Question

Let's say that I need to generate variables to hold some input from the user (I don't know how many they are). Without using Array, ArrayList (and other kind of lists and maps) can my code generate (lets say) String variables X times with names like (String var001, String var002, String var003, etc)? If yes, please provide sample code.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Following is the way that i have implemented and helped me to fix my solution easily without much hurdles.

// Creating the array List

List accountList = new ArrayList(); 




for(int k=0;k < counter;k++){
        accountList.add(k, (String)flowCtx.getValueAt("transitId"+m));
}

Iterating the loop and adding the objects into the arraylist with the index.

//Retrieving the object at run time with the help of the index

String a = accountList.get(i));

OTHER TIPS

If you really want to do something like that, you can do it through bytecode generation using ASM or some other library.

Here is code that will generate a class named "foo.bar.ClassWithFields" that contains fields "var0" to "var99". Of course there is no way other than reflection to access those fields, because they don't exist at compile time and Java is a statically typed language.

import org.objectweb.asm.*;
import static org.objectweb.asm.Opcodes.*;

import java.lang.reflect.Field;

public class GeneratedFieldsExperiment {

    public static byte[] generateClassWithFields(int fieldCount) throws Exception {
        ClassWriter cw = new ClassWriter(0);
        FieldVisitor fv;
        MethodVisitor mv;
        AnnotationVisitor av0;

        cw.visit(V1_6, ACC_PUBLIC + ACC_SUPER, "foo/bar/ClassWithFields", null, "java/lang/Object", null);

        for (int i = 0; i < fieldCount; i++) {
            fv = cw.visitField(ACC_PUBLIC, "var" + i, "Ljava/lang/String;", null, null);
            fv.visitEnd();
        }
        {
            mv = cw.visitMethod(ACC_PUBLIC, "<init>", "()V", null, null);
            mv.visitCode();
            mv.visitVarInsn(ALOAD, 0);
            mv.visitMethodInsn(INVOKESPECIAL, "java/lang/Object", "<init>", "()V");
            mv.visitInsn(RETURN);
            mv.visitMaxs(1, 1);
            mv.visitEnd();
        }
        cw.visitEnd();

        return cw.toByteArray();
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        MyClassLoader loader = new MyClassLoader();
        Class<?> c = loader.defineClass("foo.bar.ClassWithFields", generateClassWithFields(100));

        System.out.println(c);
        System.out.println("Fields:");
        for (Field field : c.getFields()) {
            System.out.println(field);
        }
    }

    private static class MyClassLoader extends ClassLoader {
        public Class<?> defineClass(String name, byte[] b) {
            return defineClass(name, b, 0, b.length);
        }
    }
}

Without using Array, ArrayList (and other kind of lists and maps)

Create files with these names. Hope that will work for your professor.

Or use the Java Scripting API mentioned before:

ScriptEngineManager manager = new ScriptEngineManager();
ScriptEngine engine = manager.getEngineByName("JavaScript");

engine.put("x", "hello"); // you can add any variable here
// print global variable "x"
engine.eval("println(x);");
// the above line prints "hello"

EDIT

Seems like internally this will use Maps :) Same with Properties file, Preferences API, or DOM Trees (they are using Vectors). So if your professor is so picky, use files.

I haven't seen this answered yet, so I'll go for it. Write a program that just writes out Java source code. Most of it could be a template, and you would just have a loop that would write as many "string UserString003" type variables as you want.

Yes, this is horrible. But, as you said, it's a conceptual challenge problem for homework, so as long as no one mistakes this for "good" code, it might solve the issue.

Naming variables like that looks very 1980-ish. Meaning pre object oriented programming. So if you ever build software for a living - DON'T DO THIS.

But since it seems to be homework...

When we're talking about a named variable in Java, we mean something that's compiled. Unlike in some scripting languages there is no easy way to do this in Java.

So either you use a runtime compiled class like Markus Lausberg suggested.
Or you cheat and use the Java Scripting API and make use of the scripting languages. That way you can create code (in a String) at runtime.

I think you can generate a Java class at runtime or maybe use some script engine like Beanshell to generate the variables, you can even build the class by its bytecode. But I can't see how you will use that variables in your code, you must also create the code to work with that variables, or use reflection for that...

A naive solution:
create a class with all variables from var000 to var999 with a getter for each... but that's not really dynamically!

It looks like your professor is PHP-biased on the feature (Variable variables), so he was thinking if that was possible in java.

I personally don't think that this is possible, not in the way you are proposing. What can be done is the generation of classes at runtime, using tools like Javassist to make a more powerful reflection mechanism. So you can create a class that has the variables you want (string1, string2, etc.) at runtime.

However, don't forget that Variable variables is a really bad technique, which leads to bad code. It might be useful on very few cases, but I really don't recommend it.

You mean you want to generate variables named

var0, var1, var2 and use them in your code.

What is the difference when you use var[0], var[1], var[2], .....

BUT

You can generate a Java class dynamically at runtime which implements an Interface you are using in your normal code. Then you compile this class using a compiler (For example Janino) and then load the class at runtime. Than you have created a class dynamically.

But i wonder, whether this is necessary for your usecase.

EDIT

I dont now for which usecase you are using this parameters but dynamic arguments you can use in Java like this example from here

// calculate average
        public static double average( double... numbers )
        {
           double total = 0.0; // initialize total

          // calculate total using the enhanced for statement
          for ( double d : numbers )              
             total += d;                          

          return total / numbers.length;
       } // end method average

This is not possible, but this is a perfect candidate for using one of the java collections.

Either use a dynamically allocated array:

String[] arr = new String[RUNTIME_SIZE];

Or a list which can change it's size during runtime:

List list = new ArrayList<String>();

I do not know if I understood you correctly but if you are trying to use dynamically created names for your variables then yes, definitely - I am doing it like this:

// rndRng() creates random numbers in specified range
// this would output dynamically created variable like "name89"
String myDynamicalyCreatedName = "name" + Utils.rndRng(0, 100);
final UberShader $myDynamicalyCreatedName = new UberShader();

As you can see the point key here is the sign "$" that basically says "create variable name from the String that is given after this sign", and that's basically it - works like a charm for me for a few years now...hope it is what you wanted and that it helps a bit solving your problem.

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