Junior Associate Blog Post Answers

How to study for the Java Foundations Junior Associate exam links to practice exam questions. This page provides the answers to those questions. It’s a separate page so you don’t accidentally see the answers while reading the questions.

Questions on Random and Math

  1. B: The Math class has static methods. The Random class needs to be instantiated. This is memorizing, but you have to memorize it.
  2. A, B: This method returns double values from 0 to 1 including 0 and not including 1. C and D are incorrect because they are too high.
  3. A,C: This method returns int values from 0 to 4 including 0 and 4. B is incorrect because is not an int. D is incorrect because it is too high.
  4. C: Using a random seed in the constructor provides the same sequence of “random” values each time.

Questions on Real World Applications of Java

  1. B,C: Servlets and JSF are both core web technologies. EJBs are used for the back end. SMTP is related to email.
  2. B: JMS is used for messaging without needing to wait for a reply.
  3. B,C: JDBC and JPA are the two core database technologies in Java.
  4. A: Applets run in a browser. JSF, JSP and Servlets are web technologies, but all run on a server

Questions on Formatting Strings

  1. D: The “2$” portion of “%2$d” denotes the second argument to be formatted, which is the 5. Therefore, 5 is output twice and the 10 does not appear in the result. The output is 5 is bigger than 5 and the answer is D.
  2. B,D: The argument index is 1 based. %d means digit/decimal and goes with int.
  3. F: This question is checking to see if you notice that %d is for int values and we’ve used it as a double. A runtime exception is thrown because we are passing a floating point number.
  4. D: Trick question! The format strings use % and not $. Since no actual replacements are present, the output is just the literal text and Choice D is correct. If the format string was %n, %s, the answer would be Choice F because the wrong arguments are passed in.
  5. D: The format strings are using with printf or format. The code calls println which expects a single String.

Questions on Using Iterators

  1. A: This is your standard iterator idiom
  2. C: Since Iterator doesn’t use generics, it requires a cast to convert from Object to String
  3. A: Since List doesn’t use generics, Iterator gives a warning since it does use generics. The code still compiles though when using the standard iterator idiom.

Questions on CompareTo

  1. A,E: Uppercase letters sort before lowercase ones making the first string smaller and compareTo() return a negative number. The Strings are not an exact match so equals() returns false.
  2. C,E: Blanks sort before uppercase letters making the second string smaller  and compareTo() return a positive number. The Strings are not an exact match so equals() returns false.
  3. B,D: The strings are the same so compareTo() returns 0 and equals() returns true.
  4. F: The method is compareTo(), not compare() so the code doesn’t compile.
  5. C,E: Numbers letters sort before letters making the first string larger and compareTo() return a positive number. The Strings are not an exact match so equals() returns false.

 

Math and Random for the Java Foundations Junior Associate exam

 

Thinking about using our OCA 8 book to study for the Java Foundations Junior Associate exam? It covers most of the topics. See what other topics you need to learn and where to read about that. One of those topics is the Math and Random classes both of which are covered in this post.

Disclaimer: I’m assuming you have already an intro to Java book and just covering what you should know when studying for the exam. This is not intended to be a complete reference for the classes; this is a basic exam. If you are looking for documentation see the JavaDoc for Random and Math.

Random

Overview of Random

The Random class is used to create a list of mostly random numbers. It’s random enough for most purposes and for the exam. When you get up to writing code that has to with security, it is no longer random enough and you’ll need to use another class such as SecureRandom. Using the Random class is easy. You create an instance of it and call methods to get random values. For example:

import java.util.*;
public class PlayTest {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
      Random random = new Random();
      System.out.println(random.nextInt());
      System.out.println(random.nextDouble());
      System.out.println(random.nextLong());
   }
}

When I run this, I get:
-944250601
0.8115233936833056
-8514335293554058162

Running again gives:
1307999651
0.4324686951998048
1958536137379003933

Notice how they are different results. When you run it, you’ll get different numbers. That’s because they are random!

