Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 Decisions, decisions, decisions Chapter 4 Trey Kirk.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 Decisions, decisions, decisions Chapter 4 Trey Kirk."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Decisions, decisions, decisions Chapter 4 Trey Kirk

2 2 Background  Our problem-solving solutions so far have the straight-line property They execute the same statements for every run of the program public class DisplayForecast // main(): application entry point public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.print("I think there is a world"); System.out.print(" market for maybe five "); System.out.println("computers. “); System.out.print(" Thomas Watson, IBM, “); System.out.println("1943.“); } }

3 3 Background  For general problem solving we need more capabilities The ability to control which statements are executed The ability to control how often a statement is executed  We will concentrate first on controlling which statements are executed  Java provides the if and switch conditional constructs to control whether a statement list is executed The if constructs use logical expressions to determine their course of action  We will start with logical expressions

4 4 Logical expressions

5 5  The branch of mathematics dealing with logical expressions is Boolean algebra Developed by the British mathematician George Boole

6 6 Logical expressions  A logical expression has either the value logical true or logical false Some expressions whose values are logical true  The year 2004 is a leap year  A meter equals 100 centimeters Some expressions whose values are logical false  A triangle has four sides  The area of square is always equal to twice its perimeter

7 7 Logical expressions  There are three primary logical operators for manipulating logical values Logical and Logical or Logical not  The operators work as most of us would expect

8 8 Truth tables  We use truth tables to give formal specifications of the operators “It works as most of us would expect” allows for ambiguity of interpretation  Jim is smiling or Patty is smiling Can both Jim and Patty both be smiling?  Truth tables Lists all combinations of operand values and the result of the operation for each combination pq p and q False FalseFalse False TrueFalse True FalseFalse True TrueTrue

9 9 Or and not truth tables pq p or q False FalseFalse False TrueTrue True FalseTrue True TrueTrue pnot p False True True False

10 10 Boolean algebra  Can create complex logical expressions by combining simple logical expressions not (p and q) pq p and q not (p and q) False FalseFalseTrue False TrueFalseTrue True FalseFalseTrue True TrueTrueFalse

11 11 DeMorgan’s laws  not (p and q) equals (not p) or (not q) (not p) or pq p and q not (p and q) ( not p) (not q) (not q) False False False True True True True False True False True True False True True False False True False True True True True True False False False False

12 12 DeMorgan’s laws  not (p or q) equals (not p) and (not q) (not p) and pq p or q not (p or q) ( not p) (not q) (not q) False False False True True True True False True True False True False False True False True False False True False True True True False False False False

13 13 DeMorgan’s laws  If you remember nothing else about the Boolean operators, remember that: not (a and b) == (not a) or (not b) not (a or b) == (not a) and (not b)

14 14 Sidewalk chalk guy Source: http://www.gprime.net/images/sidewalkchalkguy/ Source: http://www.gprime.net/images/sidewalkchalkguy/

15 15 Boolean expressions

16 16 A boolean type  Java has the logical type boolean  Type boolean has two literal constants true false  Operators The and operator is &&  Don’t use & The or operator is ||  Don’t use | The not operator is !

17 17 Defining boolean variables  Local boolean variables are uninitialized by default boolean isWhitespace; boolean receivedAcknowledgement; boolean haveFoundMissingLink;

18 18 Defining boolean variables  Local boolean variables with initialization boolean canProceed = true; boolean preferCyan = false; boolean completedSecretMission = true;

19 19 Assignment vs. comparison  = is the assignment operator It copies the value on the right to the location on the left Consider: int x; x = 5; The value 5 is copied to the spot x in memory  == is the comparison operator Returns a boolean (true or false) if the two sides are equal Consider: int x = 5; System.out.println (x == 5); System.out.println (x == 6); Prints out true, false

20 20 Other operators  Equality operators == and != Operator ==  Returns true if the operands have the same value; otherwise, returns false  This is not the assignment operator! Operator !=  Returns true if the operands have different values; otherwise, returns false The operators work with all types of values

21 21 Evaluating boolean expressions  Suppose boolean p = true; boolean q = false; boolean r = true; boolean s = false;  What is the value of p p && s !s p == q q q != r p && r r == s q || s q != s

22 22 Evaluating boolean expressions  Suppose int i = 1; int j = 2; int k = 2; char c = '#'; char d = '%'; char e = '#';  What is the value of j == k i != k i == j j != k c == e d != e c == d c != e

