0

I've got a program that goes through and reads "tokens" that can either be a String (Symbol) or a number. It uses postfix and a stack to evaluate simple commands.

For example:

/x 100 def
/y 200 def
x y add

should return 300. The first line defines a variable called "x" and sets it to 100. To do this a reader adds "/x" and "100" on the stack and stops when it gets to the "def" operator, which tells it to go make a token with a Symbol called "x" and its value being 100. The stack is then empty, and next time "x" would be pushed, the interpreter should automatically replace it with its value. This is where my problem lies.

This is my interpreter:

while ( r.hasMoreTokens() ) {
            Token t = r.nextToken();

            if ( !t.isSymbol() ) {
                operands.push( t );
            } else if (env.contains(t.getSymbol())) {
                Token tmp = env.get(t.getSymbol());
                operands.push(tmp); 
            } else if (t.getSymbol().startsWith("/")) {
                operands.push(t);
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "def" ) ){
                execute_def();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "add" ) ) {
                execute_add();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "sub" ) ) {
                execute_sub();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "mul" ) ) {
                execute_mul();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "exch" ) ) {
                execute_exch();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "dup" ) ) {
                execute_dup();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "pop" ) ) {
                execute_pop();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "pstack" ) ) {
                execute_pstack();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "moveto" ) ) {
                execute_moveto();
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "lineto" ) ) {
                execute_lineto( g );
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "arc" ) ) {
                execute_arc( g );
            } else if ( t.getSymbol().equals( "quit" ) ) {
                execute_quit();
            } else {
                System.out.println( "ILLEGAL SYMBOL: " + t );
            }
        }

Once the variables get defined correctly, I cant get into that first else if and change the value. Because I can't do this, I never push anything on the stack and end up with an empty stack error. Here are the methods contains() and get() from env (environment):

public boolean contains(String key) {
        Elem tmp = top;
        for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
            if (tmp.key == key) {
                return true;
            } else {
                tmp = tmp.next;
            }
        }
        return false;
    }

public Token get(String key) {
        Elem tmp = top;
        int counter = 0;
        boolean found = false;
        for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
            if (tmp.key == key) {
                found = true;
                break;
            } else {
                tmp = tmp.next;
            }
            counter++;
        }

        if (found == true) {
            tmp = top;
            for (int i = 0; i <= counter; i++) {
                tmp = tmp.next;
            }
            return tmp.value;
        } else {
            throw new BadKeyQueryException();
        }
    }

I'm using linked elements in the environment to keep track of symbols. Elem is a nested class in Environment:

private static class Elem {
        private String key;
        private Token value;
        private Elem next;

        private Elem(String key, Token value, Elem next) {
            this.key = key;
            this.value = value;
            this.next = next;
        }
    }

Thanks for any help from you guys!

3
  • 1
    Never compare strings with ==, use .equals instead.
    – I82Much
    Mar 17, 2011 at 4:20
  • Thanks l82Much, I've got a new set of errors to deal with now. Why should you never compare strings with ==?
    – user623990
    Mar 17, 2011 at 4:22
  • == applied to objects tests whether the left and right objects are the same object. So "abc" == new String("abc") is false. I wouldn't say "never", though; there may be occasions where that's what you need. But "almost never" is just about right. :)
    – Ted Hopp
    Mar 17, 2011 at 4:46

2 Answers 2

0

Strings in java are Objects, rather than primitives.

When you say:

int i = 5;

i stores the value "5".

When you say:

String s = "string";

s stores the value of a reference to "string".

Comparing s to "string" would return false, even though they contain the same value when you print there. This is because the computer compares a reference to memory containing "string" to another reference to memory containing "string". Same values, but different references.

Also, you're setting "t" to multiple different values in your code. Try setting t once, before everything, and a precomputed t value against your if-else-if block.

0

You can only call getSymbol() once, so you just need to store the value from it. Here is the start of your statements, you should be able to change the others the same way

if ( !t.isSymbol() ) {
    operands.push( t );
    continue;
}

String symbol = t.getSymbol();

if (env.contains(symbol)) {
    Token tmp = env.get(symbol);
    operands.push(tmp); 
} else if (symbol.startsWith("/")) {
    operands.push(t);
...
1
  • Shouldn't it be continue; instead of break;?
    – Ted Hopp
    Mar 17, 2011 at 4:50

Your Answer

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