This is my source code. I’trying to implement a simple program that asks a question to a user and expects the answer to be “yes” or “no” and terminates only if the user answer to the question “yes” or “no”. The book I have suggested me not to use == comparison and to use the equals method instead, so that the program can understand if the user typed “y e s” instead of “yes”. But in this way the result is the same and the method seems to compare the user’s answer if it is exactly “yes” or “no”. It doesn’t accept for example an aswer of “n o”. Is that logical for that method? Is it supposed to work that way? How can I change the program to accept answers like “Yes” “ye s” “No” “NO” etc.? I would appreciate your help:)
import acm.program.*;
public class YesNoExample extends ConsoleProgram{
public void run(){
while(true){
String answer = readLine("Would you like instructions? ");
if(askYesNoQuestion(answer)){
break;
}
println("Please answer yes or no.");
}
}
private boolean askYesNoQuestion(String str){
if(str.equals("yes")||str.equals("no")){
return true;
}else{
return false;
}
}
}
If you use
==you’ll be comparing the references (memory pointers) of two String objects. If you useequals, a custom made method in theStringclass will be run that does some “intelligent” comparison, in this case, check that the characters are all the same, and the whole thing has the same length.If you’d like to support mixed case letters, you could use
"someString".equalsIgnoreCase("SoMeString")(which will return true). This is done (said roughly) by making both strings lowercase (so the case doesn’t matter) and comparing them using equals.Edit: The other posters made me realize that, in addition to capitalization, you also want to look for String equality where spaces don’t matter. If that’s the case, a similar trick to turning everything to lowercase applies, where you first remove all the spaces, as @LouisWasserman says in his answer