How to get random values in a smaller range

Wait a minute. It’s great to be able to generate giant random numbers. But all I want to do is simulate rolling a single die which gives me a number between 1 and 6 inclusive. Luckily, there is another method available on the Random class that we can use.

nextInt(x) returns a random number between 0 and x-1. If we called random.nextInt(6), we’d get a random number from 0-5. That’s almost what we want. Since we want to start with 1, we have to add 1 to the result. Which means we can write:

int dieRoll = random.nextInt(6) + 1);

How to get the same “random” values each time you run the program

Usually, you want to get different random values each time you run the program. However, sometimes you want to test your program so that it runs the same way every time. If your program doesn’t work the way you want it to, having it work differently each time makes troubleshooting tough! Luckily, there is a way around this problem. You can pass a “seed” to the constructor. This tells Java to always return the same sequence of “random” values for the same seed.

import java.util.*;

public class PlayTest {
   public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
      Random random = new Random(111);
      System.out.println(random.nextInt(6) + 1);
      System.out.println(random.nextInt(6) + 1);
      System.out.println(random.nextInt(6) + 1);
   }
}

Every time I run this program, it outputs:
2
3
2

If I pass a different seed, I get different “random” values each time. Cool, right?

Math

Unlike Random, the Math class is not instantiated. All methods in Math are static. This class is for common operations you might want to do. For example:

  • Math.abs(x) gives you the absolute value of x (removes the sign if it is negative)
  • Math.round(x) rounds x to the nearest int
  • Math.sqrt(x) gives you the square root of x
  • Math.random() gives you a random double that is >= 0 and < 1.

Wait. Say what? Didn’t we just go over a whole class about random numbers? Yes. We did. The Math class’ one doesn’t require you to instantiate it class. It’s good if you just need a quick random number. It doesn’t give as much control as Random.

You can get an int random number out of this by mutliplying and casting to an int. For example, this prints an int between 0 and 4 inclusive:

System.out.println((int) (Math.random() * 5));

Summary

What are the key takeaways for the exam in all this?

  1. The Math class has static methods
  2. Math.random() returns a double between 0 and 1 including 0 and not including 1.
  3. The Random class has instance methods.
  4. The Random class can return an int random number.
  5. If you instantiate two classes with the same random seed, they will return the same “random” numbers for the same sequence of calls.

Practice Questions

And yes, you can figure out the answers to some by looking at others. The key is to understand and remember the information.

Question 1

Which of the following fill in the blanks to make this code compile?

double num1 = _____________.random();
int num2 = ____________.nextInt();

A: Math, Random

B: Math, new Random()

C: new Math(), Random

D: new Math(), new Random()

E: None of the above

Question 2

What are possible values for Math.random() to return? (Choose all that apply)

A: 0

B: .5

C: 1

D: 5

E: None of the above

Question 3

What are possible values for new Random.nextInt(5) to return? (Choose all that apply)

A: 0

B: .5

C: 1

D: 5

E: None of the above

Question 4

Will of these statements are true? (Choose all that apply)

A: Math.random() will return the same number if called twice.

B: new Random().nextInt() will return the same number if called twice.

C: new Random(6).nextInt() will return the same number if called twice.

D: Random.nextInt() will return the same number if called twice.

E: None of the above

 

The answers are posted here.

decibel measuring iPhone apps

I was curious how loud my apartment is. I live on a busy street. I waited until there was little to no traffic noise to do the test. I tried two iPhone apps.

 

Category Expected result The free Decibel Meter app The 99 cent DbVolume Meter
Inside my apartment 35-45 55-60 44-46
On my terrace (mild honking) 50-60 75-80 50-60
My normal speaking voice back inside 50-60 75-85 50-55
My voice when projecting back inside (like giving a speech or on the phone) 60-70 90-100 57-60

Guess the free one is free for a reason. It’s highly inaccurate! All in all, an interesting experiment.