A Java program consists of one or more classes one of them must be public and must have a method with the following signature:
public static void main (String[] args).
Basically, the main
() method will instantiate appropriate objects and send them "messages" (by calling their methods) to perform the desired tasks. The main() method should not contain any complicated program logic nor program flow control.
public class PizzaClient { /** * Prints the answer to the problem stated in the above.. */ public void run() { Pizza round = new Pizza (3.99, new Circle (2.5)); Pizza rect = new Pizza (4.99, new Rectangle (6, 4)); PizzaDeal pd = new PizzaDeal(); System.out.println(round + " is a better deal than " + rect + ": " + pd.betterDeal(round, rect)); } /** * Main entry to the program to find the better deal. * Instantiates an instance of PizzaClient and tells it to run. * This is what all main() should do: instantiates a bunch of objects and * "turn them loose"! * There should no complicated logic and/or control in main(). * @param nu not used */ public static void main (String[] nu) { new PizzaClient().run(); } }
public class Rectangle implements IShape { private double _width; private double _height; /** * Initializes thisRectangle
width a given width and a given height * @param w width of thisRectangle
, >= 0. * @param h height of thisRectangle
, >= 0. */ public Rectangle(double w, double h) { _height = h; _width = w; } /** * @returns thisRectangle
's area. */ public double getArea() { return _height * _width; } /** * Overrides the inherited method from class Object. * @returns a String describing a Rectangle with its width and height. */ public String toString() { return "Rectangle(h = " + _height + ", w = " + _width + ")"; } }
Notes on the toString() method: toString() is a method that is inherited all the way from the base class, Object. It is the method that the Java system calls by default whenever a string representation of the class is needed. For instance, "This is "+ myObject is equivalent to "This is " + myObject.toString(). DrJava will call an object's toString() method if you type the object's name in the interaction window, without terminating the line with a semicolon. The return value of toString() is what prints out on the next line.
// Line-oriented - comment goes to end of the current line.
/*
block-oriented
can span several lines.
*/
[ ] means optional.
[public] class class-name [inheritance-specification] {
[field-list;]
[constructor-list;]
[method-list;]
}
Inheritance Specification looks like
[extends SomeClass] [implements Interface1,..., InterfaceN]
We will discuss the meaning of inheritance in due time.
NOTE: Each Java statement must terminate with a semi-colon.
A field list consists of zero or more field declarations of the form
[static] [final] [public | private | protected] field-type field-name [assignment];
A constructor list consists of zero or more constructor definitions of the form
[public | private | protected]
class-name ([parameter-list]){
[statement-list;]
}
NOTE: The constructor's name is the same as the class name. Constructors are used for initialization of the object during the object's instantiation only.
A method list consists of zero or more method definitions of the form
[static] [final] [public | private | protected]
return-type method-name ([param-list]) {
[statement-list;]
}
A return type void means the method does not return any value.
param-list can be:
public double getArea() {
// code ...
}
type1 param1, type2 param2, , typeN paramN
for example,
private void doSomethingWith(int n, double x, Pizza p) {
// code ...
}
type1 param1, type2 param2, , typeN... params
In the above,
typeN... params is called a variable argument list. It must appear at the end of the whole parameter list.for example,
private void doSomethingWith(int n, double x, Pizza... p) {
// code ...
}