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I am trying to use one file to create a menu in the command window. The user selects from those menu options. They are prompted to enter a number. The number is passed to two overloaded methods which determine if the number is an integer or a float. After the calculation is done the result is printed to the screen and the menu reappears. Here is the code from my two files.

import java.util.Scanner;// import Scanner class
public class MyMathOpsTest
{
   //method to pause until a key is pressed
   public static void pause() 
   { 
       try 
   { 
       System.out.print("Press <Enter> to continue..."); 
       System.in.read(); 
   } 
       catch (Exception e)
       {
           System.err.printf("Error %s%c\n",e.getMessage(),7);
       }
}//end pause

public static void main( String args[] )
{
	//variables to capture keyboard input
	Scanner keyBd = new Scanner( System.in );
	char selection;
	//int selection;

	do{//display menu
		System.out.println( "1. Square a Number");
		System.out.println( "2. Cube a Number");
		System.out.println( "3. Raise a Number to a Power");
		System.out.println( "4. Maximum of Three Numbers");
		System.out.println( "5. Minimum of Three Numbers");
		System.out.println( "6. Exit");
		System.out.print( "Selection[1-6]: " );

		//get menu selection
		selection = keyBd.next().charAt(0);
		//selection = keyBd.nextInt();

		//process menu selection
		switch (selection){
			case '1':
				MyMathOpsTest.squareTheNumber();
				pause();
				break;
			case '2':
				MyMathOpsTest.cubeTheNumber();
				pause();
				break;
			case '3':				
				MyMathOpsTest.raiseTheNumber();
				pause();
				break;
			case '4':				
				MyMathOpsTest.maximumNumber();
				pause();
				break;
			case '5':				
				MyMathOpsTest.minimumNumber();
				pause();
				break;
				case '6':
				//recognize as valid selection but do nothing
				break;
			default :
				System.out.printf("%c\n",7);
				System.out.println("Invalid Selection");
		}//end switch

	}while( selection != '6');
} // end method main

public static void squareTheNumber()
{

}

public static void cubeTheNumber()
{
}

public static void raiseTheNumber()
{
}

public static void maximumNumber()
{
MyMathOps.maximum();
}

public static void minimumNumber()
{
}

} // end class MyMathOpsTest

import java.util.Scanner;

public class MyMathOps
{
public static int square(x:Integer):Integer
{
}

public static double square(x:Double):Double
{
}

public static int cube(x:Integer):Integer
{
}

public static double cube(x:Double):Double
{
}

public static int maximum(x:Integer, y:Integer, z:Integer):Integer
{
	// create Scanner for input from command window
	Scanner input = new Scanner( System.in );
	// obtain user input
	System.out.print( "Enter three integer values separated by spaces: ");
	int numberl = input.nextInt();
	// read first integer
	int number2 = input.nextInt();
	// read second double
	int number3 = input.nextInt();
	// read third double
	// determine the maximum value
	int result = maximum( numberl, number2, number3 );
	// display maximum value
	System.out.println( "Maximum is: " + result );
} // end method maximum

public static double maximum(x:Double, y:Double, z:Double):Double
{
	// create Scanner for input from command window
	Scanner input = new Scanner( System.in );
	// obtain user input
	System.out.print( "Enter three floating-point values separated by spaces: ");
	number1 = input.nextDouble();
	// read first double double
	number2 = input.nextDouble();
	// read second double
	double number3 = input.nextDouble();
	// read third double
	// determine the maximum value
	double result = maximum( numberl, number2, number3 );
	// display maximum value
	System.out.println( "Maximum is: " + result );
} // end method maximum

public static int minimum(x:Integer, y:Integer, z:Integer):Integer
{
	// create Scanner for input from command window
	Scanner input = new Scanner( System.in );
	// obtain user input
	System.out.print( "Enter three integer values separated by spaces: ");
	int numberl = input.nextInt();
	// read first integer
	int number2 = input.nextInt();
	// read second double
	int number3 = input.nextInt();
	// read third double
	// determine the minimum value
	int result = minimum( numberl, number2, number3 );
	// display minimum value
	System.out.println( "Minimum is: " + result );
} // end method minimum

public static double minimum(x:Double, y:Double, z:Double):Double
{
// create Scanner for input from command window
	Scanner input = new Scanner( System.in );
	// obtain user input
	System.out.print( "Enter three floating-point values separated by spaces: ");
	number1 = input.nextDouble();
	// read first double double
	number2 = input.nextDouble();
	// read second double
	double number3 = input.nextDouble();
	// read third double
	// determine the minimum value
	double result = minimum( numberl, number2, number3 );
	// display minimum value
	System.out.println( "Minimum is: " + result );
} // end method minimum

