This is the problem:
int j = random.nextInt();
char symbol = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz".charAt(j);
The charAt
method requires that its argument is within the bounds of the string - you're just using a random integer from Random.nextInt()
which could have any int
value:
Returns the next pseudorandom, uniformly distributed int value from this random number generator's sequence. The general contract of nextInt is that one int value is pseudorandomly generated and returned. All 232 possible int values are produced with (approximately) equal probability.
You should use something like:
private static String final ALPHABET = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
...
int j = random.nextInt(ALPHABET.length());
char symbol = ALPHABET.charAt(j);
That way you know that j
will be within the bounds of the string (i.e. 0 <= j < ALPHABET.length()
).
There are other things I'd change about your code though:
- There's no need to use string concatenation here
- There's no need to use an instance variable for
Random
(currently each password you generate will be longer than the previous one)
- I'd use final fields
- I'd use
SecureRandom
instead of Random
for password generation
- I'd make the class final
- I'd allow the alphabet of characters to be passed in
So:
public final class PasswordRandomizer {
private static final String DEFAULT_ALPHABET = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz";
private final Random random = new SecureRandom();
private final String alphabet;
private final int passwordLength;
public PasswordRandomizer(int length) {
this(length, DEFAULT_ALPHABET);
}
public PasswordRandomizer(int length, String alphabet) {
// TODO: Arguvment validation
this.passwordLength = length;
this.alphabet = alphabet;
}
public String createPassword() {
char[] chars = new char[passwordLength];
for (int i = 0; i < this.passwordLength; i++){
chars[i] = alphabet.charAt(random.nextInt(alphabet.length());
}
return new String(chars);
}
}