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CS0007: Introduction to Computer Programming The for Loop, Accumulator Variables, Seninel Values, and The Random Class.

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Presentation on theme: "CS0007: Introduction to Computer Programming The for Loop, Accumulator Variables, Seninel Values, and The Random Class."— Presentation transcript:

1 CS0007: Introduction to Computer Programming The for Loop, Accumulator Variables, Seninel Values, and The Random Class

2 Review General Form of a switch statement: switch (SwitchExpression) { case CaseExpression1: //One or more statements break; case CaseExpression2: //One or more statements break; default: //One or more statements } CaseExpression s must be of type… char, byte, short, or int.

3 Review If you want to display a floating-point number in a particular format use The DecimalFormat Class printf A loop is… a control structure that causes a statement or group of statements to repeat. Two looping structures talked about so far… while Loop do - while Loop The difference between the two… while Loop is pretest do - while Loop posttest

4 The for Loop You can do any kind of looping with what we learned up to this point. For instance, how can we make a do - while loop without the do - while looping structure? while and do - while are conditionally-controlled loops. A Conditionally-Controlled Loop executes as long as a particular condition exists. However, sometimes you know exactly how many iterations a loop must perform. A loop that repeats a specific number of times is called a count-controlled loop. For example, you may ask for information about the 12 months about a year. You can turn conditionally controlled loops into count-controlled loops, but Java provides a structure specifically for this called the for loop.

5 The for Loop The for loop has three elements: 1. It must initialize a control variable to a starting value. 2. It must test the control variable to see when the loop terminates. 3. It must update the control variable during each iteration. General Form of a for loop: for(Initialization; Test; Update) Statement or Block Initialization – an initialization expression that happens once when the loop is first reached. Normally used to initialize the control variable Test – boolean expression known as the test expression that controls the execution of the loop. As long as this is true, the loop with iterate again Note: the for loop is a pretest loop Update – expression known as the update expression that executes at the end of every iteration Usually used to change the control variable.

6 for Loop Flowchart Test Expression Statement or Block True False Update Expression Initialization Expression

7 The for Loop for(int count = 0; count < 5; count++) System.out.println("Hello!"); This will print “Hello!” 5 times. First, count is initialized to 0. count is often called a counter variable because it keeps count of the number of iterations. Then, count < 5 is tested. It is true so the body is executed. Then, count is incremented. This happens 5 times until count = 5 which makes count < 5 false. Note that count is declared inside of the loop header, this makes it have block-level scope in the loop. This implies that it can be used in the body of the loop. The counter variable can be declared outside of the header.

8 for Loop Example public class ForLoop { public static void main(String[] args) { for(int number = 1; number <= 10; number++) { System.out.println(number + "\t\t" + number*number); }

9 The for Loop Notes Remember: the for loop is a pretest loop. Use the update expression to modify the control variable, not a statement in the body of the loop (unless there is no way to avoid it) You can use any statement as the update expression: count-- count += 2 You can declare the loop control variable outside of the loop header, and it’s scope will not be limited to the loop. int count; for(count= 0; count < 5; count++) System.out.println("Hello!"); count = 99;

10 Prefix and Postfix Increment and Decrement Operators We talked about the ++ and -- operators before x++ x-- These are known as postfix increment and decrement operators, because they are placed after the variable. There is also prefix increment and decrement operators: ++x --x What’s the difference? oWhen the increment or decrement takes place. int x = 1, y; y = x++; y is 1 x is 2. The increment operator happened after the assignment operator. int x = 1, y; y = ++x; y is 2 x is 2. The increment operator happened before the assignment operator.

11 User-Controlled for Loop import java.util.Scanner; public class UserControlledForLoop { public static void main(String[] args) { int begNum, endNum; Scanner keyboard = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.print("Enter a begining number for the squares table: "); begNum = keyboard.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter an ending number for the squares table: "); endNum = keyboard.nextInt(); for(int number = begNum; number <= endNum; number++) { System.out.println(number + "\t\t" + number*number); } } }

12 Multiple Statements in the Initialization and Update Expressions Java allows multiple statements to be executed in the initialization and/or update expression portion of the for loop. Example: MultipleForLoop.java (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)

13 Running Totals and Accumulator Variables Programming tasks often require you to keep a running total of some data. This can often be done by looping and keeping track of the running total in a single variable. A variable that keeps track of a running total is called an accumulator variable. Example: AccumulatorVariable.java (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)

14 Sentinel Value The previous example required the user to enter in beforehand how many days they sold. We can allow the user to keep entering until they decide to quit by looping until they enter a sentinel value. A Sentinel Value is a special value that cannot be mistaken for normal input that signals that a loop should terminate. We’ve done this before… SoccerLeague.java Example: SentinelValue.java (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)

15 Nested Loops Just like in if statements, loops can be nested. This is required when a repetition of statements itself must be repeated a number of times. Example: NestedLoop.java (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)

16 break and continue Java provides two keywords that can be used to modify the normal iteration of a loop: break – when encountered in a loop, the loop stops and the program execution jumps to the statement immediately following the loop. continue – when encountered in a loop, the current iteration of the loop stops immediately. Example: BreakAndContinue.java (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)

17 The Random Class Some application require randomly generated numbers The Java API provides a class called Random that does exactly that. Need to import it: import java.util.Random; To create an object: Random identifier = new Random(); The random class provides many methods for generating random numbers, namely: nextDouble() – Returns the next random number as a double between 0.0 and 1.0. nextInt() – Returns the next random number as an int within in the range of int (-2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,648) nextInt(int n) - Returns the next random number as an int within in the range of 0 and n.

18 Random Class Example (See Lesson 10 Program Sheet)


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