23 23 These images are not animated…

24 24 End of lecture on 12 February 2007

25 25 Translating English to logical expressions

26 26 Translating English to logical expressions  English doesn’t always translate cleanly into logical expressions  To see this, we need to examine the NOR operator It doesn’t exist in Java, but we can fake it p NOR q == NOT (p OR q) NOR is represented by a downward arrow:   In Java, given variables p and q NOR is done by: !(p||q) pq p or q not (p or q) p nor q False False False TrueTrue False True True FalseFalse True False True FalseFalse True True True FalseFalse

27 27 Translation Example  “I have neither given nor received help on this exam” Rephrased: “I have not given nor received …” Let p = “I have given help on this exam” Let q = “I have received help on this exam”  Translation is: pq Remember the precedence: NOT is done first! pq pppqpq TTFF TFFT FTTF FFTF

28  “I have neither given nor received help on this exam” Rephrased: “I have not (given nor received …)” Let p = “I have given help on this exam” Let q = “I have received help on this exam”  Another translation is: (pq) = p || q 28 Translation example, take 2 pq (pq)(pq) p || q TTFTT TFFTT FTFTT FFTFF

29 29 Translation example, rephrased  What is meant is “I have not given and I have not received help on this exam” Or “I have not (given or received) help on this exam” This is a DeMorgaization of the one above it  The problem:  has a higher precedence than  in Boolean logic, but not always in English  Also, “neither” is vague pq pq(p||q) TTFF TFFF FTFF FFTT

30 30 Floating point comparison

31 31 Floating point precission  What gets printed? class FloatTest { public static void main (String args[]) { double y = 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1; System.out.println (y); } There are 10 0.1’s

32 32 Program demo FloatTest.java FloatTest.java

33 33 Take care with floating-point values  Consider double a = 1; double b = 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1 + 0.1; double c =.9999999999999999;  Two true expressions! c == bb != a  Two false expressions! a == bb != c  Problem lies with the finite precision of the floating-point types  Instead with the ordering operators for closeness

34 34 How to solve this  Don’t compare floating-point values if you can help it! Both doubles and floats  Need to test if the two doubles are “close” in value final double EPSILON = 0.000001; boolean foo = Math.abs (a-b) < EPSILON;

35 35 Sand Castles

36 36 More on evaluating expressions

37 37 Ordering operators  Java provides ordering operators for the primitive types Four ordering operators,, = They correspond to mathematical operators of, ≤, and ≥  Together the equality and ordering operators are known as the relational operators  False is less than true

38 38 Evaluation boolean expressions  Suppose int i = 1; int j = 2; int k = 2;  What is the value of i < j j < k i <= k j >= k i >= k

39 39 Unicode values  Character comparisons are based on their Unicode values  Characters ‘0’, ‘1’, … ‘9’ have expected order Character ‘0’ has the encoding 48 Character ‘1’ has the encoding 49, and so on.  Upper case Latin letters ‘A’, ‘B’, … ‘Z’ have expected order Character ‘A’ has the encoding 65, character ‘B’ has the encoding 66, and so on.  Lower case Latin letters ‘a’, ‘b’, … ‘z’ have expected order  Character ‘a’ has the encoding 97  Character ‘b’ has the encoding 98, and so on.

40 40 Evaluation boolean expressions  Suppose char c = '2'; char d = '3'; char e = '2'; int f = 4;  What is the value of c < d c < e c <= e d >= e c >= e f > e

41 41 Operator precedence revisited  Highest to lowest Parentheses Unary operators Multiplicative operators Additive operators Relational ordering Relational equality Logical and Logical or Assignment

42 42 Expressions vs. statements  A statement is a single command for Java to do, and always ends in a semi-colon (for now, at least) System.out.println (“hello world”); int x = 4; ++x;  An expression returns a value, and does not have a semi- colon 5 circle.getRadius() x  Note the difference between the following: ++iis an expression ++i;is a statement

43 43 More demotivatiors!

44 44 if statement

45 45 Conditional constructs  Provide Ability to control whether a statement list is executed  Two constructs If statement  if  if-else  if-else-if Switch statement

46 46 Basic if statement  Syntax if (Expression) Action  If the Expression is true then execute Action  Action is either a single statement or a group of statements within braces  For us, it will always be a group of statements within braces Expression Action truefalse

47 47 Example if (value < 0) { value = -value; } Is our number negative? If Value is not less than zero then our number is fine as is If Value is less than zero then we need to update its value to that of its additive inverse false Value < 0 Value = -Value true Our number is now definitely nonnegative

48 48 Sorting two values System.out.print("Enter an integer number: "); int value1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another integer number: "); int value2 = stdin.nextInt(); // rearrange numbers if necessary if (value2 < value1) { // values are not in sorted order int rememberValue1 = value1; value1 = value2; value2 = rememberValue1; } // display values System.out.println("The numbers in sorted order are " + value1 + " and then " + value2); What happens if the user enters 11 and 28? What happens if the user enters 11 and 4?

