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Start your free trialEirin Joahna Pamela Gonzales
8,686 PointsI got an error: for-each not applicable to expression type
What does this mean?
package com.example;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.List;
public class BlogPost implements Comparable<BlogPost>, Serializable {
private String mAuthor;
private String mTitle;
private String mBody;
private String mCategory;
private Date mCreationDate;
public BlogPost(String author, String title, String body, String category, Date creationDate) {
mAuthor = author;
mTitle = title;
mBody = body;
mCategory = category;
mCreationDate = creationDate;
}
public int compareTo(BlogPost other) {
if (equals(other)) {
return 0;
}
return mCreationDate.compareTo(other.mCreationDate);
}
public String[] getWords() {
return mBody.split("\\s+");
}
public List<String> getExternalLinks() {
List<String> links = new ArrayList<String>();
for (String word : getWords()) {
if (word.startsWith("http")) {
links.add(word);
}
}
return links;
}
public String getAuthor() {
return mAuthor;
}
public String getTitle() {
return mTitle;
}
public String getBody() {
return mBody;
}
public String getCategory() {
return mCategory;
}
public Date getCreationDate() {
return mCreationDate;
}
}
package com.example;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.TreeSet;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.HashMap;
public class Blog {
List<BlogPost> mPosts;
public Blog(List<BlogPost> posts) {
mPosts = posts;
}
public List<BlogPost> getPosts() {
return mPosts;
}
public Set<String> getAllAuthors() {
Set<String> authors = new TreeSet<>();
for (BlogPost post: mPosts) {
authors.add(post.getAuthor());
}
return authors;
}
public Map<String, Integer> getCategoryCounts() {
Map<String, Integer> allCategories = new HashMap<String, Integer>();
for (BlogPost post: mPosts) {
for (String category : post.getCategory()) {
Integer ctr = allCategories.get(category);
if (ctr == null) {
ctr = 0;
}
ctr++;
allCategories.put(category, ctr);
}
}
return allCategories;
}
}
2 Answers
Dan Johnson
40,533 PointsThe String
class is not an Iterable
in Java so it can't be used in a for-each loop. In other standard libraries for other languages where strings are iterables this would generally have a for-each pull out each character individually which isn't what you'd want to deal with in this case anyways.
With the nested for-each out of the way we can grab the category like this instead:
// Grab from each Post
String category = post.getCategory();
Eirin Joahna Pamela Gonzales
8,686 PointsThanks Dan! I already solved it! I removed the inner for loop then, I used that statement. Thanks! :)
Chirag jhumkhawala
1,212 PointsHad the same issue, worked out for me as well.!! thanks