2

I have a program where a number of grades are entered by the user and stored into array which is then used by the program to calculate various values.

I'm using multiple methods so I want to define a static array that all the methods can refer to and will hold the grades. However I want its length to be equal to the number of grades entered.

public class GradeStatistics {
static int numGrades, sum = 0;
static int[] grades = new int[numGrades];

public static void main(String args[]){
    readGrades();
    calcSum();

the readGrades() method finds out how many grades there will be and assigns it to numGrades

public static void readGrades(){
    Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

    System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
    numGrades = input.nextInt();

Is there a way I can get the user to enter the number of grades before defining the static array?

1
  • Is there any particular reason why you are using an array and not an arraylist?
    – luanjot
    Dec 23, 2013 at 8:28

6 Answers 6

3

You can define the static array, but not initialize it:

static int[] grades;

Then you can call the readGrades() method and initialize the grades array inside it:

public static void readGrades(){
    Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

    System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
    numGrades = input.nextInt();
    grades = new int[numGrades];
}
0

You're not forced to initialize a field when declaring it. The initialization can come after, and the variable can be reinitialized any number of times. So you just need

static int[] grades; // declaration. The field is implicitely initialized to null.

public static void readGrades(){
    Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

    System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
    int numGrades = input.nextInt();
    grades = new int[numGrades]; // initialization

Note that I made numGrades a local variable rather than a static field. There is no reason to make it a static field. The number of grades is available using grades.length.

0

When declaring the grades array you don't have to assign it.

static int[] grades;

And then just assign it when you're reading in the nr of grades.

public static void readGrades(){
Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
numGrades = input.nextInt();
grades = new int[numGrades];
0

I would implement the readGrades method like this

public static int[] readGrades(){
   Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

   System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
   numGrades = input.nextInt();
   int[] grades = new int[numGrades];
   // read the grades
   return grades;
}

since it is more intuitive and encapsulated if a method that is named readGrades also returns something.

0

you may init the array int your static method : readGrades

like this:

public class GradeStatistics {
  static int numGrades, sum = 0;
  static int[] grades = null;

public static void main(String args[]){
  readGrades();
  calcSum();
}


 public static void readGrades(){
    Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);

    System.out.print("Enter the number of grades: ");
    numGrades = input.nextInt();
    grades = new int[numGrades];
   }
}
0

Declare you grades like this

static int[] grades = null;

And initialize the grades like below.

public static void readGrades(){

       numGrades = input.nextInt();
       grades  =new int[numGrades];
}

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