30, 2013 at 7:14
  • How about implementing comparable in your rectangle class ? Aug 30, 2013 at 7:16
  • @nazar_art You have also to keep saved/updated the smallestArea you have found because as written as it is, you are just comparing all rectangle areas to the 1st rectangle area in the list
    – araknoid
    Aug 30, 2013 at 7:17

7 Answers 7

1

You should update smallestArea local variable as well (one line more in your code):

   public Rectangle smallestArea()
   {        
       if (list.size() == 0) return null;

       Rectangle smallest = list.get(0);           
       double smallestArea = smallest.getWidth() * smallest.getHeight();

       for (int i = 1; i < list.size(); i++) {
           Rectangle next = list.get(i);
           double nextArea = next.getWidth() * next.getHeight();

           if ((nextArea - smallestArea) < 0) { 
             smallest = next;         // <- Whenever you've updated smallest           
             smallestArea = nextArea; // <- Do not forget updating the smallestArea as well
           }  
       }

       return smallest;
   }
1

Your algorithm does not work because you need to update smallestArea as well:

if ((nextArea - smallestArea) < 0) {
    smallest = next; 
    smallestArea = nextArea; // <<== Here
}

Note that (nextArea - smallestArea) < 0 is another way of saying nextArea < smallestArea, so this looks cleaner:

if (nextArea < smallestArea) {
    smallest = next; 
    smallestArea = nextArea;
}
0

I would do

double smallest = Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY;

// in the loop.
if (smallest > next)
    smallest = next;
0

Besides remembering what the smalles rectangle is, you also need to remember what the size of it is. Change the if inside the loop:

if (nextArea < smallestArea) {
    smallest = next;
    smallestArea = nextArea
}
0
public Rectangle smallestArea()
{        
   if (list.size() == 0) return null;

   Rectangle smallest = list.get(0);           
   double smallestArea = smallest.getWidth() * smallest.getHeight();

   for (int i = 1; i < list.size(); i++) {
       Rectangle next = list.get(i);
       double nextArea = next.getWidth() * next.getHeight();

       if ((nextArea - smallestArea) < 0){
          smallest = next;             
          smallestArea = nextArea;
       }
   }

   return smallest;
}
0

What about this? I think you can try this way

    List<Rectangle> list=new ArrayList<>();
    List<Double> areaList=new ArrayList<>();
    for(Rectangle r:list){
        areaList.add(r.getHeight()*r.getHeight());
    }
    Collections.sort(areaList);
    System.out.println("Smallest "+areaList.get(0));
-1

Try,

int retval = Double.compare(nextArea, smallestArea);

if(retval < 0)
{
  System.out.println("smallestArea is greater than nextArea");
  smallest = next;
}
1
  • Using Double.compare simply because you want to check which of two double values is smaller is unnecessarily complicated. Just use < to compare them. Besides, this is not the problem in nazar_art's code.
    – Jesper
    Aug 30, 2013 at 7:24

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