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I'm a relatively inexperienced programmer working on a basic array generating/searching program for homework. I've got it working perfectly, but it will randomly freeze up (without throwing any exceptions or error messages that I can detect) after I set the search key. The real problem, though, is that I can't always reproduce the error by doing the same thing. I'm programming and running the program in Eclipse.

Here is the basic structure of my program; for simplicity's sake, I'm only including the actual code for the setter and button that seems to be causing the problem. I suspect it's something simple, but I see no reason that this code should be locking up a program.

public class ArraySearcher extends JPanel
                       implements ActionListener  {


private static final long serialVersionUID = 6449138670325520140L;

/**
 * A program description.
 */


// Fields (array and search parameters)
static int key;
static int arraySize;
static int min;
static int max;
static int midpoint;
// (Number of search steps taken by each search algorithm)
static int linSteps;
static int binSteps;
// (JButtons, JLabels, JTextFields, and the log for displaying results)
static JButton runButton, chKeyButton, newArrayButton, exitButton;
static JTextField lStepField, bStepField;
static JTextField keyField;
static JTextField arraySizeField;
static JTextField time;
static JTextArea log;
// (The arrays to be used)
static int[] randArray, sortArray;
// (Makes the output formatting a little easier to read)
public static String newline = "\n", twolines = "\n\n";


// The constructor
public ArraySearcher() {

// Setting up the fields and GUI
    }


// Getters and setters
protected static int getKey() {
    return key;
}


protected static void setKey() {
    boolean success = false;
    // loop and try catch block to deal with the potential parsing exception
    while (success == false) {
        try {
            key = Integer.parseInt(JOptionPane.showInputDialog(
                    "Please enter the number you\nwish to search for:"));
            keyField.setText(Integer.toString(getKey()));
            success = true;
        }

        catch (NumberFormatException e) {
            JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(null, 
                    "There was a number format error.  Please\n" +
                    "input only positive, whole numbers.");
        }
    }
}

    // More getters and setters...


public static void main(String[] args) {
    // Implement the GUI, all other work is handled from
    // there and from within the constructor
    theGUI();
}


private static void theGUI() {
// Set up the GUI and allow user to set min and
// max values for the random number generator

    }


@Override
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
    //Handling of the run/restart button.
    if (e.getSource() == runButton) {
    }

    // Handling the Change Key button
    else if (e.getSource() == chKeyButton) {
        setKey();
        chKeyButton.setText("Change Key");
        linSearch(getRandArray());          // Implicit searches triggered by
        binSearch(getRandArray());          // selecting a new search key
    }

    // Handling the New Array button
    else if (e.getSource() == newArrayButton) {
    }

    // Handling of the exit button.
    else if (e.getSource() == exitButton) {
    }
}


// Method for building the array of random numbers; includes an implicit search
// which can be canceled (i.e. just build and return the array) by passing it
// a false condition when it's called
private void arrayBuilder(boolean fullRun) {

}


private void linSearch(int[] arrayIn) {
    // Linear search method

}


private void binSearch(int[] arrayIn) {
    // Binary search method
    int result = -1;            // Location of a positive match; initialized to an impossible result
    int tempMax = arraySize;    // Dynamic maximum index for progressive midpoint calculations
    int tempMin = 0;            // Dynamic minimum index
    int newMid = 0;             // Dynamic midpoint
    int count = 0;              // Counts the steps required to find value
    boolean success = false;    // A loop escape boolean

    log.append("RUNNING BINARY SEARCH" + newline);      
    log.append("SORTING ARRAY..." + twolines);

    sortArray = sort(arrayIn);              // Sort the array prior to searching

    // Array midpoint index calculation
    midpoint = tempMax/2 - tempMin/2;   // Calculation prevents buffer overflow; allows for nonzero minimum
    newMid = midpoint;

    // Search loop
    while (tempMin != tempMax && success == false) {
        if (sortArray[newMid] == key) {
            success = true;
            result = newMid;
            count++;
        }

        else if (sortArray[newMid] < key) {
            tempMin = newMid;
            newMid = tempMax/2 - tempMin/2;
            count++;
        }

        else if (sortArray[newMid] > key) {
            tempMax = newMid;
            newMid = tempMax/2 - tempMin/2;
            count++;
        }
    }
    binSteps = count;
    bStepField.setText(Integer.toString(binSteps));
    log.append(twolines);

    if (result != -1) {
        log.append("Success!  The number " + Integer.toString(key) + " was found " +
                "at array location " + result + "." + newline);
    }
    else if (result == -1) {
        log.append("Failure.  The number " + Integer.toString(key) + 
                " was not found in the array." + newline);
    }

    log.append("The binary search was completed in " + Integer.toString(binSteps) + 
            " steps." + newline + newline);
    log.setCaretPosition(log.getDocument().getLength());

}


private int[] sort(int[] arrayIn) {
    // Method for sorting the random array before
    // performing a binary search
}
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  • 4
    Ugh, please remove the excessive use of statics in your code. And remember that any Swing GUI program is essentially multithreaded. Sounds like you are running into a deadlock issue.
    – Perception
    Dec 14, 2012 at 19:37
  • 1
    The homework tag is obsolete now.
    – Reimeus
    Dec 14, 2012 at 19:39
  • 1
    @Perception: Swing programs are not multithreaded - there is a single Event Dispatch Thread that everything runs on. Dec 14, 2012 at 19:40
  • 1
    @pst, russelzahniser - the EDT is a separate thread from the main thread of the program. EDT + main thread = multithreading. A swing program will actually normally have more than these two threads, which you can verify yourself by running a simple one. And this is assuming you don't manually start any threads of your own.
    – Perception
    Dec 14, 2012 at 20:11
  • 1
    @Perception: Normally the main thread exists only long enough to start the EDT. The whole point of the EDT is that a correctly-written swing program is single-threaded except for background threads with very localized use. Dec 14, 2012 at 20:43

1 Answer 1

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Doing tempMax/2 - tempMin/2 will not get you the midpoint. Consider a simple example: if tempMin = 2 and tempMax = 5, then tempMax/2 - tempMin/2 = 5/2 - 2/2 = 2 - 1 = 1.

The typical way to get the midpoint without overflow is mid = (min + max) >>> 1.

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  • Yeah, I noticed that when I started looking harder at the method. I don't recognize the >>> symbol. I tried to google it, but google disregards that symbol. What does it do?
    – Troy D
    Dec 14, 2012 at 21:40
  • It's an unsigned right bitshift. See this classic article on how most Java binary search methods had an overflow bug in them that went unnoticed for years. Dec 14, 2012 at 22:01
  • Outstanding. This solved my problem. Thanks for that article and the catch on my algorithm. I also added in a +1 and -1 to the tempMin and tempMax recalculations to exclude the former midpoint.
    – Troy D
    Dec 14, 2012 at 23:04

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