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CS110 Lecture 12 Tuesday, March 9, 2004 • Announcements – hw5 due Thursday – Spring break next week • Agenda – questions – ArrayList – TreeMap Lecture 12 1 ArrayList • • • • A Collection class in the Java API Like an array: stores elements at positions 0,1,… Can grow as needed! Unlike an array in other ways too – – – – stores only objects (not primitive types) can store different kinds of objects simultaneously you must cast when retrieving send explicit messages instead of using [ ] for access • Read ArrayListDemo.java Lecture 12 2 Casting • Syntax: (Bar)foo tells the compiler to treat object foo as something of type Bar • ArrayList get returns an anonymous Object for (int i = 0; i<myList.size(); i++ ){ SimpleObject foo = (SimpleObject)myList.get(i); System.out.println (i + "\t" + foo.name); } • Perhaps the compiler ought to know, but it doesn’t Lecture 12 3 ArrayList API • • • • • • • • • • can store: any Object, not primitive types declaration: ArrayList myList creation: myList = new ArrayList( ) put at end: myList.add( obj ) put at index: myList.add( index, obj ) – moves later entries down the list get: (Type)myList.get( index ) – cast to proper Type after get replace: myList.set( index, obj ) remove: myList.remove( index ) size: myList.size( ) looping: for( ; ; ) Lecture 12 4 Boxes and arrows for ArrayList ArrayList myList: ArrayList Object 0: Object SimpleObject String name: "zero" SimpleObject 1: String Object "one" name: 2: ••• SimpleObject String name: Lecture 12 "two" 5 hw5 • array practice (sorting) • ArrayList practice: modify Bank.java so that it uses an ArrayList of BankAccounts instead of an array – BankAccounts have numbers 0, 1, 2, … – Banker can open as many accounts as she likes! Lecture 12 6 Maps • arrays and ArrayLists locate entries by index – index is an integer position, starting at 0 • A Map locates entries by key – key is often a String (think dictionary, phone book) • A map stores key-value pairs – key: “Java” value: “a modern OO language” PhoneNumber areaCode: 617 exchange: 287 number: 5000 – key: “UMass” value: Lecture 12 7 Duplicates? • The same value may appear more than once in a collection (array, ArrayList or Map) – my wife and I have the same phone number – “field” and “instance variable” have the same definition – in an array, foo[3] may == foo[7] • In a Map, keys are unique • If you want to arrange for one person to have more than one phone number or one word to have more than one definition you need to work harder (see last slides, JOI Chapter4) Lecture 12 8 TreeMap • Java API provides class TreeMap • Don’t ask why it’s called that • Key can be any Object (but our keys will always be String objects) • TreeMaps, like ArrayLists – can grow – store Objects (references, not primitive types) – are heterogeneous • can hold objects of different types • need to cast what you get from a TreeMap Lecture 12 9 Directory • Model windows folder • Contains TextFiles (not other Folders - wait for Chapter 5) • API: create, add file to, get file from, get size, get owner, get create/mod date • Design: Directory object has a TreeMap field storing TextFile objects keyed by String filename • You write this for homework Lecture 12 10 Dictionary • Model a real dictionary • A collection of definitions of words – A word is a String – A definition will be an instance of class Definition • Design: Dictionary object has a TreeMap field storing Definition objects keyed by String words • API: create, add entry, look up entry, get size, arrange for printing the whole Dictionary Lecture 12 11 Dictionary.java • Architecture: a Dictionary object is a thin wrapper around a TreeMap • Prepare to use classes in java.util package (line 6) • private TreeMap instance variable – declared on line 18 – created in constructor (line 26) • Put a Definition in this Dictionary: addEntry method (36) – parameters: String word, reference to Definition instance – delegate to TreeMap put method Lecture 12 12 Dictionary (continued) • Look up a Definition: getEntry (line 48) – delegate to TreeMap get method, passing String word as the argument (line 50) – cast retrieved anonymous object to Definition – return the Definition (null if not found) • How large is this Dictionary? getSize (line 61) – delegate to TreeMap size method • What’s a Definition? – just one String field, set in constructor, access by public getter (toString) – would be richer in a real dictionary (pronunciation, etymology, …) Lecture 12 13 TreeMap boxes and arrows Dictionary entries: entries: TreeMap "a geometric object in a plane" TreeMap Object Object "shape" Definition String definition: entries: Object Object ••• "quadrilateral" Definition String definition: entries: "a shape with four sides" Lecture 12 14 Class Lookup • Dictionary has no unit test • Class Lookup is a client for Dictionary (and tests it thoroughly) • All of Lookup is static > java Lookup <word> <word> … all • Lookup.java sends toString messages to a Definition object (line 53) and to a Dictionary object (line 103) Lecture 12 15 Looping on a TreeMap • To print the whole Dictionary, Lookup sends a toString message, invoking Dictionary toString method (line 70) • Subtle, since there’s no index to loop with • Uses an Iterator object Java tool custom designed for looping • Iterator API has just two methods: – boolean hasNext() – Object next() Lecture 12 16 Getting an Iterator Set allWords = entries.keySet(); Iterator wordIterator = allWords.iterator(); • • • • ask the entries field (a TreeMap) for its keySet ask the keySet to give you an Iterator wI is like a list of the keys in the entries Map You can infer from this code that – Set and Iterator are classes in the Java API – keySet is a method in class TreeMap; it returns a Set – iterator is a method in class Set; it returns an Iterator Lecture 12 17 Using an Iterator while ( wordIterator.hasNext() ) { word = (String)wordIterator.next(); definition = this.getEntry( word ); str += word + ":\n" + definition.toString() + "\n"; } • hasNext() returns false when at end of list • next() returns a reference to the next Object in the list • cast that to a String since that’s what the key is Lecture 12 18 Building a multiline String while ( wordIterator.hasNext() ) { word = (String)wordIterator.next(); definition = this.getEntry( word ); str += word + ":\n" + definition.toString() + "\n"; } • use the key to look up a Definition • send the Definition a toString message • add two lines to the String str we are building to represent the whole Dictionary Lecture 12 19 TreeMap summary • • • • declaration: TreeMap mapName; creation: new TreeMap( ); put: mapName.put(Object key, Object obj) get: (Type)mapName.get(Object key) cast to proper Type • length: mapName.size( ) • looping: use Iterator mapName.keySet( ).iterator( ) Lecture 12 20 Collections of collections • Dictionary might map a word to an ArrayList of definitions • Screen maintains a private field that’s an array of arrays of char: private char[][] pixels; Lecture 12 21 Figure 4.5 Object structure of a 2x3 Screen Screen int width: 2 0: ‘ ‘ 1: ‘ ‘ 2: ‘ 5‘ char[][] int height: char[] 0: 3 1: char[][] pixels: char[] 0: ‘ ‘ 1: ‘ ‘ 2: ‘ 5‘ Lecture 12 22 hw6 • Due Thursday after Spring break • TreeMap practice – class Directory – little Bank, using a TreeMap Lecture 12 23