1

Ive got a highscore system for my game. and i want to be able to sort the numbers in acending order,ive got a way to sort the numbers

   public static int[] sort(int[] a){
    Arrays.sort(a);
    return a;
}

but how do i make it so the scores stay with the name of the player that set it? for example me:10 you:50

You should be number 1 and me should be nubmer 2. how to i make it so that the string stays with the int when its sorted? thanks

2 Answers 2

4

Easiest is to create a class to hold the person's name and score. Make it implement the Comparable interface, in the compareTo(...) method compare the score of the current object, this, to the object being passed into the method, and then sort an array of objects of this class just as you're doing.

class MyFoo implements Comparable<MyFoo> {
  private String name;
  private int score;

  public MyFoo(String name, int score) {
     // ... etc...
  }

  // getter methods here

  public int compareTo(MyFoo other) {
    return score - other.getScore();
  }

  //.... etc...
}
8
  • ok,so a arraylist of a comparable object will sort into the right order with Arrays.sort? thanks for the help :D Feb 4, 2012 at 18:40
  • Ok,will do also thanks for the quick way of doing the compare to return,i was doing it manually,with a if for each case :) Feb 4, 2012 at 18:43
  • Ok,nearly got it,just cant work out how to add a new score to Score[],as i cant just to scores.add and I dont know how many scores are saved in the array Feb 4, 2012 at 18:52
  • @JackPatrick: then use an ArrayList<Score> (if your class is called Score) as this collection is made for your exact situation -- you need an array like structure of flexible size. Feb 4, 2012 at 18:54
  • Thats what i had,but Arrays.sort(score) doesnt work,as there is no sort(arraylist) Feb 4, 2012 at 18:57
2

Create a class Player that contains both the name of the player and its score, and the appropriate getters (getName() and getScore()), and you'll be able to sort an array of Players with

 Player[] players = ...
 Arrays.sort(players, new Comparator<Player> {
     public int compare(Player p1, Player p2) {
         return Integer.valueOf(p1.getScore()).compareTo(p2.getScore());
     }    
 }
1
  • Ah yes, your compare(...) method is better than my compareTo(...) as it handles the "edge" cases better. +1 vote Feb 4, 2012 at 18:44

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