I stopped programming for a while now. Probably around 4 years, and I was just looking to mess around with it, so I decided to make a high:low number guessing game. (guess a number 1-100, program says if your guess is too high or too low) and I completely forgot how I would go about:
a) Once the user guesses the correct number, asking if they want to play again
b) If they don't guess the correct number (too high or too low), the program lets them guess again.
I understand that you would need loops, but I just forgot about how I would go about them
package highlow;
import java.util.Random;
import java.util.Scanner;
public class guessing {
public static void main(String[] args){
Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
Random rand = new Random();
int tries;
int correctNum = rand.nextInt(100);
System.out.println("enter a number 1-100");
int guess1 = input.nextInt();
if(guess1 < correctNum){
System.out.println("number is too low!");
}
else if(guess1 > correctNum){
System.out.println("Number is too high!");
}
else if(guess1 == correctNum){
System.out.println("correct!");
}
else{
System.out.println("not a valid option");
}
}
}
You need to wrap everything in a while loop so that it keeps repeating until the user guesses correctly:
// Make the scanner, get the random number etc... Put all the setup and
// stuff you don't want to be repeated here
while (true) {
System.out.println("enter a number 0-99"); // Changed from 1-100 because rand.nextInt(100)
// returns a number between 0 and 99
// You can do correctNum += 1 to make it between 1 and 100
// But put this in before the while loop starts
int guess1 = input.nextInt();
if(guess1 < correctNum){
System.out.println("number is too low!");
}
else if(guess1 > correctNum){
System.out.println("Number is too high!");
}
else if(guess1 == correctNum){
System.out.println("correct!");
break; // <---- Add this, this will make the loop stop when the
//player gets the answer correct and therefore the program will end
}
else{
System.out.println("not a valid option");
}
}
While loops repeat whatever is inside them until the statement inside their () is false. In our case the loop will go forever because true is inside the () but with the break statement, the loop will end when the user guesses correctly.
package highlow;
import java.util.*;
public class guessing
{
public static void main (String [] args)
{
boolean wantstoplay = true;
while(wantstoplay)
{
play();
System.out.println("Would you like to play again?");
Scanner kb = new Scanner (System.In);
if ((kb.nextLine().equals("yes") || (kb.nextLine().equals("Yes"))
wantstoplay = true;
else
wantstoplay = false;
}
}
public void play()
{
boolean playing = true;
int correctNum = (int) ((Math.Random() *100) + 1);
//selects random double from [1,101) and then rounds down
int tries = 0;
while (playing)
{
Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("enter a number 1-100");
int guess = input.nextInt();
if(guess < correctNum){
System.out.println("number is too low!");
tries++;
}
else if(guess > correctNum){
System.out.println("Number is too high!");
tries++;
}
else if(guess == correctNum){
System.out.println("correct!");
if (tries > 1)
System.out.println("Congrats, you guessed the right number. It only took you " + tries + " attempts!");
else
System.out.println("You guessed it first try! good job");
}
else{
System.out.println("not a valid option");
}
}
}
}
Above is some sample code that might be helpful.
I suggest making a play method, and then calling it in your main method.
This makes your code more organized and readable, because now you'll get the functionalities you desired without having 1 messy method with 2 loops in it.
You'll notice I included while loops rather than for loops. This is because while loops are ideal when you don't know how many times you're going to need to iterate.
The while in the main method checks to see whether the user would like another game. Notice that it assumes that the user wants to play at least one game. I did this by setting wantstoplay as true before we entered the loop, but this also could've been done with a do-while loop. For more, see (http://www.java-examples.com/do-while-loop)
The while in the play method checks to see whether the user needs to make another guess because he hasn't gotten the answer yet. Just like we can't know how many times the user wants to play before hand, we can't know how many guesses the user will take either.
Hope this helps you get back into programming!
