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Alice in Action with Java

Alice in Action with Java. Chapter 5 Lists and Arrays. Objectives. Use a list to store multiple items Use Alice’s forAllInOrder and forAllTogether statements Use random numbers to vary the behavior of a program Use an array to store multiple items. Lists and Arrays.

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Alice in Action with Java

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  1. Alice in Action with Java Chapter 5 Lists and Arrays

  2. Objectives • Use a list to store multiple items • Use Alice’s forAllInOrderand forAllTogetherstatements • Use random numbers to vary the behavior of a program • Use an array to store multiple items Alice in Action with Java

  3. Lists and Arrays • Some variables only store a single value • Number, Boolean, String, Object, Sound, Color • Variables that can store multiple values • list: container that can dynamically grow and shrink • array: container whose size remains fixed at run-time • Benefits of using variables that store multiple values • Reduces amount of code that needs to be written • Makes a program more readable • Example: a variable playList that holds 12 songs • Pass all 12 songs to a method using one parameter Alice in Action with Java

  4. Lists and Arrays (continued) Alice in Action with Java

  5. List Example 1: Flight of the Bumble Bees • Scene 2: a dozen bees rise to defend queen’s honor • Set up the scene by adding 12 bees and 1 queenBee • Manipulating 12 individual bees leads to inefficiencies • Adding 12 bees to a list simplifies implementation • Form: Object[]bees = bee, bee2,... bee12; • Defining bees list variable in playScene2() • Open Create New Local Variable dialog box • Select Object type and then make a List • Click new item and add the first bee to the list • Continue adding new items until the list holds 12 bees Alice in Action with Java

  6. List of Bumble Bees Alice in Action with Java

  7. Processing a List of Bumble Bees • Processing list entries • Drag the forAllInOrder statement to editing area • Drop forAllInOrder, select expressionsbees • Construct move()using bee2 as a placeholder • Drag item_from_beesonto the placeholder and drop • Send turnToFace()message to the queenBee • Send say()message with command to queenBee • Simulated behavior • queenBeeturns to each beeand orders it to rise • Each beeresponds by rising upward 5 meters Alice in Action with Java

  8. List Operations • forAllInOrder statement • Used to sequentially perform actions on list items • forAllTogether statement • Used to simultaneously perform actions on list items • Example: cause all bee objects to take off at once • Each item in list is accessed by index (position) • Messages can be sent to an entire list or to list items • Example 1: aList.clear();(removes all items) • Example 2: aList.add(0, 1);(inserts 1 at list head) Alice in Action with Java

  9. doAllInOrder Alice in Action with Java

  10. doAllTogether Alice in Action with Java

  11. List Operations Alice in Action with Java

  12. List Operations • A few list functions • aList.size(): the number of items in aList • aList[i]:the value item iin aList • aList.getRandomItem(): random value in aList • Using list functions • Drag a list definition into the editing area • Drop list onto placeholder with function’s return type • Alice will display a list of messages to choose from Alice in Action with Java

  13. List Example 2: Buying Tickets • Scene 3: line of people waiting to buy tickets • Animating the scene using the list data structure • Create a new world with a ticket box office • Line up five people in front of the ticket window • Add five people to the personList • Use nested looping to advance the line • After an outer loop iteration, the line is reduced by one • Testing the animation • Compare positions of each person after each iteration Alice in Action with Java

  14. List Example 2: Buying Tickets (continued) Alice in Action with Java

  15. The Array Structure • Fixed-size container that can store a group of values • Data items are accessed by position (as in a list) • Values of data items can be changed at run-time • The capacity of an array cannot change at run-time • Two reasons for using an array instead of a list • The array is more memory-efficient than a list • An array is more time-efficient for accessing an item Alice in Action with Java

  16. Array Example 1: The Ants Go Marching • User story: soldier ant sings a song while marching • View the story as a counting problem • The ant song is 10 verses long • Most of the lines are repeated • A for loop can be used to iterate through 10 verses • Managing the differences in lines using parallel arrays • One String array stores the verse-specific numbers • Another String array stores verse-specific ant actions • Values at ithindex of array are accessed with each loop • Enhance the program by adding a marching method Alice in Action with Java

  17. Array Example 1: The Ants Go Marching Alice in Action with Java

  18. Array Operations • Array items are accessed by index (like lists) • Predefined operations for arrays • anArray[i] = val; (the subscript operation) • val.set(value, anArray[i]); • anArray.length • Two versions of the subscript operation • Write version: changes value of item i in the array • Read version: retrieves the value of item i in the array • Traverse an array using a for loop or while loop • forAllInOrder and forAllTogethernot available Alice in Action with Java

  19. Array Example 2: Random Access • Scene: left castle door tells jokes to right castle door • Elements used to program random knock-knock jokes • Castle interior with camera positioned before doors • Parallel arrays for accessing name and punchline • Dialog including name and punchline arrays • Use of Random.nextDouble()to generate index • Random.nextDouble()details • Accessed in the functions pane of world’s details area • Set integerOnly attribute to true • Define a range of random values for indexing the array Alice in Action with Java

  20. Array Example 2: Random Access (continued) Alice in Action with Java

  21. Summary • Data structure: structure storing a group of values • List: dynamic container that holds a group of values • Array: static container that holds a group of values • Item: individual variable stored by index in an array or list • forAllInOrder statement: loops through list items in sequence Alice in Action with Java

  22. Summary (continued) • forAllTogether statement: applies instructions to list items in parallel • Random.nextDouble():generates random numbers • Alice usually displays <None>to indicate that an object value is null Alice in Action with Java

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