49 If semantics Are the numbers out of order Rearrange value1 and value2 to put their values in the proper order value2 < value1 intrememberValue1 = value1 value1 = value2 value2 = rememberValue1 true false The numberswereinitially in order The numbers were rearranged into the proper order The numbers are in order

50 50 What an if statement executes  An if statement executes the next block of code  A block is either: A single statement without curly brackets: if (a == b) System.out.println (“a==b!!!”); A number of statements enclosed by curly brackets: if (a == b) { System.out.print (“a”); System.out.print (“==”); System.out.print (“b”); System.out.println (“!!!”); }

51 51 Why we always use braces  What is the output? int m = 5; int n = 10; if (m > n) { ++m; ++n; } System.out.println(" m = " + m + " n = " + n);

52 52 if-else statement

53 53 The if-else statement  Syntax if (Expression) Action 1 else Action 2  If Expression is true then execute Action 1 otherwise execute Action 2  The actions are either a single statement or a list of statements within braces Expression Action 1 Action 2 true false

54 54 Finding the maximum of two values System.out.print("Enter an integer number: "); int value1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another integer number: "); int value2 = stdin.nextInt(); int maximum; if (value1 < value2) { // is value2 larger? maximum = value2; // yes: value2 is larger } else { // (value1 >= value2) maximum = value1; // no: value2 is not larger } System.out.println("The maximum of " + value1 + " and " + value2 + " is " + maximum); But is it initialized?

55 55 Finding the maximum of two values System.out.print("Enter an integer number: "); int value1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another integer number: "); int value2 = stdin.nextInt(); int maximum; if (value1 < value2) { // is value2 larger? maximum = value2; // yes: value2 is larger } System.out.println("The maximum of " + value1 + " and " + value2 + " is " + maximum); But is it initialized?

56 56 Finding the maximum of two values value1 < value2 maximum = value2 maximum = value1 true false Is value2 larger than value1 Yes, it is. So value2 is larger than value1. In this case, maximum is set to value2 No, its not. So value1 is at least as large as value2. In this case, maximum is set to value1 Either case, maximum is set correctly

57 57 Why we use whitespace  What does the following do? System.out.print("Enter an integer number: "); int value1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another integer number: "); int value2 = stdin.nextInt(); if (value2 < value1) { int rememberValue1 = value1; value1 = value2; value2 = rememberValue1; } System.out.println("The numbers in sorted order are " + value1 + " and then " + value2);

58 58 End of lecture on 12 February 2007

59 59 How do you like your braces? if (a == b) { //... } else { //... } if (a == b) { //... } else { //... } if (a == b) { //... } else { //... } if (a == b) { //... } else { //... } if (a == b) { //... } else { //... }

60 60 If-then-else precedence if (number != 0) if (number > 0) System.out.println("positive"); else System.out.println("negative"); Which if does this else refer to?

61 61 If-then-else precedence without whitespace if (number != 0) if (number > 0) System.out.println("positive"); else System.out.println("negative"); else System.out.println("zero");

62 62 Program demo ElsePrecedence.java ElsePrecedence.java

63 63 if-else-if statement

64 64 if (number == 0) { System.out.println("zero"); } else If-else-if  Consider System.out.println("positive"); } else { System.out.println("negative"); } } { These braces aren’t needed if (number > 0) { Same results as previous segment – but this segment better expresses the meaning of what is going on We can change the whitespace of the code

65 65 Sorting three values  For sorting values n1, n2, and n3 there are six possible orderings n1  n2  n3 n1  n3  n2 n2  n1  n3 n2  n3  n1 n3  n1  n2 n3  n2  n1  Suppose s1, s2, s3 are to be a sorted version of n1, n2, and n3

66 66 Sorting three values if ((n1 <= n2) && (n2 <= n3)) { // n1 <= n2 <= n3 s1 = n1; s2 = n2; s3 = n3; } else if ((n1 <= n3) && (n3 <= n2)) { // n1 <= n3 <= n2 s1 = n1; s2 = n3; s3 = n2; } else if ((n2 <= n1) && (n1 <= n3)) { // n2 <= n1 <= n3 s1 = n2; s2 = n1; s3 = n3; } else if ((n2 <= n3) && (n3 <= n1)) { // n2 <= n3 <= n1 s1 = n2; s2 = n3; s3 = n1; } else if ((n3 <= n1) && (n1 <= n2)) { // n3 <= n1 <= n2 s1 = n3; s2 = n1; s3 = n2; } else { // n3 <= n2 <= n1 s1 = n3; s2 = n2; s3 = n1; }

67 67 ?: notation

68 68 Finding the minimum value  Consider: // z is to hold the minimum of x and y if ( x < y ) z = x; else z = y ;  Another way to do this: z = (x<y) ? x : y; Notice no braces!

