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1 Java Basics. 2 Compiling A “compiler” is a program that translates from one language to another Typically from easy-to-read to fast-to-run e.g. from.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Java Basics. 2 Compiling A “compiler” is a program that translates from one language to another Typically from easy-to-read to fast-to-run e.g. from."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Java Basics

2 2 Compiling A “compiler” is a program that translates from one language to another Typically from easy-to-read to fast-to-run e.g. from C or Assembly to machine code Java must be (explicitly) compiled before it is run The Java compiler turns Java source code (.java) into Java bytecode (.class)

3 3 The Java Platform The Java Virtual Machine (JVM) is responsible for running bytecode The idea: bytecode can be interpreted quickly The same bytecode can be interpreted on any architecture: write once, run anywhere Code (C,C++) compiled to machine code must be compiled to a specific system

4 4 The Java Language Created by Sun Microsystems Introduced in 1995, initial popularity grew due to Internet applications  Excitement surrounding Java applets  Confusion with Javascript Steady rise in popularity has continued for “better” programming reasons

5 5 A Historical Interlude: The Java Team Java originally intended to be used on “smart” consumer electronics Bill Joy  Founded Sun, 1982  Intelligent robots will replace humanity in the near future… James Gosling (“the father of Java”)  University of Calgary grad  First JVM, compiler, interpreter  also developed Emacs Patrick Naughton  Arrested in late 90s on child predator charges  Not mentioned so much as a founding father anymore

6 6 The Java Language (cont’d) … is a high-level programming language … is very object oriented … is similar to C++ and C … typically compiled to Java bytecode … is often confused with the Java Platform, but these are two different aspects of “Java”

7 7 Syntax and Semantics The syntax rules of a language define how we can combine reserved words, symbols, and identifiers The semantics of a program statement define what the statement means  Problem with program syntax = “error”  Problem with program semantics = “bug”

8 8 Java Program Structure A Java program consists of:  One or more classes  A class contains one or more methods  A method contains program statements We will explore these terms in detail

9 9 Java Program Structure public class MyProgram {}{} // comments about the class class header class body Comments can be placed almost anywhere

10 10 Java Program Structure public class MyProgram {}{} // comments about the class public static void main (String[] args) {}{} // comments about the method method header method body

11 11 Hello World public class HelloWorld {}{} // HelloWorld.java public static void main (String[] args) {}{} System.out.println(“Hello World!”);

12 12 Hello World public class HelloWorld {}{} // HelloWorld.java public static void main (String[] args) {}{} System.out.println(“Hello World!”); Creates a “class” called HelloWorld  Compiled to HelloWorld.class  Classes used to define objects… later

13 13 Hello World public class HelloWorld {}{} // HelloWorld.java public static void main (String[] args) {}{} System.out.println(“Hello World!”); The “main” method is where it starts to run  Ignore “public static void” and “String[] args” for now

14 14 Hello World public class HelloWorld {}{} // HelloWorld.java public static void main (String[] args) {}{} System.out.println(“Hello World!”); Contains one “statement”  The System.out.println function comes from the Java “class library”  Ends with a semicolon (all statements do)

15 15 Compiling and Running Create the file HelloWorld.java in a text editor Compile:  javac HelloWorld.java Run:  java HelloWorld Output:  Hello World!

16 16 Comments Three kinds of comments: To simplify: comments are good // a one-line comment /* a multi-line comment */ /** a javadoc comment */

17 17 Reserved Words and Identifiers Reserved words are specified by the language  All Java reserved words are in the text Identifiers are specified by a programmer  Maybe you: e.g. HelloWorld  Maybe someone else: e.g. println

18 18 Restrictions and Conventions Restriction  Identifiers can not start with a digit Conventions  Title case for class names: HelloWorld  Uppercase for constants: MAX

19 19 White Space Conventions Idea: make programs easy to read Use consistent indentation Use blank lines and comments to visually separate methods The fact that it compiles doesn’t make it right…

20 20 Strong Typing Java is a “strongly typed” language All variables and values have a specific type Type is known when the program is compiled…. before it is run So all variables and values must be declared with a type before being used

21 21 Declaring Variables Syntax: Examples:  int count1, int count 2;  int count = 0;  String course1 = “CMPT 126”; ::=, …. ; ::= ::= =

22 22 Assignment We use the = operator for variable assignment  Initialization is a special case When a value is assigned, the old value is overwritten In Java, we use the final modifier to declare a variable constant  final int MAX_HEIGHT = 6;

23 23 Primitive Data Types in Java Four integer types:  byte, short, int, long Two floating point types  float, double One of them is for characters  char One of them is for boolean values  boolean

24 24 Expressions and Assignment An expression is a combination of one or more operators and operands Arithmetic operators: +, -, *, /, %  Use the normal order of operations e.g. int exp = 2 * 5 +7; count = count + 1; count++; Boolean operators: &&, ||

25 25 More Assignment Operators x += y is equivalent to x = x + y Also:  -=  *=  /=  %=

26 26 Data Conversion Non-matching types can be converted A widening conversion is automatic  e.g. from short to int A narrowing conversion may lose information  e.g. from float to int Three kinds of conversion:  Assignment  Promotion  Casting

27 27 Assignment Conversion final int dollars = 6; double money; money = dollars; Only works for widening conversion

28 28 Promotion int count = 2; float mass = 18.342; mass = mass / count; Passing count to an operator that expects floating point values

29 29 Casting float mass = 18.342; int roundedmass = (int) mass; Casting works for widening and narrowing  In this example, decimal part is just lost  Note: this does not actually round

30 30 Object Types The primitive types aren’t really enough Java also allows object types, or classes  Typically capitalized Object variables hold references to objects  The declaration only creates a reference This is different from primitive types  Variables of primitive type hold a value

31 31 Example: String Objects We have already seen one object type in Java: String A String object is a list of characters e.g. “Hello world!” or “My name is Aaron” Can be passed to print or println Can be concatenated using the (+) operator e.g. “Hello world! ” + “My name is Aaron” “I can also append numbers, like “ + 2

32 32 Object Instances We must create a new “instance” of an object to store something  Each object type has a constructor (more later)  Create instances using the reserved world new e.g. course = new String(“CMPT 126”); This creates a new String in memory  It stores the characters “CMPT 126”  The assignment sets course to refer to this instance

33 33 References and Instances String course; new String(“CMPT 126”) course = new String(“CMPT 126”); course: CMPT 126 course:


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