1

Trying to create a method that will make an array and assign different numbers from 1 - 9 to each index of the array (nos. cannot be repeated). please have a look at the boolean comparison i made, this is where the cmd stuck at runtime. I have tried to separate the two but nothing happens.

Please help.

import java.util.ArrayList;

class Testing {

public static void main (String[] args) {

  ArrayList<Integer> grid = new ArrayList<Integer>();

     int randNum;
     int count = 0;
     int size=8;

     for (int b = 0; b <=size; b++) { 

       while (count <= size) {

        randNum = (int) (Math.random() * 9);


           if (grid.contains(randNum) == false & randNum != 0 ) { 

            grid.add(randNum);
            count++;

          }
       }
     System.out.println(grid.get(b)); 
    }
   System.out.println("size: " + grid.size());
  }
 }
1
  • Are you sure that the code is getting "stuck?" Seems like it's just terminating without filling the array.
    – Matt Ball
    Jan 5, 2016 at 3:48

3 Answers 3

1

Why not use a Fisher-Yates shuffle instead?

That is, fill the array with 1-9 and then Collections.shuffle() it.


Aside: use && not & in your original code.

2
  • but what bothers me is, why 2 logical expressions cant be used in one "if ()"? if (grid.contains(randNum) == false && randNum != 0 ) please tell me if this is logically wrong, based on my code.
    – MicroFarad
    Jan 5, 2016 at 5:24
  • the same thing when i removed randNum !=0
    – MicroFarad
    Jan 5, 2016 at 5:50
0

I agree with Matt Ball, create an array 1-9 and shuffle, but to answer your question, the problem is here:

randNum = (int) (Math.random() * 9);
if (grid.contains(randNum) == false & randNum != 0 ) { 

Should be this:

randNum = (int) (Math.random() * 9) + 1;
if (grid.contains(randNum) == false) {

since you multiply Math.random() * 9 you will only get numbers between 0-8, adding 1 will give you 1-9.

0

You are doing it wrong or unknowingly actually at several places:

  1. & and && are two different things. Use && when you want to continue to check for second condition iff first operand or condition evaluates to true otherwise to evaluate both operands use &.

  2. Why multiplying by 9. Multiply it by 10. As multiply by 9 constrained to 1-8 numbers only.

  3. Why are you printing the grid within a loop and having a special loop for same?. Just print the grid it will show you all the elements.

Below is your corrected program:

import java.util.ArrayList;

public class HelloWorld{

     public static void main(String []args){
        ArrayList<Integer> grid = new ArrayList<Integer>();

     int randNum;
     int count = 0;
     int size=8;

       while (count <= size) {
        randNum = (int) (Math.random() * 10);
        System.out.println(randNum+"test"+grid); 
           if (!grid.contains(randNum) && randNum != 0 ) { 
               System.out.println("grid coming in here"+grid); 
            grid.add(randNum);
            count++;

          }
       }
     System.out.println(grid); 
   System.out.println("size: " + grid.size());
  }
}

Hope it helps!

1
  • i thought it would generate nos from 0 ~ 9?
    – MicroFarad
    Jan 5, 2016 at 5:20

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.