Software Engineers Handbook/Language Dictionary/Visual J++
Visual J++
[edit | edit source]Here is the Java wikipedia entry.
Type
[edit | edit source]Visual J++ is a full, procedural, object-oriented, visual language.
Execution Entry Point
[edit | edit source]public static void main(String args[]) { // some functionality here }
General Syntax
[edit | edit source]The typical statement is completed by a semi-colon. For the assignment of b to a use:
a = b;
Comments
[edit | edit source]// this is an inline comment. Everything after the // is a comment.
Block comments are specified by a starting /* and ending */ They can span multiple lines.
/* * this is a block comment */
Variable Declarations
[edit | edit source]int x = 9; Integer y = new Integer(4);
Method Declaration/Implementation
[edit | edit source]// declaration private return_type class_name::function_name(argument_1_type arg_1_name, argument_2_type arg_2_name, default_argument_type default_arg_name) { // implementation // work with arg_1_name, arg_2_name, and default_arg_name // depending on the argument types the variables are passed by // value, reference, or are constant // don't forget to return something of the return type return 36; }
Scope
[edit | edit source]Scope is defined by curly braces.
{ // this the beginning of a scope // the scope is about to end }
Conditional Statements
[edit | edit source]If and only if A is equal to B assign C to D, otherwise, assign E to F.
if( A == B ) { D = C; // more code can be added here. It is used if and only if A is equal to B } else { F = E; // more code can be added here. It is used if and only if A is not equal to B }
or
if( A == B ) D = C; //more lines of code are not permitted after this statement else F = E;
Alternatively, a switch statement can be used for multiple choice operations. This sample converts a number input to text.
switch( number_value ) { case 37: text = "thirty-seven"; break; // this line prevents the program from writing over this value with the // following code case 23: text = "twenty-three"; break; default: // this is used if none of the previous cases contain the value text = "unknown number"; }
Looping Statements
[edit | edit source]This code counts from 0 to 9, adding up the contents of the array.
int i = 0; for( int index = 0; index < 10; index = index + 1 ) { i = array[index]; }
This code repeats until the number 4 is found. If this runs off of the end of the array, there could be a problem.
int index = 0; while( 4 != array[index] ) { index = index + 1; }
This code increments the counter before the check is made, so that it starts with element 1.
int index = 0; do { index = index + 1; } while( 4 != array[index] );
Output Statements
[edit | edit source]System.out.println( "Hello World!" );
And adding text to visual components.
Containers
[edit | edit source]Containers inherit from the Collection class. See the java.util package for specific containers including Vector.
Algorithms
[edit | edit source]What algorithms does it have? Does sort work in J++?
Garbage collection
[edit | edit source]Garbage collection is automatic.
Physical Structure
[edit | edit source]Code is generally kept in files with a .java extension. It is compiled into Java byte code into files with .class extensions.
Tips
[edit | edit source]- The language is very similar to Java.
- Visual form layout and component access is similar to other Microsoft Visual development languages.
- Classes in the Java packages are capitalized, methods are not.
- Everything is a pointer. Use a clone method to avoid operating on the original element of a Collection.
- Arrays start with index 0.
- Don't confuse these two:
= // assignment == // comparison, is equal to
Often using the one you don't want will compile, and will produce results you did not expect.
Web References
[edit | edit source]- Java wikibooks page
- Microsoft support is available at the [Microsoft Developers Network] pages.
Books and Articles
[edit | edit source]paper references here