} // end class MyMathOps

This code is a combination of code I type myself and example code from my text book. This will not compile for me in jGRASP. I get these errors.

MyMathOps.java:10: expected public static int square(x:Integer):Integer ^ MyMathOps.java:96: ')' expected } // end method minimum ^ 2 errors

----jGRASP wedge: exit code for process is 1. ----jGRASP: operation complete.

What am I doing wrong here? I have spent hours working on this and reading in my textbook. If I do not get this right. I will get a bad grade. I need to get a good grade in this class so I can get into a top notch Computer Science University. Thanks for your help.

In the unlikely event that my instructor or any administrator from Salt Lake Community College ever comes across this question, let me make my intentions clear. This question is posted in the greatest spirit of academic honesty. I ask this question to seek general advice and help in understanding the proper way to use the Java programming language. I in no way use the work of others and represent it as my own work. I use the answers provided here as a general aid in my understanding. I do all my own work and do not copy work provided by people answering my question.

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Can you post syntactically correct Java code please. Make sure you comment out and mark the problematic line clearly. Might be able to help here then... – Jon Mar 30 at 1:11
I'm a little confused about this. Why are you using JGrasp? And why are you using the var:Type syntax in the MyTextOps class? – Uri Mar 30 at 1:12
Do yourself another favor and remove all those awful comments. They add no new information whatsoever; they're only cluttering your already hard-to-read code. – duffymo Mar 30 at 1:15
I am using JGRASP because that is the IDE my college's Computer Science Department asks new students to use. JGRASP does not do code completion which helps a programmer new to Java learn the language throught repetition. My instructor says you learn the basics better if the IDE does not do things for you. – Patrick Cassell Jun 15 at 21:33
I added these comments because I am following the example of my instructor. I have read many times that comments make code more readable. I have read that most developers do not document their code enough. Maybe I am puting in more comments than you are used to. Maybe because I am new to Java I am not following coventions. The comments are ignored by the compiler, if they bother you ignore them too. – Patrick Cassell Jun 15 at 21:46
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4 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

The lines like this are not valid Java syntax:

public static int square(x:Integer):Integer
public static int maximum(x:Integer, y:Integer, z:Integer):Integer
...

This looks like a UML or pseudo-code syntax. "x:Integer" is "language-agnostic" notation that means that x is an Integer type (which maps to an int or Integer object in Java). The ":Integer" at the end means that the method returns an Integer type, which you are doing correctly already.

Try changing all your method declarations to look like this:

public static int square(int x) // Or "Integer x" if you want to use the Integer class, rather than the primitive int
public static int maximum(int x, int y, int z)
....
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"int" yes, "Integer" no. You should always prefer a primitive type over a boxed primitive (wrapper) type unless you have good reason to do otherwise. – Alan Moore Jun 16 at 2:26
vote up 2 vote down

I am guessing that you are used to Pascal (or a derivative).

public static int square(x:Integer):Integer

in Java that is

public static int square(int x)

Also since the code is inside of "MyMathOpsTest" you do not need to prefix the method calls with "MyMathOpsTest.".

Also, why call it "MyMathOps" instead of "MathOperationsTest"? Of course it is yours - it doesn't be long to me or anyone else! Pick names that have meaning, try to avoid shorthands like "Ops", unless it is common for the field you are working in (URL is a good one, "Ops" isn't).

And now for the generl programming advice for a beginner:

  • write a single line of code
  • get that line of code to compile
  • once that line of code compiles work on the next one
  • get the next line of code to compile
  • keep doing that until the program is done.

