4

I have a string as an input and I wanted to convert the whole string to lowercase except one random letter which needs to be in uppercase.

I have tried the following: splited is the input string array

word1 = splited[0].length();
word2 = splited[1].length();
word3 = splited[2].length();
int first = (int) Math.random() * word1;
String firstLetter = splited[0].substring((int) first, (int) first + 1);
String lowcase1 = splited[0].toLowerCase();

char[] c1 = lowcase1.toCharArray();
c1[first] = Character.toUpperCase(c1[first]);
String value = String.valueOf(c1);

System.out.println(value);

When I try and print the string, it ALWAYS returns the first letter as capital and the rest of the string is lowercase. Why is it not returning random letters but the first letter.

Cheers

6
  • Evidently, first is always 0. So, what is word1?
    – Matt Ball
    Mar 20, 2014 at 2:50
  • first is generated randomly using Math.random() * word1. word1 is the length of the string Mar 20, 2014 at 2:52
  • Yes, I can see that. What is the value of word1?
    – Matt Ball
    Mar 20, 2014 at 2:53
  • Why is first always 0? I thought it was Math.random() * range Mar 20, 2014 at 2:53
  • The value of word1 is6 because of the string "author" Mar 20, 2014 at 2:54

3 Answers 3

4

The key to understanding your problem is that you've multiplied zero times word1.

Your code int first = (int) Math.random() * word1; is returning the same number every time because (int) Math.random() returns zero every time.

Here's the javadoc for Math.random()

Returns a double value with a positive sign, greater than or equal to 0.0 and less than 1.0.

Any number less than 1 and greater than 0, once casted to an integer, is zero. This is because floating point numbers are truncated.

0
2
String str = "my string";
Random rand = new Random(str.length());

int upperIndex = rand.nextInt();

StringBuffer strBuff = new StringBuffer(str.toLowerCase());
char upperChar = Character.toUpperCase(strBuff.charAt(upperIndex));
strBuff.replace(upperIndex, upperIndex, upperChar);

System.out.println(strBuff.toString());
1

Because

Math.random()

Returns a value between 0 and 1, so

(int) Math.random()

Is always zero, and since zero multiplied by anything is zero

(int) Math.random() * word1;

Is also always zero. You need parenthesis.

int first = (int) (Math.random() * word1);

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