0

I have created 4 objects of the class "Testklasse". Each of these objects have a name (Ingrid, Ask, Tom, Dana) and they each represent a person. What I am trying to do is create different methods that loop through the objects to see if they know each other, are bf/gf, if they like each other etc. etc. I have tried to create the method blirKjentMed (trans.: getsToKnow), but it isn't working and I don't know where to go from here. Any tips?

import easyIO.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;

    class Oblig1{
        public static void main(String[] args){
        Testklasse t = new Testklasse();

        }

    }
    class Testklasse{

        public Testklasse(){

            Person ingrid = new Person("Ingrid", 3);
            Person ask = new Person("Ask", 3);
            Person tom = new Person("Tom", 3);
            Person dana = new Person("Dana",3);

            ingrid.blirKjentMed(ingrid);
        }
    }

    class Person{

        private String navn; 
        private Person [] kjenner;
        private Person [] kjennerIkke; 
        private Person forelsket;
        private Person sammenmed;

        Person(String n, int lengde){
            this.navn = n;
            this.kjenner = new Person[lengde];
            this.kjennerIkke = new Person[lengde];
            this.forelsket = forelsket;
            this.sammenmed = sammenmed;


        }

        public void blirKjentMed(Person ingrid){
            for(int i = 0; i < ingrid.kjenner.length; i++){
                if(ingrid.navn.equalsIgnoreCase("ingrid")){
                    continue;
                } else {
                    kjenner[i] = ingrid;
                    System.out.println(ingrid.navn + kjenner[i].navn);
                }

            }

        }
1
  • Well right now your arrays are empty. Not sure what you are really trying to do in your getsToKnow method. Right now since you pass ingrid to itself, you probably observed that it essentially does nothing. If you pass, say, tom to ingrid, it will do something (fill ingrid's array with tom) but I'm not sure what it's supposed to accomplish. If you could clarify your description a bit so it's more specific about what you are trying to do maybe we can help.
    – Radiodef
    Jan 17, 2014 at 17:17

2 Answers 2

0

I assume this is a homework problem, because a fixed-size array is not an appropriate representation of a person's friends. People can have many friends, and the list can change.

Let's look at the Person class. As you will have noticed, the constructor does not quite work because it constructs a Perspn with null for forelsket and sammenmed. The line

this.forelsket = forelsket;  \\ Google: forelsket means lover in English.

does not work. forelsket is never initialized, so at the beginning of the constructor, this.forelsket is null. Since forelsket does not appear as a constructor argument, the code snippet is interpreted as

this.forelsket = this.forelsket;

which does nothing. A better constructor would be:

Person(final String n,         final Person forelsket,
       final Person sammenmed, final int    lengde) {
    this.navn        = n;
    this.forelsket   = forelsket;
    this.sammenmed   = sammenmed;
    this.kjenner     = new Person[lengde];
    this.kjennerIkke = new Person[lengde];
}

though getting rid of lengde and using ArrayList would be better once you learn about collections.

Next, you need to write methods to manipulate the kjenner and kjennerIkke arrays (or lists). You can fill these in yourself:

public void  setForelsket(final Person forelsket);
public Person getForelsket();
public void  setSammenmed(final Person sammenmed);
public Person getSammenmed();
// Return whether the addition changed anything.
public boolean addKjenner(Person kjenner);
public boolean removeKjenner(Person kjenner);
// Same for kjennerIkke.

And after all that, you probably want to create your own equals and hashCode methods; these are necessary for collections.

0

Put your objects into an array or an ArrayList, and then inter ate through it:

for(Testklasse obj : myArray) {
    // do stuff
}
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.