diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'java.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | java.html.markdown | 48 |
1 files changed, 48 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/java.html.markdown b/java.html.markdown index 67e5494e..35ec57d8 100644 --- a/java.html.markdown +++ b/java.html.markdown @@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ contributors: - ["Madison Dickson", "http://github.com/mix3d"] - ["Simon Morgan", "http://sjm.io/"] - ["Zachary Ferguson", "http://github.com/zfergus2"] + - ["Cameron Schermerhorn", "http://github.com/cschermerhorn"] filename: LearnJava.java --- @@ -95,11 +96,13 @@ public class LearnJava { // Note: Java has no unsigned types. // Float - Single-precision 32-bit IEEE 754 Floating Point + // 2^-149 <= float <= (2-2^-23) * 2^127 float fooFloat = 234.5f; // f or F is used to denote that this variable value is of type float; // otherwise it is treated as double. // Double - Double-precision 64-bit IEEE 754 Floating Point + // 2^-1074 <= x <= (2-2^-52) * 2^1023 double fooDouble = 123.4; // Boolean - true & false @@ -115,6 +118,34 @@ public class LearnJava { final double E; E = 2.71828; + + // BigInteger - Immutable arbitrary-precision integers + // + // BigInteger is a data type that allows programmers to manipulate + // integers longer than 64-bits. Integers are stored as an array of + // of bytes and are manipulated using functions built into BigInteger + // + // BigInteger can be initialized using an array of bytes or a string. + + BigInteger fooBigInteger = new BigDecimal(fooByteArray); + + + // BigDecimal - Immutable, arbitrary-precision signed decimal number + // + // A BigDecimal takes two parts: an arbitrary precision integer + // unscaled value and a 32-bit integer scale + // + // BigDecimal allows the programmer complete control over decimal + // rounding. It is recommended to use BigDecimal with currency values + // and where exact decimal percision is required. + // + // BigDecimal can be initialized with an int, long, double or String + // or by initializing the unscaled value (BigInteger) and scale (int). + + BigDecimal fooBigDecimal = new BigDecimal(fooBigInteger, fooInt); + + + // Strings String fooString = "My String Is Here!"; @@ -286,6 +317,23 @@ public class LearnJava { break; } System.out.println("Switch Case Result: " + monthString); + + // Starting in Java 7 and above, switching Strings works like this: + String myAnswer = "maybe"; + switch(myAnswer){ + case "yes": + System.out.println("You answered yes."); + break; + case "no": + System.out.println("You answered no."); + break; + case "maybe": + System.out.println("You answered maybe."); + break; + default: + System.out.println("You answered " + myAnswer); + break; + } // Conditional Shorthand // You can use the '?' operator for quick assignments or logic forks. |