There is no point in making the same mistakes over and over again - all you get good at is making mistakes, and that isn't much fun.

So to get you started...

Step 1:

public class MathOperations
{
    public static int maximum(final int x, final int y, final int z)
    {
    }
}

(compile the above code)

Step 2:

public class MathOperations
{
    public static int maximum(final int x, final int y, final int z)
    {
        final Scanner input;
    }
}

(compile the above code)

Step 3:

public class MathOperations
{
    public static int maximum(final int x, final int y, final int z)
    {
        final Scanner input;

        intput = new Scanner(System.in);
    }
}

(compile the above code)

and then keep going one line at a time. Once you get the hang of it you can do more than one line, but at the start, doing it one line at a time will show you immediately when you make a mistake. Make sure that you fix ALL of the mistakes before you move on to the next line.

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The names of the classes are requirements of the assignment. Because this assignment is for an introductory course a lot of things that would normally be left up to me to decide are specified by the assignment description. – Patrick Cassell Mar 30 at 2:27
ah... too bad people actually teach the "My" stuff. – TofuBeer Mar 30 at 2:36
vote up 1 vote down

Also, at the end of the first method pause(), you need another curly brace:

public static void pause() 
{ 
    try 
    { 
      System.out.print("Press <Enter> to continue..."); 
      System.in.read(); 
    } 
    catch (Exception e)
    {
      System.err.printf("Error %s%c\n",e.getMessage(),7);
    }
}<-- this one is missing in yours

Hope this helps!

link|flag
Looks like he has that one, but it is not indented properly. It looks like he is closing the class there, but that actually closes the pause() method. However, he is missing a curly brace to end his class. – Kevin Crowell Mar 30 at 1:35
vote up 0 vote down

I don't know what the point of the exercise is - the math ops, the overloading, or the menu. But I'd recommend that you start over with these as your basis. At least they compile and run:

public class MyMathOps
{
   public static int square(int x)
   {
       return x*x;
   }

   public static double square(double x)
   {
       return x*x;
   }

   public static int cube(int x)
   {
       return x*x*x;
   }

   public static double cube(double x)
   {
       return x*x*x;
   }

   public static int maximum(Integer... values)
   {
       Integer maxValue = Integer.MIN_VALUE;

       for (Integer value : values)
       {
           if (value.compareTo(maxValue) > 0)
           {
               maxValue = value;
           }
       }

       return maxValue;
   }

   public static double maximum(Double... values)
   {
       Double maxValue = Double.MIN_VALUE;

       for (Double value : values)
       {
           if (value.compareTo(maxValue) > 0)
           {
               maxValue = value;
           }
       }

       return maxValue;
   }

   public static int minimum(Integer... values)
   {
       Integer minValue = Integer.MAX_VALUE;

       for (Integer value : values)
       {
           if (value.compareTo(minValue) < 0)
           {
               minValue = value;
           }
       }

       return minValue;
   }

   public static double minimum(Double... values)
   {
       Double minValue = Double.MIN_VALUE;

       for (Double value : values)
       {
           if (value.compareTo(minValue) < 0)
           {
               minValue = value;
           }
       }

       return minValue;
   }

}

and the test class (simplified):

public class MyMathOpsTest
{
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        Integer [] intValues = { 1, 2, 3, };
        Double [] doubleValues = { 11.0, 14.0, -6.0 };

        for (Integer value : intValues)
        {
            System.out.println("value  : " + value);
            System.out.println("squared: " + MyMathOps.square(value));
            System.out.println("cubed  : " + MyMathOps.cube(value));
            System.out.println("min    : " + MyMathOps.minimum(intValues));
            System.out.println("max    : " + MyMathOps.maximum(intValues));
        }

        for (Double value : doubleValues)
        {
            System.out.println("value  : " + value);
            System.out.println("squared: " + MyMathOps.square(value));
            System.out.println("cubed  : " + MyMathOps.cube(value));
            System.out.println("min    : " + MyMathOps.minimum(doubleValues));
            System.out.println("max    : " + MyMathOps.maximum(doubleValues));
        }
    }
}

When this is done running, you'll know that your methods are correct. Spare yourself the difficulties of reading in values on the first try.

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