I think1 that the real problem is that you are confused over the difference between a method and a constructor, and you are trying to use a constructor as if it was a method.
Your UserNumber
so-called method is actually declared (properly!) as a constructor1. The way to use is as a constructor is as follows:
UserNumber myNum = new UserNumber();
I suspect you are trying to call it like:
... = UserNumber();
... and that is going to fail, saying that UserNumber
is an invalid method. A Java constructor is invoked using new
.
There are 3 clues that say to me that the OP's code is intended to be a constructor:
- The
super()
syntax is only valid in a constructor.
- A method declaration requires a return type AND a method name. This has only one identifier before the parameter list.
- You've used an identifier that should be a class name (according to the Java identifier rules).
1 - I can't be sure, because you didn't show us the line with the syntax error on it. Or if you did, then the real problem is somewhere else ... in code that you haven't shown us.