This document provides information about an introductory course on Object Oriented Programming with Java. It includes details about textbooks, assessment breakdown, and an introduction to Java concepts like history, features, tools, and a simple example Java program.
This document provides information about an introductory course on Object Oriented Programming with Java. It includes details about textbooks, assessment breakdown, and an introduction to Java concepts like history, features, tools, and a simple example Java program.
(Cabin D-208). About Course • The objective of this course is to expose the students to concepts of OOP with Java. • T1: An Intro. To OOP with Java. C Thomas Wu TMH, 2006. (Don’t use it at all.) • R1: The complete Ref. JAVA J2SE,Herbert Schildt, 5th edition. TMH, 2005. • R2: Prog. With java, E.Balagurusamy, 2nd edition.TMH 2006 • Test 1:15% • Test2(Mid Sem):20% • Test3(Online LAB Exam):15% • Compre:40% • Quiz(After Mid Sem):10% Introduction to Java • History: Java is based on the two lang. C and C++. • C lang.(by Dennis Ritchie) is the first high level programming lang. Structured/Procedure oriented lang. • C++ lang.(by Bjarne Stroustrup) is the extension of C(‘C’ + ‘OOP’).C++ is partially Object oriented lang. • Java is developed by James Gosling, patrick naughton, chris warth, Ed frank and Mike sheriden at Sun Microsystems Inc. in 1991. Its name was “Oak” at that time. Later in 1995 it is renamed as Java. • The primary motivation of java was platform independence lang. that can be used to create software (embedded s/w) for consumer electronics devices. • Later it is observed that java can be used for internet also(due to platform-independency). Today most browsers are integrated with java runtime environment(JRE).The key point of java for internet are • Applet(client-side), Servlets(server-side) • Security(control access within Java execution environment only, not to other part of Comp.) • Portability(Same applet code work on all system.) • Bytecode: The security and portability feature of java comes from bytecodes. The java compiler(javac) generate output for a virtual machine(JVM) not for the real machine / real platform. The java interpreter (java) executes the bytecodes and produce output. • JVM differs platform to platform but all JVM understand same bytecode. Thus as long as JVM is installed all java prog. will run irrespective of h/w platform. • Java Features a) Simple h)Interpreted b) Secure i)High performance c) Portable j)Distributed d) Object oriented k)Dynamic e) Robust f) Multithreaded g) Architecture neutral • The latest version of java is Java SE 6(internally 1.6). • J2SE:Java 2 standard edition( JRE, Packages) • J2EE:Java 2 enterprise edition (J2SE+ JSP, Beans, Framework, API etc) • J2ME:Java 2 micro edition(for mobile and portable devices) • Some basic Java tools javac: Compiler for Java java: The launcher for Java applications. javadoc: API documentation generator. apt: Annotation processing tool. appletviewer: Run and debug applets jar: Create and manage Java Archive (JAR) files. jdb: The Java Debugger. javah: C header and stub generator. javap: Class file disassembler CH-2 • OOP and Java OOP and Java • The two approaches of programming a) Structured/process-oriented: Like in C. Follow top down approach. b) Object Oriented: Like in java. Follow bottom up approach. OOP • The principle of OOP are a) Abstraction: Hiding complexity.(object in java, Car as a object not as a collection of various parts like engine, break, gear etc). b) Encapsulation: Binding code and data together and keep safe from outside interference.(A class in java). c) Inheritance: Reuse of existing class/code.(More feature are added in subclass then base class). d) Polymorphism: Different behavior for different inputs.(One interface shared by multiple methods). A simple java Prog. • /* • This is a simple Java program. • Call this file "Example.java". • */ • class Example { • // Your program begins with a call to main(). • public static void main(String args[]) { • System.out.println("This is a simple Java program."); • } • } • Save the file with name Example.java(as the class name is Example which contains the main method.) • Compile the program with >javac Example.java This will create a class file Example.class.(The compiler will create a separate class file for each class. A class file is nothing but the bytecodes for JVM). • Execute the program with >java Example This will run the code and give the output message. This is a simple Java program. • If the program contain more then one class the file name will be the class name which contain main() method. • By doing this we will get the class file name (Example.class) same as the class name it contain.( class Example). • When we execute ‘java Example’, then we are actually specifying the class name that we want to execute. So the interpreter will search for a file classname.class(Example.class) • Comments: // single line comment /* Multiline comment */ /** documentation comments for javadoc */ • ‘class Example’ declares a class with name Example. • ‘public static void main(String args[])’ declares main method. • public is access specifier, which control the visibility of class member. When a class member is preceded by public, then that member may be accessed by code outside the class in which it is declared. In this case, main( ) must be declared as public, since it must be called by code outside of its class when the program is started. • The keyword static allows main( ) to be called without having to instantiate a particular instance of the class. This is necessary since main( ) is called by the Java interpreter before any objects are made. • The keyword void simply tells the compiler that main( ) does not return a value • Java is case-sensitive. Thus, Main is different from main.(with Main() the program will compile but on execution give error main() not found). • In main( ), there is only one parameter. String args[ ] declares a parameter named args, which is an array of instances of the class String. (Arrays are collections of similar objects.) • System.out.println("This is a simple Java program."); This line outputs the string “This is a simple Java program.” followed by a new line on the screen. Output is actually accomplished by the built-in println( ) method. System is a predefined class that provides access to the system, and out is the output stream that is connected to the console. (System class, out object and println() method.) • Question • What if the program contain more then two main methods.(Error/compile, how to execute that program). • Is it necessary to keep the file name same as class name. If no then how we will execute the program. class A{ public static void main(String args[]) { System.out.println("Hi Main A"); } } class B{ public static void main(String args[]) { System.out.println("Hi Main B"); } } • Save with file name ex1.java, compile it. It will generate two files A.class and B.class. When you write ‘java A’ o/p is Hi Main A and when you write ‘java B’ o/p is Hi Main B. class Example2 { public static void main(String args[]) { int num; // this declares a variable called num num = 100; // this assigns num the value 100 System.out.println("This is num: " + num); num = num * 2; System.out.print("The value of num * 2 is "); System.out.println(num); } }
(Ebook) Mastering VMware Horizon 8: An Advanced Guide to Delivering Virtual Desktops and Virtual Apps by Peter von Oven ISBN 9781484272602, 1484272609 - Download the ebook now for full and detailed access
(Ebook) Mastering VMware Horizon 8: An Advanced Guide to Delivering Virtual Desktops and Virtual Apps by Peter von Oven ISBN 9781484272602, 1484272609 - Download the ebook now for full and detailed access