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I am trying to add elements of type ENTRY in this array. But before adding I want want to make sure its not a duplicate as I don't want duplicate entries. Tried a lot but it keeps doesn't add entries :/ I tried BREAK from the IF clause as well didn't seem to work. Is there something really silly I'm missing ? Would really appreciate if someone could help me. Cheers

import java.util.Arrays;

public class PhoneDirectory {
    private Entry[] ar;
    static int index = 0;

    public PhoneDirectory() {
        ar = new Entry[0];
    }

    public PhoneDirectory(Entry[] ent) {
        ar = ent;
    }

    public boolean addEntry(Entry ent) throws NullPointerException {

        boolean newEntry = true;
        for (int i = 0; i < ar.length; i++) {

            if (ar[i] == ent) {
                newEntry = false;

            else 
                newEntry = true;
        }

        int length = ar.length;
        Entry[] temp = new Entry[length];

        for (int x = 0; x <= length - 1; x++) {

            temp[x] = ar[x];
        }

        length++;
        ar = new Entry[length];

        // add the new entry in the last index
        for (int i = length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {

            if (newEntry == true) {

                ar[i] = ent;
                newEntry = false;
                // return true;
            } else {

                // ar[i] = temp[i];
                return false;
            }
        }

        return true;

    }
}
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  • Your If block braces are not balanced. please correct it. Jun 22, 2012 at 4:18

4 Answers 4

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This is your problem:

    if (ar[i] == ent) {
        newEntry = false;

    else 
        newEntry = true;

You really want:

if (ar[i].equals(ent)) {

It is unlikely your entries will be == to each, which means the same instance, not just an equivalent object.

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  • Also, the else clause in this section is completely unnecessary as newEntry is assigned a value of true right at initialization; the only way it could be false is if it gets set by the if statement.
    – MattS
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:40
  • if (ar[i].equals(ent)) I fixed it to what you suggested and its giving a NullPointerException. I thought of adding if (ar[i].equals(ent) && ar[i]!=null) to it see if the entry is empty... ?
    – Achilles
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:43
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You could use Set , dynamically add the data and maintain uniqueness

Set<Entry> entries = new HashSet<Entry>();
//note you will have to implment `equals()` & `hashcode()` in `Entry` class
//and then simply
entries.add(entry1);
entries.add(entry2);
entries.add(entry3);

It grows by it self you don't need to handle it + it maintains uniqueness,

If you want to preserve the order in set then you need to use LinkedHashSet

In your code

for (int i = 0; i < ar.length; i++) {

        if (ar[i] == ent) {
            newEntry = false;

        else 
            newEntry = true;
    }

you are comparing two objects so you need to override equals() in your Entry class and then you need to use ar[i].equals(ent) to check (and not the ==)

also , For example ent matches with value at index 2 and array is of size 4 then at last index newEntry would be set to true and so it will allow this entry, Use break; when you find the already existing entry

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  • I know I can use java collections but I'm suppose to do this by Array only. I did try the break but seems like something else is wrong too which I cannot seem to find.
    – Achilles
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:11
  • Check the brackets of yoru if block Jun 22, 2012 at 4:14
  • One should be using .equals method for comparing and not == . Please correct your answer. Jun 22, 2012 at 4:20
  • I corrected the equals methods. I have problem with null entries... I mean when I initialise it the postion (0) has a value of null and I think it creates the problem for addEntry method
    – Achilles
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:46
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Make sure you have overridden the equals method on the Class ENTRY

for (int i = 0; i < ar.length; i++) {

    if (ar[i].equals(ent)) {
        newEntry = false;
        break;
    }
    else 
        newEntry = true;
}
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  • You mean override ? or just as you have put it? because I did chance the == to EQUALS but nothing changed.
    – Achilles
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:25
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In the addEntry function you created the temp array with all the previous entries in the PhoneBook. Then you reassigned ar as a new array. However, you never repopulated the new ar with the previous entries you stored in temp.

length++;
ar = new Entry[length];

//copy the temp entries back into the new ar
for (int i=0; i<= temp.length-1; i++){
  ar[i] = temp[i];
}

Also you need to add a break in your newEntry loop:

boolean newEntry = true;
for (int i = 0; i < ar.length; i++) {

    //comparing object should use equals
    if (ar[i].equals(ent)) {
        newEntry = false;
        //add break;
        break;
    }
    else 
        newEntry = true;
}

I don't think you need a for loop to add the lastest entry

Instead of :

   for (int i = length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {

        if (newEntry == true) {

            ar[i] = ent;
            newEntry = false;
            // return true;
        } else {

            // ar[i] = temp[i];
            return false;
        }
    }

Try this

int i = length-1;

if (newEntry == true) {
  ar[i] = ent;
  newEntry = false;
  return true;
} else {
   return false;
}
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  • I did both of these two, but it is still not adding entries to the array.
    – Achilles
    Jun 22, 2012 at 4:28

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