Related
I'm creating a HiLo guessing game in Java. Everything I have so far works as intended except at the end when I prompt a user to play again, the random number remains the same from the previous game. How do I make it so the code produces a new random number when the user chooses to play a new game?
int answer = (int)(Math.random() * 100 + 1);
int guess = 0;
int guessCount = 0;
boolean playGame = true;
String restart;
Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);
while(playGame == true)
{
while (playGame == true)
{
System.out.println("Enter a number between 1 and 100: ");
guess = scan.nextInt();
guessCount ++;
System.out.println(answer);
if (guess < 1 || guess > 100)
{
System.out.println("You have entered an invalid number.");
guessCount --;
} else if (guess == answer)
{
System.out.println("Correct! Great guess! It took you " + guessCount + " tries!");
break;
} else if (guess > answer)
{
System.out.println("You've guessed too high! Guess again: ");
} else if (guess < answer)
{
System.out.println("You've guessed too low! Guess again: ");
}
}
System.out.println("Would you like to play again? Y/N");
restart = scan.next();
if (restart.equalsIgnoreCase("Y"))
{
playGame = true;
} else if(restart.equalsIgnoreCase("N"))
{
System.out.println("Thank you for playing!");
break;
}
}
The value in the variable 'answer' remains same since variable is a reference to what you have stored / Initialized or Assigned. It does not manipulate in itself. You have to rewrite the code for e.g. answer = (int)(Math.random()*100+1) at the point before game will be restarted or after it.
You're initializing the answer before the loop, it never changes. You have to assign answer a new value when the user chooses to play a new round. This is not the code I'd write, but here it is:
if (restart.equalsIgnoreCase("Y"))
{
answer = (int)(Math.random() * 100 + 1);
}
I'm building a dice guessing game. the program has 5 die tosses. I've implemented hasNextInt() as it is the only one I can understand at the moment.
When I enter something that's not an Int it breaks out of the code but I want the program to continue for the rest of the goes (out of 5).
Also If the user guesses correctly I have to keep track of how many they get right.
If they guess wrong I have let them know what the die toss was, this keeps returning the first wrong die toss for the five goes.
At the end I have let the player know how many they got right out of 5.
This is my code so far
import java.util.Scanner;
public class Attempt11
{
public static void main(String args[]) {
int attempt = 1;
int userGuessNumber = 0;
int secretNumber = (int) (Math.random() * 6) + 1;
Scanner userInput = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("Guess the next dice throw (1-6)");
do {
if (userInput.hasNextInt()) {
userGuessNumber = userInput.nextInt();
if (userGuessNumber == secretNumber) {
System.out.println("Congratulations you guessed right");
continue;
} else if (userGuessNumber < 1) {
System.out.println("Number must be between 1 and 6 inclusive, please try again ");
} else if (userGuessNumber > 6) {
System.out.println("Number must be between 1 and 6 inclusive, please try again ");
} else if (userGuessNumber > secretNumber) {
System.out.println("Hard luck the last throw was " + secretNumber);
} else if (userGuessNumber < secretNumber) {
System.out.println("Hard luck the last throw was " + secretNumber);
}
if (attempt == 5) {
System.out.println("You have exceeded the maximum attempt. Try Again");
break;
}
attempt++;
} else {
System.out.println("Enter a Valid Integer Number");
break;
}
} while (userGuessNumber != secretNumber);
userInput.close();
}
}
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I'm new at java and i tried to make a Guess The Number game.
When the loop starts, i want to check if the user has any tries left.
if (remain > 1);
then after each end of the loop I want to subtract 1 from the tries.
I also tried to gather 1 after each loop ends.
byte tries = 5, remain=(byte)(--tries);
When user is out of tries i want to break the loop and break the game:
else if (remain == 0){
System.out.println("You haven't guessed the number!");
break;
}
Here's my code:
public class Master{
private static Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);
public static void main(String[] args) {
double number = (byte)(Math.random() * 21);
while(true){
// User input
System.out.print("Choose a number between 1 and 21 :");
byte user = scanner.nextByte();
byte tries = 5, remain=(byte)(--tries);
System.out.println(remain);
if (remain > 1);
//game
if (user==number){
System.out.println("You have guessed the number!");
break;
} else if (user < number)
System.out.println("You are lower than the number!");
else if (user > number)
System.out.println("You are higher than the number!");
//Break if user is out of tries
else if (remain == 0){
System.out.println("You haven't guessed the number!");
break;
}
}
}
}
Code works perfectly but it won't break when user is out of tries.
