-1

The bellow class contain a method fromRomanToArabic () in this method I'm trying to convert a Arabic number to Roman number. the method should act as follows:

  • take the user String from the object
  • itterate through the string
  • add up the values associated with the characters. If the characters associated number is larger than the previous one, deduct the character value from the sum.

here is my code:

package romantoarabicnums;

import javax.swing.JOptionPane;


public class RomanToArabicNums {
    private static String userString;
    private static int userNumber;
    private static char letter;
    private static int letterNum;

    public RomanToArabicNums (String s) throws NumberFormatException {
        for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++) {

           if (s.charAt(i) == 'M' ||s.charAt(i) == 'D' ||s.charAt(i) == 'C' ||s.charAt(i) == 'X' ||
               s.charAt(i) == 'V' ||s.charAt(i) == 'I' ||s.charAt(i) == 'L') {
               userString += s.charAt(i);
           }
           else {throw new NumberFormatException("Only M,C,D,X,V and I allowed");}
        }
    }
    public RomanToArabicNums (int num) throws NullPointerException {
       if (num >= 1 && num <= 3999) {
           RomanToArabicNums.userNumber = num;
       }
       else {throw new NumberFormatException("numbers between 1 and 3999 only!");}
    }
    public RomanToArabicNums (char let, int num) {
        RomanToArabicNums.letter = let;
        RomanToArabicNums.letterNum = num;
    }
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        RomanToArabicNums r2 = new RomanToArabicNums("MCMXCV");
        System.out.println("the arabic number is: " + r2.fromRomanToArabic());

    }
    /* convert Roman characters to Arabic numbers */
    public int fromRomanToArabic () {
            int sum = 0;

            for (int i = 0; i <= userString.length(); i++) {
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'M') {
                    sum += 1000;
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'D') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M') {
                        sum -= 500;
                    } else {
                        sum += 500;
                    }
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'C') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'D') {
                        sum -= 100;
                    } else {
                        sum += 100;
                    }
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'L') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'D'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'C') {
                        sum -= 50;
                    } else {
                        sum += 50;
                    }
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'X') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'D'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'C' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'L') {
                        sum -= 10;
                    } else {
                        sum += 10;
                    }
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'V') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'D'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'C' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'L'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'X') {
                        sum -= 5;
                    } else {
                        sum += 5;
                    }
                }
                /**/
                if (userString.charAt(i) == 'I') {
                    if (userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'D'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'C' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'L'
                            || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'X' || userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'V') {
                        sum -= 1;
                    } else {
                        sum += 1;
                    }
                }
            }
            return sum;

    }
}

and here is the error: enter image description here

NOTE: I think that the error is due to number of string elements being less that the steps in the for loop

2

6 Answers 6

2

So strings are Zero bases, you have to run your Loop until: i < userString.length()

for (int i = 0; i < userString.length(); i++) {

And theree are many more Errors where you get a character out of the length of your string.

2
  • @zamzam No not same error. But you have a lot of Errors with index in strings.
    – Jens
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:31
  • @Jens He'll still get an IndexOutOfBoundsException due to charAt(i+1)..
    – eol
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:57
1

In addition to Jens' and Andy's answers you should actually check for i + 1 < userString.length(), since you use userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M'.

This will also cause an IndexOutOfBoundsException if you're at the index of the last character.

Note that you'll need to handle the last character accordingly or keep i < userString.length() and add a check if i + 1 exceeds the string's length wherever you use userString.charAt(i + 1).

2
  • thanks for the answer! this almost solved the problem. I'm getting a return int value of 1990. for MCMXCV it should return 1995
    – zamzam
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:34
  • @zamzam As I said you need to apply your logic to the last character seperatly after the loop since you break out of it too early.
    – eol
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:36
0

I didn't got this at all. But you do the following in your method:

   for (int i = 0; i <= userString.length(); i++)

You should do this:

   for (int i = 0; i < userString.length(); i++)
0
0

You are using userString.charAt(i + 1) in a loop where i <= userString.length()

so there are 2 indexes that are going to be out of bound i == n - 1 and i == n.

change loop definition from

for (int i = 0; i <= userString.length(); i++) {

to

for (int i = 0; i < userString.length() - 1; i++) {
1
  • thanks for the answer! this almost solved the problem. I'm getting a return int value of 1990. for MCMXCV it should return 1995
    – zamzam
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:34
0

There are two problems in your code. One is obvious - you're looping for (int i = 0; i <= userString.length(); i++) instead of for (int i = 0; i < userString.length(); i++). The second one is more hidden. You don't check if i + 1 < userString.length() before calling charAt(i+1). Fixing those two mistakes will let you convert valid Roman numbers.

One more thing. The class called RomanToArabic isn't the best place to convert Arabic to Roman. Consider refactoring the name of your class to RomanArabicConverter or divide your logic to two separate classes and provide one class that would aggregate both of them.

0

Referring to the Javadoc of String.charAt(int):

[throws] IndexOutOfBoundsException - if the index argument is negative or not less than the length of this string.

So anywhere you call userString.charAt, you need to ensure that the index meets these conditions:

  • i <= userString.length() should be i < userString.length(). This means that all userString.charAt(i) calls succeed;
  • All of the calls to userString.charAt(i + 1) require a prior check that i + 1 < userString.length(), e.g.

    if (i + 1 < userString.length() && userString.charAt(i + 1) == 'M') {
    

    Logically, these calls are checking the "next character". By checking the value of i + 1 first, this check is basically saying:

    if ((there is a next character) AND (the next character is 'M')) {
    
2
  • It's not the only problem with the code. He also calls userString.charAt(i + 1) at different places in his code, so even if he fixes the for, it will still throw that exception.
    – Mark
    Jul 27, 2016 at 10:30
  • @zamzam it is not the same error, only the same kind of error. If you look carefully at the stack trace before and after changing the loop guard, you will see that the exception is thrown on different lines. Jul 27, 2016 at 11:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.