Java array assignment (multiple values)

倖福魔咒の 提交于 2020-01-20 15:04:25

问题


I have a Java array defined already e.g.

float[] values = new float[3];

I would like to do something like this further on in the code:

values = {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

But that gives me a compile error. Is there a nicer way to define multiple values at once, rather than doing this?:

values[0] = 0.1f;
values[1] = 0.2f;
values[2] = 0.3f;

Thanks!


回答1:


Yes:

float[] values = {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

This syntax is only permissible in an initializer. You cannot use it in an assignment, where the following is the best you can do:

values = new float[3];

or

values = new float[] {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

Trying to find a reference in the language spec for this, but it's as unreadable as ever. Anyone else find one?




回答2:


On declaration you can do the following.

float[] values = {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

When the field is already defined, try this.

values = new float[] {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

Be aware that also the second version creates a new array. If values was the only reference to an already existing field, it becomes eligible for garbage collection.




回答3:


Java does not provide a construct that will assign of multiple values to an existing array's elements. The initializer syntaxes can ONLY be used when creation a new array object. This can be at the point of declaration, or later on. But either way, the initializer is initializing a new array object, not updating an existing one.




回答4:


values = new float[] { 0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f };



回答5:


If you know the values at compile time you can do :

float[] values = {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};

There is no way to do that if values are variables in runtime.




回答6:


This should work, but is slower and feels wrong: System.arraycopy(new float[]{...}, 0, values, 0, 3);




回答7:


You may use a local variable, like:

    float[] values = new float[3];
    float[] v = {0.1f, 0.2f, 0.3f};
    float[] values = v;



回答8:


    public class arrayFloats {
      public static void main (String [] args){
        float [] Values = new float[3];
        float Incre = 0.1f;
        int Count = 0;

        for (Count = 0;Count<3 ;Count++ ) {
          Values [Count] = Incre + 0.0f;
          Incre += 0.1f;
          System.out.println("Values [" + Count + "] : " + Values [Count]);
        }


      }
    }

//OUTPUT:
//Values [0] : 0.1
//Values [1] : 0.2
//Values [2] : 0.3

This isn't the all and be all of assigning values to a specific array. Since I've seen the sample was 0.1 - 0.3 you could do it this way. This method is very useful if you're designing charts and graphs. You can have the x-value incremented by 0.1 until nth time.

Or you want to design some grid of some sort.




回答9:


for example i tried all above for characters it fails but that worked for me >> reserved a pointer then assign values

char A[];
A = new char[]{'a', 'b', 'a', 'c', 'd', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'q', 'r'};



回答10:


int a[] = { 2, 6, 8, 5, 4, 3 }; 
int b[] = { 2, 3, 4, 7 };

if you take float number then you take float and it's your choice

this is very good way to show array elements.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2576038/java-array-assignment-multiple-values

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