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A Second Look at Classes and Objects. Contents. Stock Purchase Problem Employee Problem Drawing Lines Exercises. A. Stock Purchase Problem. A stock purchase consists of info of a stock and number of shares Info of a stock includes the trading symbol and share price
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Contents • Stock Purchase Problem • Employee Problem • Drawing Lines • Exercises
A. Stock Purchase Problem • A stock purchase consists of info of a stock and number of shares • Info of a stock includes the trading symbol and share price • Trading symbol is a short series of characters that are used to identify the stock on the stock exchange • Develop a program to calculate the cost of a stock purchase, given that cost = number-of shares×share-price
Solution • Problem Description • Preliminary Design • Test Cases • Developing the Test Class • Fixing the Test Class
1. Problem Description • Calculate the cost of a stock purchase • Input: number of shares, share price • Output: cost
3. Test Cases • Input: • Stock • Trading symbol: XYZ • Share price: $9.62 • Number of shares: 100 • Output: $962.0
5. Fixing Test Class 4.1. Creating Class Stock 4.2. Creating Class StockPurchase 4.3. Running Test Class To See Red Bar 4.4. Changing delta in Test Method
B. Employee Problem • Info of an employee includes: first name, last name, birthday, and hire day. Develop the Employee class
Solution • Problem Description • Preliminary Design • Test Cases • Developing the Test Class • Fixing the Test Class
1. Problem Description • Develop the Employee class
3. Test Cases • Example 1 • Person • Name • First name: Sue • Last name: Jones • Birthday: Sept 5, 1986 • Hire day: Jan 1, 2007 • Example 2 • Person • Name • First name: Bob • Last name: Blue • Birthday: July 24, 1949 • Hire day: March 12, 1988
5. Fixing Test Class • Develop Name
C. Drawing Lines 1. Drawing Random Lines 2. Drawing a Flower
1. Drawing Random Lines • Draw a random number of lines (at least 1 and at most 5) inside a frame
Solution 1.1. Developing the Raw View 1.2. Drawing Random Lines to the View
D. Exercises • The Savings Account Problem • The Course Problem • The Sports Car Problem • The Retail Problem • The Parking Problem
1. The Savings Account Problem • A savings account has a balance indicating the amount the saver currently has on deposit. The bank applies the same annual interest rate for all account holders • Develop a program that has the following behaviors • Setting a new value for the annual interest rate • Calculating the monthly interest (by multiplying the balance by the annual interest rate divided by 12) • Updating the balance monthly by adding the monthly interest to the current balance • Test your program with two savings accounts with balances of $2000.00 and $3000.00. In the beginning, the annual interest rate is 4%. After a month, the annual interest rate is changed to 5%
2. The Course Problem • A course holds the following information: • The course name • The instructor’s last name, first name, and office number • The textbook’s title, author, and publisher
3. The Sports Car Problem • A sports car has the following information: • The type (make) • The color • The price • The type is either Porsche, Ferrari, or Jaguar • The color is either red, black, blue, or silver
4. The Retail Problem • An item in a retail store holds the following information • A brief description of the item • The number of units currently in inventory • The item’s retail price • For example
A cash register is a sale of a retail item • Given the quantity of items being purchased, the cash register provides the sale’s subtotal, amount of sales tax, and total • The subtotal is the quantity multiplied by the price • The sales tax rate is 6% of a retail sale • The total is the subtotal plus the sales tax
5. The Parking Problem • This problem is about a police officer issuing a parking ticket • A parked car holds the following information • The car’s make (for example Toyota) • The model (for example, NissanZ28) • The color • The license number (for example XY-1234) • The number of minutes that the car has been parked • A parking meter records the number of minutes of parking time that has been purchased • A parking ticket is responsible for • Reporting the make, model, color, and license number of the illegally parked car • Reporting the amount of the fine, which is $25 for the first hour or part of an hour that the car is illegally parked, plus $10 for every additional hour or part of an hour that the car is illegally parked • Reporting the name and badge number of the police officer issuing the ticket • A police officer inspecting parked cars is responsible for • Telling his/her name and badge number • Examining the parked car and the parking meter, and determining whether the car’s time has expired • Issuing a parking ticket if the car’s time has expired
References • Java How to Program, Seventh Edition, Chapter 8. Deitel & Deitel, 2007 • Starting Out with Java. From Control Structures Through Objects, Fourth Edition, Chapter 9. Tony Gaddis. Pearson Education International, 2010 • Core Java, Volume II – Advanced Features, Eighth Edition, Chapter 1. Cay S. Horstmann & Gary Cornell. Prentice Hall, 2008