Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Lab 8: IF statement …. Conditionals and Loops.
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Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Lab 8: IF statement ….
Conditionals and Loops
The if condition Statement
if ( condition ) statement;
if is a Javareserved word
The condition must be aboolean expression. It mustevaluate to either true or false.
If the condition is true, the statement is executed.If it is false, the statement is skipped.
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A conditional statement lets us choose which statement will be executed next
Logic of an if statement
conditionevaluated
statement
truefalse
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Can use if to code things like:if total > 100
print “$” + total / 100
The if-else Statement
if ( condition ) statement1;else statement2;
• If the condition is true, statement1 is executed; if the condition is false, statement2 is executed
• One or the other will be executed, but not both
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Logic of an if-else statement
conditionevaluated
statement1
true false
statement2
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Can use if to code things like:if total > 100
print “$” + total / 100else
print total + “ cents”
Logic of an if-else statement
total > 100?
print “$” + total / 100
true false
print total + “ cents”
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Can use if to code things like:if total > 100
print “$” + total / 100else
print total + “ cents”Boolean expression
Boolean Expressions• A condition often uses one of Java's equality
operators or relational operators, which all return boolean results:
== equal to!= not equal to< less than> greater than<= less than or equal to>= greater than or equal to
• Note the difference between the equality operator (==) and the assignment operator (=)
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Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
Logical Operators• What if we wanted to test for multiple conditions?
• For example, what if we want to print the temperature if it’s below 80 degrees and greater than 50 degrees?
• We use logical operators:if (temp < 80 && temp > 50)
System.out.println(temp);
Logical Operators• Boolean expressions can also use the following
logical operators:
! Logical NOT&& Logical AND|| Logical OR
• They all take boolean operands and produce boolean results
• Logical NOT is a unary operator (it operates on one operand)
• Logical AND and logical OR are binary operators (each operates on two operands)
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Logical NOT
• The logical NOT operation is also called logical negation or logical complement
• If some boolean condition a is true, then !a is false; if a is false, then !a is true
• Logical expressions can be shown using a truth table:
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a !a
true false
false true
Logical AND and Logical OR• The logical AND expression
a && b
is true if both a and b are true, and false otherwise
• The logical OR expression
a || b
is true if a or b or both are true, and false otherwise
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Logical AND and Logical OR• A truth table shows all possible true-false
combinations of the terms
• Since && and || each have two operands, there are four possible combinations of conditions a and b
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a b a && b a || b
true true true true
true false false true
false true false true
false false false false
Boolean Expressions• Write an expression that evaluates to true if an
integer variable age represents the age of a teenager
(age >= 13 && age <= 19)
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Boolean Expressions• Write a statement that prints out “It’s fun to be a
teen” if age represents the age of a teenager
if (age >= 13 && age <= 19)System.out.println(“It’s fun to be a teen”);
if (age > 12 && age < 20)System.out.println(“It’s fun to be a teen”);
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Short-Circuited Operators• The processing of && and || is “short-circuited”
• If the left operand is sufficient to determine the result, the right operand is not evaluated
if (count != 0 && total/count > MAX) System.out.println ("Testing.");
• This type of processing is commonly used to avoid divide by zero and null pointer exceptions
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Quick Check
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What do the following statements do?
if (total != stock + warehouse) inventoryError = true;
if (found || !done) System.out.println("Ok");
Sets the boolean variable to true if the value of totalis not equal to the sum of stock and warehouse
Prints "Ok" if found is true or done is false
Indentation• Indentation is for the human reader, and is ignored
by the compiler
if (depth >= UPPER_LIMIT) delta = 100;else System.out.println("Reseting
Delta"); delta = 0;
• Despite what the indentation implies, delta will be set to 0 no matter what
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"Always code as if the person who ends up maintaining your code will be a violent psychopath who knows where you live."
-- Martin Golding
Nested if Statements• The statement executed as a result of an if or else clause could be another if statement
• Braces can be used to specify the if statement to which an else clause belongs
• An else clause is matched to the last unmatched if (no matter what the indentation implies)
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
Comparing Data
Comparing Float Values• You might consider two floating point numbers to be
"close enough" even if they aren't exactly equal
• Don’t use == when comparing real numbers(float or double), use a tolerance:
if (Math.abs(f1 - f2) < TOLERANCE) System.out.println ("Essentially equal");
• The tolerance could be set to any appropriate level, such as 0.000001 or even 0.01, depending on precision
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Comparing Characters• Characters can be compared like numbers, since
internally they are encoded as numbers:
• For example:– ‘a’ + 1 => ‘b’ ‘A’ + 1 => ‘B’
– ‘a’ == ‘a’ => true
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Characters Unicode Values
0 – 9 48 through 57
A – Z 65 through 90
a – z 97 through 122
Comparing Strings• Remember a String is an object in Java, so we
cannot use relational operators (==, <, >, etc.) to compare strings (or objects)
• Instead, use the equals method:
• Or compareTo. For example, a call to name1.compareTo(name2)
– returns zero if name1 and name2 are equal (contain the same characters)
– returns a negative value if name1 is less than name2– returns a positive value if name1 is greater than name2
if (name1.equals(name2)) System.out.println ("Same name");
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Comparing Objects• When applied to objects, == returns true if the two
references are aliases of each other
• The equals method is defined for all objects, but unless we redefine it when we write a class, it has the same semantics as the == operator
• It has been redefined in the String class to compare the characters in the two strings
• When you write a class, you can redefine the equals method to return true under whatever conditions are appropriate
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
Practice!
Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
Part A: static methods tested in main• Write a method that takes someone’s age as input
and returns true if they can vote but not drink beer. (Note that you must be 18 to vote and 21 to drink.)Test in main
• Write a method isVowel that takes a character as input and returns whether or not the letter is a vowel. Test in main
• Write a method isVowel like above but taking a String as input instead of a character. Test in main
Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
Part B: Timer class• Create a Timer class that counts down from n to 0
(where n is specified by the constructor, 5 by default for the default constructor)
• You will need 2 fields: n & time_left
• Write a tick method that decrements the time left if time left is greater than zero, otherwise it prints: “You have no time left!”
Homework• Finish this lab• Work on CodingBat• Finish Lab 7• Read Chapter 5
Created by Emily Hill & Jerry Alan Fails
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