21

First some code:

import java.util.*;
//...

class TicTacToe 
{
//...

public static void main (String[]arg) 
{ 

    Random Random = new Random() ; 
    toerunner () ; // this leads to a path of 
                   // methods that eventualy gets us to the rest of the code 
} 
//... 

public void CompTurn (int type, boolean debug) 
{ 
//...

        boolean done = true ; 
        int a = 0 ; 
        while (!done) 
        { 
            a = Random.nextInt(10) ;
            if (debug) { int i = 0 ; while (i<20) { System.out.print (a+", ") ; i++; }} 
            if (possibles[a]==1) done = true ; 
        } 
        this.board[a] = 2 ; 


}
//...

} //to close the class 

Here is the error message:

TicTacToe.java:85: non-static method nextInt(int) cannot be referenced from a static context
            a = Random.nextInt(10) ;
                      ^

What exactly went wrong? What does that error message "non static method cannot be referenced from a static context" mean?

2

4 Answers 4

36

You are calling nextInt statically by using Random.nextInt.

Instead, create a variable, Random r = new Random(); and then call r.nextInt(10).

It would be definitely worth while to check out:

Update:

You really should replace this line,

Random Random = new Random(); 

with something like this,

Random r = new Random();

If you use variable names as class names you'll run into a boat load of problems. Also as a Java convention, use lowercase names for variables. That might help avoid some confusion.

11
  • then i get a cannot find symbol error in regard to the r.
    – David
    Apr 22, 2010 at 21:19
  • Did you initialize r? It can't just appear out of nowhere. Apr 22, 2010 at 21:20
  • yes i replaced both the second "Random" in main (so that it reads Random r = new Random();) and the "Random" comming before "nextInt"
    – David
    Apr 22, 2010 at 21:22
  • Remove the Random declaration from main unless you necessarily need it, and just initialize Random r = new Random(); inside CompTurn Apr 22, 2010 at 21:24
  • 1
    Yes, it is, it is an object, but its scope is local to main, so it is not visible in other methods.
    – OscarRyz
    Apr 22, 2010 at 21:41
3

In Java, static methods belong to the class rather than the instance. This means that you cannot call other instance methods from static methods unless they are called in an instance that you have initialized in that method.

Here's something you might want to do:

public class Foo
{
  public void fee()
  {
     //do stuff  
  }

  public static void main (String[]arg) 
  { 
     Foo foo = new Foo();
     foo.fee();
  } 
}

Notice that you are running an instance method from an instance that you've instantiated. You can't just call call a class instance method directly from a static method because there is no instance related to that static method.

2

You're trying to invoke an instance method on the class it self.

You should do:

    Random rand = new Random();
    int a = 0 ; 
    while (!done) { 
        int a = rand.nextInt(10) ; 
    ....

Instead

As I told you here stackoverflow.com/questions/2694470/whats-wrong...

4
  • does it still work if i have the first line in mane? (see my comments on Anthony's answer).
    – David
    Apr 22, 2010 at 21:23
  • In mane? Did you mean, in main ?? No, the random declared in main is local to that method. Once you get in a second method it is not reachable.
    – OscarRyz
    Apr 22, 2010 at 21:39
  • I get a null pointer exception when I do this though (by calling the method with an object)...What do you think the problem is? Let me know if you need any code. Thanks! (Been stuck on this for 3 and a half hours now!) Dec 10, 2015 at 5:53
  • @RuchirBaronia open a question and post your code, it should be easy to fix
    – OscarRyz
    Dec 10, 2015 at 19:20
0

Violating the Java naming conventions (variable names and method names start with lowercase, class names start with uppercase) is contributing to your confusion.

The variable Random is only "in scope" inside the main method. It's not accessible to any methods called by main. When you return from main, the variable disappears (it's part of the stack frame).

If you want all of the methods of your class to use the same Random instance, declare a member variable:

class MyObj {
  private final Random random = new Random();
  public void compTurn() {
    while (true) {
      int a = random.nextInt(10);
      if (possibles[a] == 1) 
        break;
    }
  }
}

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