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I'm trying to figure out the best way to search a customer in an ArrayList by its Id number. The code below is not working; the compiler tells me that I am missing a return statement.

Customer findCustomerByid(int id){
    boolean exist=false;

    if(this.customers.isEmpty()) {
        return null;
    }

    for(int i=0;i<this.customers.size();i++) {
        if(this.customers.get(i).getId() == id) {
            exist=true;
            break;
        }

        if(exist) {
            return this.customers.get(id);
        } else {
            return this.customers.get(id);
        }
    }

}

//the customer class is something like that
public class Customer {
    //attributes
    int id;
    int tel;
    String fname;
    String lname;
    String resgistrationDate;
}
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7  
One of the main Java Good Practices is to ALWAYS use braces even if the block has just one sentence to avoid problems like yours – victor hugo Jun 12 '09 at 6:24

6 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

The compiler is complaining because you currently have the 'if(exist)' block inside of your for loop. It needs to be outside of it.

for(int i=0;i<this.customers.size();i++){
        if(this.customers.get(i).getId() == id){
            exist=true;
            break;
        }
}

if(exist) {
    return this.customers.get(id);
} else {
    return this.customers.get(id);
}

That being said, there are better ways to perform this search. Personally, if I were using an ArrayList, my solution would look like the one that Jon Skeet has posted.

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Yes I reformated it and now is more obvious – victor hugo Jun 12 '09 at 6:19
I strongly suspect that code is still broken though (note the argument to customers.get at the end). The fact that it also still has an "if/else" where both branches have the same code is deeply suspicious too! – Jon Skeet Jun 12 '09 at 6:32
I agree, Jon. Moreover, there are certainly better ways to perform the search (as several other posters have indicated). – Brandon E Taylor Jun 12 '09 at 6:35

Others have pointed out the error in your existing code, but I'd like to take two steps further. Firstly, assuming you're using Java 1.5+, you can achieve greater readability using the enhanced for loop:

Customer findCustomerByid(int id){    
    for (Customer customer : customers) {
        if (customer.getId() == id) {
            return customer;
        }
    }
    return null; 
}

This has also removed the micro-optimisation of returning null before looping - I doubt that you'll get any benefit from it, and it's more code. Likewise I've removed the exists flag: returning as soon as you know the answer makes the code simpler.

Note that in your original code I think you had a bug. Having found that the customer at index i had the right ID, you then returned the customer at index id - I doubt that this is really what you intended.

Secondly, if you're going to do a lot of lookups by ID, have you considered putting your customers into a Map<Integer, Customer>?

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Personally I rarely write loops myself now when I can get away with it... I use the Jakarta commons libs:

Customer findCustomerByid(final int id){
    return (Customer) CollectionUtils.find(customers, new Predicate() {
        public boolean evaluate(Object arg0) {
            return ((Customer) arg0).getId()==id;
        }
    });
}

Yay! I saved one line!

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1  
You've saved one line for every time you write a find() function :-) That's not to be sneezed at! – Brian Agnew Jun 12 '09 at 10:28
Customer findCustomerByid(int id){
    for (int i=0; i<this.customers.size(); i++) {
        Customer customer = this.customers.get(i);
        if (customer.getId() == id){
             return customer;
        }
    }
    return null; // no Customer found with this ID; maybe throw an exception
}
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Moving out the if statement is not sufficient to fix the method. Your solution is preferred. +1 – waxwing Jun 12 '09 at 6:26
I quite agree. +1 – Brandon E Taylor Jun 12 '09 at 6:28

You're missing the return statement because if your list size is 0, the for loop will never execute, thus the if will never run, and thus you will never return.

Move the if statement out of the loop.

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Even if that topic is quite old, I'd like to add something. If you overwrite equals for you classes, so it compares your getId, you can use:

customer = new Customer(id);
customers.get(customers.indexOf(customer));

Of course, you'd have to check for an IndexOutOfBounds-Exception, which oculd be translated into a null pointer or a custom CustomerNotFoundException.

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