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I'm making a number guessing program. A random number is generated, and the user tries to guess it. The program will print "too high" or "too low" and let the user guess again. I'm having an issue inputing guesses after the first one into the method that takes the guess.

Here is my class:

import java.util.Scanner;

public class Lab8
{
    public static void main (String [] args)
    {
        Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in);

        System.out.println("Enter a number: ");
        MyNumberGuess MyNumberGuess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

        while (MyNumberGuess.tooLow() == true || MyNumberGuess.tooHigh() == true)
        {

            if (MyNumberGuess.tooHigh() == true)
            {
                System.out.println("Too high");
                System.out.println("Enter a number: ");
                MyNumberGuess.MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());
            }
            else if (MyNumberGuess.tooLow() == true)
            {
                System.out.println("Too low");
                System.out.println("Enter a number: ");
                MyNumberGuess.MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());
            }
        }

        System.out.println("Correct");
        System.out.println("You made " + MyNumberGuess.getNumGuesses() + " guesses");
    }
}

Here's the other class, and the problem method:

import java.util.*;

public class MyNumberGuess
{
    public static final int MAX_GUESS = 1000; 

    private int theNumber, numGuesses, prevGuess;

    public MyNumberGuess(int inGuess)
    {
       Random generator = new Random(); 
       numGuesses = 1;
       prevGuess = inGuess;
       theNumber = generator.nextInt(MAX_GUESS);
    }
}

As is, I'm getting a "cannot find symbol" error when compiling in my first class on this line:

MyNumberGuess.MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

I've tried calling it in different ways, using parameters and not, and trying to call the variables alone, thought they are supposed to be private. Any help is appreciated.

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4 Answers 4

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You previously used

MyNumberGuess MyNumberGuess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

to create an instance of your class. Why would you then use

MyNumberGuess.MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

to do the same thing?

This

public MyNumberGuess(int inGuess)
{
   Random generator = new Random(); 
   numGuesses = 1;
   prevGuess = inGuess;
   theNumber = generator.nextInt(MAX_GUESS);
}

is a constructor. You need to invoke it with the new operator.

Just re-initialize your variable

MyNumberGuess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

Note that java convention states that variables' names should begin with a lower case character.


On another note, this piece of code

  while (MyNumberGuess.tooLow() == true || MyNumberGuess.tooHigh() == true)

is redundant. The method call MyNumberGuess.tooLow() already returns a true or false value, so why compare it with == true? Just use it directly. For example

if (MyNumberGuess.tooLow()) // read it as "If my number guess is too low"

or

if (!MyNumberGuess.tooLow()) // read it as "If my number guess is not too low"

Apply that appropriately with the while.

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  • Ahh, alright. So I did want to make the instance of my class. I renamed it just "guess". I tried calling it againt with (in.nextInt()) as the parameter, like this: if (guess.tooHigh() == true) { System.out.println("Too high"); System.out.println("Enter a number: "); guess.MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt()); but I still get a "cannot find symbol" error
    – coinbird
    Nov 13, 2013 at 2:12
  • @coin You still aren't creating a new instance. The notation guess.MyNumberGuess(... indicates that you are trying to call a method called MyNumberGuess on the object referenced by the variable guess. This is wrong. What you want is to reassign the guess variable to a new object. Use guess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt()). Nov 13, 2013 at 2:13
  • I didn't know you could do that with boolean methods. Thanks!
    – coinbird
    Nov 13, 2013 at 2:14
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Don't use the exact class name as the variable name

MyNumberGuess MyNumberGuess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());

Change the casing if anything

MyNumberGuess myNumberGuess = new MyNumberGuess(in.nextInt());
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You are missing a curly bracket, you have your class definition and then you have a function definition but no ending semicolon. And you shouldn’t use the same name for so many variables.

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I had a weird issue: no matter what I couldn't access the public methods of one of my classes whether it was static or whether I setup to instantiate it. I ended up deleting the class and creating a new one with a different name. I must have been stepping on a built in class name.

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