69 69 The ?: notation  Only works when both “cases” return a value! Meaning when both “cases” are expressions Example: z = (x<y) ? x : y; Thus, you can’t put a print statement in there!  Can be difficult to read System.out.println ((number != 0) ? ((number > 0) ? "positive“ : "negative") : "zero“); if (number != 0) if (number > 0) System.out.println("positive"); else System.out.println("negative"); else System.out.println("zero");

70 70 A bit of humor…

71 71 switch statement

72 72 Switch statement  Software engineers often confronted with programming tasks where required action depends on the values of integer expressions The if-else-if construct can be used  Separately compare the desired expression to a particular value If the expression and value are equal, then perform the appropriate action  Because such programming tasks occur frequently Java includes a switch statement  The task is often more readable with the switch then with the if-else-if

73 73 A switch statement example if (a == ‘0’) System.out.println (“zero”); else if (a == ‘1’) System.out.println (“one”); else if (a == ‘2’) System.out.println (“two”); else if (a == ‘3’) System.out.println (“three”); else if (a == ‘4’) System.out.println (“four”); else System.out.println (“five+”); switch (a) { case ‘0’: System.out.println (“zero”); break; case ‘1’: System.out.println (“one”); break; case ‘2’: System.out.println (“two”); break; case ‘3’: System.out.println (“three”); break; case ‘4’: System.out.println (“four”); break; default: System.out.println (“five+”); break; }

74 74 End of lecture on 14 February 2007  … because the projector kept dying. Need to go over the switch statement again

75 75 Switch statement switch(SwitchExpression) { caseCaseExpression 1 : Action 1 ; caseCaseExpression 2 : Action 2 ;... caseCaseExpression n : Action n ; default: Action n+1 ; } Constant integral expression Java statements Integral expression to be matched with a case expression

76 76 Testing for vowel-ness switch (ch) { case 'a': case 'A': case 'e': case 'E': case 'i': case 'I': case 'o': case 'O': case 'u': case 'U': System.out.println("vowel“); break; default: System.out.println("not a vowel“); }

77 77 Testing for vowel-ness switch (ch) { case 'a': case 'A': case 'e': case 'E': case 'i': case 'I': case 'o': case 'O': case 'u': case 'U': System.out.println("vowel“); break; default: System.out.println("not a vowel“); } The break causes an exiting of the switch Handles all of the other cases

78 78 A better way to format that switch statement switch (ch) { case 'a': // FALL THRU case 'A': // FALL THRU case 'e': // FALL THRU case 'E': // FALL THRU case 'i': // FALL THRU case 'I': // FALL THRU...

79 79 Processing a request System.out.print("Enter a number: "); int n1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another number: "); int n2 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter desired operator: "); char operator = stdin.nextLine().charAt(0); switch (operator) { case '+' : System.out.println((n1 + n2)); break; case '-' : System.out.println(n1 - n2); break; case '*' : System.out.println(n1 * n2); break; case '/' : System.out.println(n1 / n2); break; default: System.out.println(“Illegal request“); }

80 80 How well do you feel you understand the swtich statement? 1.Very well! This stuff is easy! 2.Fairly well – with a little review, I’ll be good 3.Okay. It’s not great, but it’s not horrible, either 4.Not well. I’m kinda confused 5.Not at all. I’m soooooo lost

81 81 Biggest software errors Ariane 5 rocket explosion (1996) Ariane 5 rocket explosion (1996) –Due to loss of precision converting 64-bit double to 16-bit int Pentium division error (1994) Pentium division error (1994) –Due to incomplete look-up table (like an array) Patriot-Scud missile error (1991) Patriot-Scud missile error (1991) –Rounding error on the time –The missile did not intercept an incoming Scud missile, leaving 28 dead and 98 wounded Mars Climate Orbiter (1999) Mars Climate Orbiter (1999) –Onboard used metric units; ground computer used English units AT&T long distance (1990) AT&T long distance (1990) –Wrong break statement in C code Therac-25, X-ray (1975-1987) Therac-25, X-ray (1975-1987) –Badly designed software led to radiation overdose in chemotherapy patients NE US power blackout (2003) NE US power blackout (2003) –Flaw in GE software contributed to it References: http://www5.in.tum.de/~huckle/bugse.html, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_bug, http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~nachumd/verify/horror.html References: http://www5.in.tum.de/~huckle/bugse.html, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_bug, http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~nachumd/verify/horror.htmlhttp://www5.in.tum.de/~huckle/bugse.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_bug http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~nachumd/verify/horror.htmlhttp://www5.in.tum.de/~huckle/bugse.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_bug http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~nachumd/verify/horror.html