tries variable should be initialized outside the while loop and the if statement was being closed using a ';'
private static Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);
public static void main(String[] args) {
double number = (byte)(Math.random() * 21);
byte tries = 5; // tries should be initialized outside the loop
while(true){
// User input
System.out.print("Choose a number between 1 and 21 :");
byte user = scanner.nextByte();
byte remain=(byte)(--tries);
System.out.println(remain);
if (remain > 1) { // You were using ; and this if statement was closed
//game
if (user==number){
System.out.println("You have guessed the number!");
break;
} else if (user < number)
System.out.println("You are lower than the number!");
else if (user > number)
System.out.println("You are higher than the number!");
}
//Break if user is out of tries
else if (remain == 0){
System.out.println("You haven't guessed the number!");
break;
}
}
}
I think you are misunderstanding a lot of concepts. Here's a commented version :
public class Master {
private static Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);
public static void main(String[] args) {
// The number to found
double numberToFound = (byte)(Math.random() * 21);
// The user number will be stored here
byte userInput = 0;
// The number of tries left
byte tryLeft = (byte) 5;
do {
// Ask the User an number
System.out.print("Choose a number between 1 and 21 :");
userInput = scanner.nextByte(); // Store it
// Test the number
if (userInput > numberToFound) {
System.out.println("You are lower than the number!");
} else {
System.out.println("You are higher than the number!");
}
tryLeft--; // We remove one try
} while(tryLeft > 0 && userInput != numberToFound); // We loop until there are no more try OR we found the number
// Last time check (we check why we exited the loop)
// The user found the number
if (numberToFound == userInput)
System.out.println("You have guessed the number!");
else // The user has no more tries left
System.out.println("You haven't guessed the number!");
}
}
You should avoid using while(true) if you have a breaking condition for better readability.
You can try this code.
I changed some datatypes and added the decreasing of the remain variable inside the loop.
public class Master{
private static Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);
public static void main(String[] args) {
int number = (int)(Math.random() * 21);
int tries = 5;
int remain = tries;
while(true){
System.out.print("Choose a number between 1 and 21:");
int user = scanner.nextInt();
// User input
System.out.println(remain);
if (remain > 1) {
//game
if (user==number){
System.out.println("You have guessed the number!");
break;
} else if (user < number)
System.out.println("You are lower than the number!");
else if (user > number)
System.out.println("You are higher than the number!");
--remain;
}
//Break if user is out of tries
else if (remain == 0){
System.out.println("You haven't guessed the number!");
break;
}
}
}
}
First of all, you can check if the "remain" is bigger than 0 and not 1, and your code will do the job as you planned (and you don't need to check == 0 at the else) :)
Second of all small comments to make your code more arranged:
Work with parameters that are comfortable to you like int (easier to debug and work with) you should use byte only if the code really needs it.
Move parameters that you use only to check them outside the loop like tries (think on that you will define this variable on every loop iteration and you don't need to).
Add to the params you are not going to change (like tries & number after you moved outside the loop) final it will be more clear that you are not going to change this param anymore.
Other than that looks great, good luck! :)
I'm new to Java programming and taking a college course where I have an assignment to create a Hi/Lo guessing game. The game provides up to 5 attempts for the user to input a number between 1 and 100 (inclusive). The program must provide the logic back of whether the answer is too low, too high or correct. The program must provide the option to play again after either winning or the 5 failed attempts.
I've recreated this program about 10 times :(. I cannot get he logic to work to follow the instructions above. I cannot stop the tries at 5 attempts... and I cannot get the program to execute a new game.
Any help is greatly appreciated. I've spent countless hours writing and re-writing this code with MANY different results - but not the intended ones.
This is my first time posting so, I apologize if the format to post is not correct.
I've looked through more forums and examples than I care to admit and none of code I've reviewed and tried implementing have given me the results of limiting the user input to 5 tries each time and ability to play again multiple times.
Here is my code:
public class HiLoGuessingGame {
/**
* #param args the command line arguments
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
//Initialize scanner and random number gennerator
Scanner input = new Scanner(System.in);
Random generator = new Random();
//State the rules of the game
System.out.println("The Hi-Lo Guessing Game. Guess a number between 1-100");
System.out.println("You have 5 attempts!");
/* define the variable Guess (user iput)
define the variable Answer (random generator)
define the variable Counter (track number of tries and limit to 5)
define the variable PlayAgain (Y/N question)*/
int guess = 0;
int answer = generator.nextInt(100)+1;
int counter = 1;
String playAgain;
boolean gameOver = false;
//Ask the Hi-Lo question - pick number 1-100 (inclusive)
//Provide feedback answer too high, too low or you win!
