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I have my code running perfectly, except for my return value for the monthly loan calculator. It keeps on returning Infinity for both my monthly payments and total payments. Please help with the formula. This is a homework. All i need to know is if I am implementing the formula incorrectly. I get the feeling that it is somehow trying to divide over 0 and then returning infinity, but I could be wrong.

public class MyLoan
{

private double amountBorrowed;
private double yearlyRate;
private int years;

public double A;
public double n = years * 12;

public MyLoan(double amt, double rt, int yrs)
{
    amountBorrowed = amt;
    yearlyRate = rt;
    years = yrs;
}
public double getAmountBorrowed()
{
    return amountBorrowed;
}

public double getYearlyRate()
{
    return yearlyRate;
}

public int getYears()
{
    return years;
}

public double monthlyPayment()
{
    double i = (yearlyRate / 100) / 12;

    A = (amountBorrowed) * (i * Math.pow(1+i, n)) / (Math.pow(1+i, n) -1);

    return A;
}

public double totalPayment()
{
    return A * (years * 12);
}

public String toString()
{
    return "Loan: " +  "$" + amountBorrowed + " at " + yearlyRate + " for " + years + " years";
}



public static void main(String[] args)
{

final double RATE15 = 5.75;
final double RATE30 = 6.25;


StdOut.println("***** Welcome to the Loan analyzer! *****");

String ans = "Y";

do {
  StdOut.print("\n  Enter the principle amount to borrow: ");
  double amount = StdIn.readDouble();


  MyLoan fifteenYears = new MyLoan(amount, RATE15, 15);
  MyLoan thirtyYears = new MyLoan(amount, RATE30, 30);

  double amount15 = fifteenYears.monthlyPayment();
  double total15 = fifteenYears.totalPayment();
  double amount30 = thirtyYears.monthlyPayment();
  double total30 = thirtyYears.totalPayment();

  StdOut.println("===========ANALYSES==========");
  StdOut.println(fifteenYears);
  StdOut.println("Monthly payment = " + "$" + amount15);
  StdOut.println("Total payment = " + "$" + total15);

  StdOut.println("");
  StdOut.println("");

  StdOut.println(thirtyYears);
  StdOut.println("Monthly payment = " + "$" + amount30);
  StdOut.println("Total payment = " + "$" + total30);
  StdOut.println("=============================");



  StdOut.print("\n      ** Do you want to continue (y/n)? ");
  ans = StdIn.readString();


} while (ans.toUpperCase().equals("Y"));

StdOut.println("\n********** Thank you. Come again! **********");

} 

}
3
  • You should at least try to pinpoint the location of the error. I think that not too much users are going to read through your code, myself included. So please only post the parts you think are relevant.
    – Adam Arold
    Oct 3, 2013 at 17:38
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    Well, when you declare your instance variable n, you define it as years * 12, but what is years at that point?
    – ajp15243
    Oct 3, 2013 at 17:38
  • ajp, thank you very much, you pinpointed the problem and I have corrected it. Now it is working brilliantly. Thank you.
    – Lenny
    Oct 3, 2013 at 19:04

2 Answers 2

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You should be debugging this yourself, but I'll give you a hint. What is 1^n (where n is a positive integer)? Where, in your code, are you using this construct?

2
  • His payment formula is correct as far as I can tell. But the problem is that the value of n isn't what he thinks it is, as hinted in the question's comments.
    – John
    Oct 3, 2013 at 17:55
  • Thank you for the help dr. house and John, now the code is working perfectly.
    – Lenny
    Oct 3, 2013 at 19:04
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There is many ways to calculate interest and the most common is just

A = amountBorrowed * (yearlyRate / 100) / 12;
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