I'm new to Java, and I'm using Processing to make some data visualizations. I'm getting this strange error in my code though, was wondering if anyone could help me out. It seems the Xspacing float keeps getting set to Infinity, however when I print out the expression it gets set to the proper value gets printed...
float Xspacing = (endX-(width*.04) - startX)/ values;
println((endX-(width*.04) - startX)/ values);
println(Xspacing);
Result is:
49.0
Infinity
Any help would be appreciated!
Sorry, I wrote this out very quickly and omitted some pretty necessary info:
49.0 IS what is should be. All other types are floats, besides values which is an integer. The code DOES compile, and println is build into Processing, which is the framework (correct term?) that I'm using. It is basically a function that prints to the console in the Processing GUI.
Xspacing was intended to be data for my class "Graph," however when I define the variable within a public function "drawBasic" everything works fine. Now I am just curious....
Using System.out.println(0 yields the same results. Initial values or variables are:
float startX = 120.00001
float endX = 740.0
int values = 12
width is an integer (although not explicit) that is set to 800
The odd thing seems to be that within a function definition this works fine, its only when I try to define it within the class that it doesn't work...
double. Are any intermediate steps in the calculation resulting in very large numbers? – mellamokb Feb 23 '11 at 6:06printlnis non-standard, could you try theSystem.out.printlnversion and see what it outputs in the two cases? – Jeremiah Willcock Feb 23 '11 at 6:29