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What i am shooting for is to be able to take the input from my text field in my GUI and put it into an ArrayList. Then I need to check the array and see if I already have the Integer in the array. If so I need to remove both Integers so the Integer is no longer inside the array. I also need to be able to add the Integer if it is not a duplicate to the ArrayList.

The purpose of this is to be able to have users sign in with a number. The vision I have is for them to put their unique number in when they sign in or sign out (Like a time clock). If their number is not in the array, they are signing in. If their number is in the arraylist then they are signing out.

This is what i have for code so far, i am getting a problem with signing out. It keeps sending the second value in the array back as the only one able to sign out. I have tried fixing it and can't seem to figure out what is wrong. Let me know if it would be more helpful if i posted my whole program or if this code snippet is enough to figure it out.

Thanks,

private void btnSignInActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {                                          

    // Get data from form and put it into an Array List
    Integer txtUserSignInName = Integer.valueOf(txtUserSignIn.getText());
    ArrayList<Integer> userSignInNumber = new ArrayList();
    userSignInNumber.add(12345678); //sample data
    userSignInNumber.add(55489563); //sample data
    userSignInNumber.add(26489564); //sample data
    userSignInNumber.add(78654865); //sample data
    userSignInNumber.add(txtUserSignInName);

    // Setting up HashSet so no duplicate data
    Set<Integer> hashSet = new HashSet<>();
    hashSet.addAll(userSignInNumber);
    userSignInNumber.clear();
    userSignInNumber.addAll(hashSet);

    // Other settings needed
    SimpleDateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("hh:mm:ss a");
    String time = df.format(new Date());

    if ((txtUserSignIn.getText() != null && txtUserSignIn.getText().isEmpty())) {
        String userSignInErrorMessage = "Sorry, Please Try Again";
        JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(new JFrame(), userSignInErrorMessage, "Incorrect Sign In",JOptionPane.ERROR_MESSAGE);
        //setting focus
        txtUserSignIn.setText("");
        txtUserSignIn.requestFocus();
    } else {
        for(int i = 1; i < userSignInNumber.size(); i++) {
            // If number is already in array, remove it
            if(txtUserSignInName.equals(userSignInNumber.get(i))) {
                userSignInNumber.remove((Integer)txtUserSignInName);
                System.out.println(txtUserSignInName + " has signed out");
                txtLoggedInUsers.append(txtUserSignInName + " has signed out at " + time + "\n");
                break;
            } else { // If number is not in the array, add it to the array
                System.out.println(txtUserSignInName + " has signed in");
                txtLoggedInUsers.append(txtUserSignInName + " has signed in at  " + time + "\n");
                break;
            }
        }
        System.out.println(userSignInNumber);
    } 
}  

2 Answers 2

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Lists are not really suitable for what you are trying to do. You would be better off using one of the Set interface implementations. Sets provide fast contains()/add()/remove() methods that you can use, without generally having to iterate over all elements manually in a loop. And if you do need to quickly iterate over all elements for some reason, then a LinkedHashSet would work just fine. For example:

Set<Integer> signedIn = new LinkedHashSet<>();
...
if (signedIn.add(loginNumber)) {
    // The set was modified, therefore this is a new login
} else {
    // The number was already present, log-off the user.
    signedIn.remove(loginNumber);
}
...
if (signedIn.contains(loginNumber)) {
    // Allow the user to...
} else {
    // Error, user not signed in
}
1
  • Thank you so much, this seems to be working so much better than what i had originally planned.
    – tjlang
    May 29, 2015 at 15:04
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There are a number of problems with your implementation.

The loop starts at 1 when array indices start at 0, so you are skipping the first entry.

Then you always break out of the loop straight away after checking the 2nd item and so don't check any others.

A better approach would be to use a Set, not just to remove duplicates, but as a primary way to store who is signed in. Then you can check if a number is in the set easily with the contains method so you don't need to loop through manually (which means you don't have to deal with the problems associated with removing items from a list while you are looping through it).

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