//Limit number of tries in the game to 5
while (guess != answer) {
System.out.print("Enter your guess: ");
guess = input.nextInt();
counter++;
if (guess < answer) {
System.out.println("Your guess " + guess + " is too low. Try again");
System.out.println("This is attempt: " + counter);
} else if (guess > answer) {
System.out.println("Your guess " + guess + " is too high. Try again");
System.out.println("This is attempt: " + counter);
} else if (guess == answer) {
System.out.println("Your guess " + guess + " is correct! You win!");
System.out.println();
System.out.println("Would you like to play again (Y/N)?");
playAgain = input.next();
}
}
if (counter ==6) {
System.out.println("Sorry, you've reached your max atttempts.");
System.out.println("Would you like to play again (Y/N)?");
playAgain = input.next();
}
// Play again logic
boolean isValid;
do {
System.out.print("Would you like to play again (Y/N)?");
playAgain = input.next().toUpperCase();
isValid = playAgain.equals("Y") || playAgain.equals("N");
playAgain = input.next();
counter = 1;
if ( !isValid ) {
System.out.println("Error, please enter Y or N");
System.out.println();
}
} while (!isValid);
}
}
You can add an extra condition to your while-loop:
while (guess != answer && counter < 5) {
// ...
}
Alternatively, you can break the loop when you get a right answer:
while (counter < 5) {
// ...
if (answer == guess){
// ...
break;
}
}
In this program, the computer generates a random number (between 1-100) and the user attempts to guess it.
Runs until the user correctly guesses the number. Needs to print out the total number of tries it took before the number was guessed correctly.
Program runs fine, but there is a logical error. Nothing prints out when I correctly guess the number; the program just stops instead.
import java.util.*;
public class Problem3 {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random rand = new Random();
Scanner console = new Scanner(System.in);
int num = rand.nextInt(100)+1;
System.out.println(num); //prints out the random number so I know test works correctly
int count = 0;
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
console = new Scanner(System.in);
int guess = console.nextInt();
while(guess != num){ //while guess is not = to number
if(guess < num){ //if less than num
System.out.println("Your guess is too low");
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
guess = console.nextInt();
count++;
}else if( guess > num){ //if greater than num
System.out.println("Your guess is too high");
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
guess = console.nextInt();
count++;
}else{
count++;
System.out.println("You guessed correctly after " + count + " tries!");
}
}
}
}
Actually you never enter the else stage, because when the number is guessed, the while code won't execute and therefore the else code will never execute. So after that the number is guessed, so condition is false, exit while loop and System.out.print the Congrats message
Put this outside your while loop "at the end":
System.out.println("You guessed correctly after " + count + " tries!");
Here's what your code should look like:
while(guess != num){ //while guess is not = to number
if(guess < num){ //if less than num
System.out.println("Your guess is too low");
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
guess = console.nextInt();
count++;
}else{ //if greater than num
System.out.println("Your guess is too high");
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
guess = console.nextInt();
count++;
}
}
System.out.println("You guessed correctly after " + ++count + " tries!");
Your while loop condition becomes false when the correct number is guessed. This makes the else unreachable.
EDIT
Here is how I would have tackled your problem. If you find yourself repeating code, it usually means there is an opportunity for improvement. Not only is there less code, but it is easier to read and follow what is going on. I'm not trying to steal the answer (#AmirBawab found the issue first), but I am a big believer in not just making code that works, but code that can be maintained and read by others. Hopefully as you continue learning you will keep that in mind. Happy coding!
public static void main(String[] args) {
Random rand = new Random();
Scanner console = new Scanner(System.in);
int num = rand.nextInt(100) + 1;
int count = 0;
while (true) {
System.out.println("Guess the random number. The number is between 1 and 100. Enter it below");
int guess = console.nextInt();
count++;
if (guess < num) {
System.out.println("Your guess is too low");
} else if (guess > num) {
System.out.println("Your guess is too high");
} else {
System.out.println("You guessed correctly after " + count + " tries!");
break;
}
}
console.close();
}