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Old May 7th, 2005, 3:10 AM   #1
nocturna_gr
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various questions on class Point methods

Hi everyone! This is my first post (after a long time). I figured the best way to present my questions is as comments. If you find this difficult to read, let me know.
-----------------------------------------------------
//package aueb.util.api;
import java.io.*;
import java.lang.*;
import java.util.*;

public class Point
{
private int x,y;
public Point() //constructors don't have return type don't they?
{
super();
x=y=0;
}

public Point (int x, int y)
{
super();
this.x=x;
this.y=y;
}

public Point (Point p)
{
this(p.x,p.y);
}

public void setX (int x)
{
this.x=x<0?0:x;
}

public void setY(int y)
{
this.y=y<0?0:y;
}

public int getX()
{
return this.x; //difference between "return this.x" & "return x"?
}

public int getY()
{
return this.y; //same as above one
}

public Point move (int dx,int dy)
{
setX(x+dx);
setY(y+dy);
return this;
}

public void printPoint()
{
int p1= getX();
int p2= getY();
System.out.print(p1+" "+p2);
}

public double distance(Point p1)
{
return Math.sqrt(p1.getX()*p1.getX()+p1.getY()*p1.getY());
}

public boolean equals (Object o)
{
if (this==o) return true;
if (!(o instanceof Point)) return false;
Point p= (Point) o;
return (this.getX()== p.getX()) && (this.getY()== p.getY());
}
/*method equals has just been
overloaded. Why does this have to be
declared as static, in contrary to
the above one? */

public static boolean equals (Object o1, Object o2)
{
if (o1==o2) return true;
if ((!(o1 instanceof Point)) || (!(o2 instanceof Point))) return false;
Point p1= (Point) o1;
Point p2= (Point) o2;
return (p1.getX()== p2.getX()) && (p1.getY()== p2.getY());
}

public static void main (String[] args)
{
Point p= new Point(2,2);
p.printPoint();
System.out.println();
Point p2= new Point(2,3);
p2.printPoint();
System.out.println();
System.out.println(p.equals(p2)); //what's the difference between these 2 "equals"
System.out.println(equals(p,p2)); //methods? Which one is better?

}

}

Last edited by nocturna_gr; May 7th, 2005 at 3:12 AM.
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Old May 7th, 2005, 12:45 PM   #2
Blackwolf189
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1. Correct, constructors do not have a return type
2 & 3. For your program, there is no difference between return this.x and return x. However consider this:
public class test
{
    int x = 9;
    public addToX(int x)
    {
        this.x += x;
    }
}

In the above method, the object has a variable x and the method has a variable x. The methods variable x takes precedence, so to reference the objects x you have to type this.x. If the method didn't have a variable x, then you could replacethis.x with just x.

4 & 5. Static methods are constant for the whole class. It doesn't matter which one of the above are used since they both do the same thing. In fact, I would just delete the non static since it is just taking up space.
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