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I'm writing a testing system and i all i want to do is to count how many seconds had user spent on this question. i.e. i print question(standard System.out.println), then wait 5 seconds and if within these 5 seconds user answered(through standard input), i want to keep this value.

If user hasn't provided an answer in 5 seconds, it must skip this question and continue.

The problem is I'm reading user answers via Scanner object, and something like in.nextInt() is uncontrollable, I suppose.

How can I solve this problem? Here is fragment of my code without that functionality, can you give me some hints what to add?

    public void start() {
    questions.prepareQuestions(numQuestions);
    Scanner in=new Scanner(System.in);
    boolean playerIsRight=false,botIsRight=false;
    int playerScore=0,botScore=0;
    for (int i = 0; i < numQuestions; i++) {
        questions.askQuestion(i);
        System.out.print("Your answer(number): ");
        playerIsRight=questions.checkAnswer(i,in.nextInt()-1); //in.nextInt() contains the answer
        botIsRight=botAnswersCorrectly(i + 1);
        if(playerIsRight){ playerScore++; System.out.println("Correct!");}
        else System.out.println("Incorrect!");
        if(botIsRight) botScore++;
        System.out.print("\n");
    }
    if(botScore>playerScore) System.out.println("Machine won! Hail to the almighty transistors!");
    else if(playerScore>botScore) System.out.println("Human won! Hail to the power of nature!");
    else System.out.println("Tie. No one ever wins. No one finally loses.");
}

1 Answer 1

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I would use two threads in this case. The main thread writes questions, waits for answers, and keeps score. A child thread reads standard input and sends the answers to the main thread, perhaps via a BlockingQueue.

The main thread can wait for five seconds for an answer by using the poll() method on the blocking queue:

…
BlockingQueue<Integer> answers = new SynchronousQueue();
Thread t = new ReaderThread(answers);
t.start();
for (int i = 0; i < numQuestions; ++i) {
  questions.askQuestion(i);
  System.out.print("Your answer (number): ");
  Integer answer = answers.poll(5, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
  playerIsRight = (answer != null) && questions.checkAnswer(i, answer - 1); 
  …
}
t.interrupt();

If this call returns null, the main thread knows that the child thread didn't receive any input during that time, and can update the score appropriately and print the next question.

The ReaderThread would look something like this:

class ReaderThread extends Thread {

  private final BlockingQueue<Integer> answers;

  ReaderThread(BlockingQueue<Integer> answers) { 
    this.answers = answers; 
  }

  @Override 
  public void run() {
    Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in);
    while (!Thread.interrupted()) 
      answers.add(in.nextInt());
  }

}

Used on System.in, the Scanner will block until the user presses Enter, so it might happen that the user has entered some text but not yet pressed Enter when the main thread times out and moves on to the next question. The user would have to delete their pending entry and enter a new answer for the new question. I don't know of a clean way around this awkwardness, since there's not a reliable way to interrupt the nextInt() call.

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  • It can be lame, but what if i will start a new thread after asking a question, call wait(timeout) and in new thread i will wait for answer and after receiving it, i will call notify() on object in parent thread. Will it work?
    – Anton
    Nov 19, 2010 at 20:45
  • You could roll your own solution using using wait and notify, but as you've seen, it's tricky to get it right. Using a BlockingQueue is roughly equivalent, but it's bundled in a clean, reliable package.
    – erickson
    Nov 19, 2010 at 21:01
  • Im working now with your solution, and i dont understand one thing: do i have to put all cycle between t.start/t.interrupt, or only input reading part? Because it doesnt seem to work the way you wrote in your snuppet.
    – Anton
    Nov 19, 2010 at 21:18
  • @Anton - the stuff inside your original for loop should be in the new loop. That's what the ... is. When you say it doesn't seem to work, can you describe exactly what you are seeing?
    – erickson
    Nov 19, 2010 at 23:08
  • I expect to finish my current job in c++ and get back to java on monday, so i will post my code and tell you what i see. Please, dont leave this thread cuz i need your help :)
    – Anton
    Nov 21, 2010 at 18:58

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