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School of Engineering and Applied
Science
Department of Computer Science CSci 53 -- Introduction to Software Development http://www.seas.gwu.edu/~csci53/spring03 Prof. Michael B. Feldman mfeldman@gwu.edu |
Copy and compile this program. What is the output?
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Interchange the 1 in line 11 with the 10 in line 12. Compile and run. What is the output?
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Change ++ to -- in line 13. Compile and run; describe
the result.
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Change -- back to ++; now add a semicolon after the ) of line
13. Compile; describe the result.
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Remove the spurious semicolon. Now modify the program so it counts backwards from 10 to 1. Write down the modified lines:
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Now modify the program so it displays only the odd numbers. HINT: put the display statement in a conditional (if) statement inside the loop body. Write down this conditional statement here:
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Now add statements so that the user is prompted for the starting and ending values. You'll need variables for these -- call them start and end. Run the program several times; experiment with different starting and ending values. Try at least one pair such that the starting value
Now let's look at another example, programs53/NestedFor.java.
1. //--------------------------------------------------------------
2. //| Very simple example illustrating nested for-loop
construct
3. //| Author: M. B. Feldman, The George Washington
University
4. //| Last Modified: October 2002
5. //--------------------------------------------------------------
6. public class NestedFor
7. {
8. public static void main (String[] args)
9. {
10.
11. for (int outer = 1; outer <=
5; outer++)
12. {
13. System.out.print
(outer + " | ");
14. for (int inner =
1; inner <= 10; inner++)
15. {
16. System.out.print
(inner + " ");
17. }
18. System.out.println("");
19. }
20. }
21. }
Copy, compile, and run it. What is the output?
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In line 11, change 5 to 7, and in line 14, change 1 to 6. Now what is the output?
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Now in line 14, change 6 to outer. Now what is the output?
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Modify the program so it displays a triangular shape with the point
at the top, like
1 | 1
2 | 1 2
3 | 1 2 3
4 | 1 2 3 4
etc. Write down the modified lines here.
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Finally, let's look at a while-loop program, programs53/WhileLoop.java. This program is logically equivalent to the original ForLoop.java.
1. //--------------------------------------------------------------
2. //| Very simple example illustrating while-loop
construct
3. //| Author: M. B. Feldman, The George Washington
University
4. //| Last Modified: October 2002
5. //--------------------------------------------------------------
6. public class WhileLoop
7. {
8. public static void main (String[] args)
9. {
10.
11. int counter;
12.
13. counter = 1;
// INITIALIZATION
14. while (counter <= 10)
// TERMINATION
15. {
16. System.out.print
(counter + " ");
17. counter++;
// MODIFICATION
18. }
19. }
20. }
Copy and compile this one. Write down the output:
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Now in line 14, change <= to <. Compile and run; what's the output now?
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Comment out line 17; compile and run it. What's the result?
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Finally, remove the comment marks from line 17, but add a semicolon after the ) in line 14. Now what happens? Why?
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