82 82 Object equality

83 83 Testing variables for equality  Consider System.out.print("Enter an integer number: "); int n1 = stdin.nextInt(); System.out.print("Enter another integer number: "); int n2 = stdin.nextInt(); if (n1 == n2) { System.out.println("Same"); } else { System.out.println(“Different"); } What is the output if the user enters 88 and 3? What is the output if the user enters 88 both times?

84 84 Program Demo IntEquality IntEquality

85 85 Testing objects for equality  Consider String s1 = “pastel”; String s2 = s1; if (s1 == s2) { System.out.println("Same"); } else { System.out.println("Different"); }

86 86 Testing objects for equality  Memory looks like  The comparison is between the references!  Thus, s1 and s2 are the same (they refer to the same object) "pastel"s1 s2

87 87 Testing objects for equality  Consider System.out.print("Enter a string: "); String s1 = stdin.nextLine(); System.out.print("Enter another string: "); String s2 = stdin.nextLine(); if (s1 == s2) { System.out.println("Same"); } else { System.out.println("Different"); } What is the output if the user enters "pastel" both times?

88 88 Program Demo StringEquality StringEquality

89 89 Testing objects for equality  When it is executed System.out.print("Enter a string: "); String s1 = stdin.nextLine(); System.out.print("Enter another string: "); String s2 = stdin.nextLine();  Memory looks like  As a result no matter what is entered s1 and s2 are not the same They refer to different objects "pastel"s1 " "s2

90 90 Comparing strings for equality  Consider: String u = new String("hello"); String v = new String("hello"); System.out.println (u == v);  What gets printed? false  Consider: String s = "hello"; String t = "hello"; System.out.println (s == t);  What gets printed? true Huh? These aren’t the exact same thing

91 91 Program Demo StringEquality2 StringEquality2

92 92 Testing operators for equality  Consider System.out.print("Enter a string: "); String s1 = stdin.nextLine(); System.out.print("Enter another string: "); String s2 = stdin.nextLine(); if (s1.equals(s2)) { System.out.println("Same"); } else { System.out.println("Different"); } Tests whether s1 and s2 represent the same object Most classes have a method equals(). It compares the objects themselves, not the references.

93 93 Today’s demotivators

94 94 Short-circuit evaluation

95 95 Short-circuit evaluation  The value of a logical expression can be known before all the operands have been considered If left operand of && is false, then the value must be false If left operand of || is true, then the value must be true  Java uses these properties to make logical operations efficient Evaluates left operand before it evaluates right operand If the operator value is determined from the left operand, then the right operand is not evaluated  The operation is short-circuited

96 96 Short-circuit evaluation  Short-circuit evaluation is useful when some property must be true for some other expression to be evaluated  Suppose you are interested in knowing whether scoreSum divided by nbrScores is greater than value The condition can be evaluated only if nbrScores is nonzero  The following expression correctly represents the condition (nbrScores != 0) && ((scoreSum / nbrScores) > value)

97 97 Short-circuit evaluation  Assume we have a returnsFalse() method from a ‘foo’ object It returns false And it prints “returnsFalse() called”  And a returnsTrue() method  Consider: if ( foo.returnsFalse() && foo.returnsTrue() ) { } if ( foo.returnsTrue() && foo.returnsFalse() ) { } if ( foo.returnsFalse() || foo.returnsTrue() ) { } if ( foo.returnsTrue() || foo.returnsFalse() ) { } returnsFalse() called returnsTrue() called returnsFalse() called returnsTrue() called Output

98 98 How well do you feel you understand decision statements (ifs, switches) in Java? 1.Very well! This stuff is easy! 2.Fairly well – with a little review, I’ll be good 3.Okay. It’s not great, but it’s not horrible, either 4.Not well. I’m kinda confused 5.Not at all. I’m soooooo lost

99 99 End of lecture on 16 February 2007


Download ppt "1 Decisions, decisions, decisions Chapter 4 Trey Kirk."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google