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Start your free trialSteven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 PointsI'm able to solve the problem, but I'm still unclear about something
in lines 19 and 20 of the Forum class you bring in the method getAuthor() from the class ForumPost with the object post. That makes sense to me. What I'm unclear about is you also use getFirstName() and getLastName which are from the User class, but there is no object used to access the User class. I was wondering if declaring that is not required?
public class Forum {
private String topic;
public Forum(String topic)
{
this.topic = topic;
}
// TODO: add a constructor that accepts a topic and sets the private field topic
public String getTopic() {
return topic;
}
// Uncomment this when you are prompted to do so
public void addPost(ForumPost post) {
System.out.printf("A new post in %s topic from %s %s about %s is available",
topic,
post.getAuthor().getFirstName(),
post.getAuthor().getLastName(),
post.getTitle()
);
}
}
public class User {
// TODO: add private fields for firstName and lastName
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
public User(String firstName, String lastName) {
// TODO: set and add the private fields
this.firstName = firstName;
this.lastName = lastName;
}
public String getFirstName()
{
return firstName;
}
public String getLastName()
{
return lastName;
}
// TODO: add getters for firstName and lastName
}
public class ForumPost {
private User author;
private String title;
private String description;
public ForumPost(User author, String title, String description)
{
this.author = author;
this.title = title;
this.description = description;
}
// TODO: add a constructor that accepts the author, title and description
public User getAuthor() {
return author;
}
public String getTitle() {
return title;
}
public String getDescription() {
return description;
}
}
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("Beginning forum example");
if (args.length < 2) {
System.out.println("Usage: java Main <first name> <last name>");
System.err.println("<first name> and <last name> are required");
System.exit(1);
}
// Uncomment this when prompted
Forum forum = new Forum("Java");
// TODO: pass in the first name and last name that are in the args parameter
User author = new User(args[0], args[1]);
// TODO: initialize the forum post with the user created above and a title and description of your choice
ForumPost post = new ForumPost(author, "WWE", "Gimme a Hell Yeah!");
forum.addPost(post);
//
}
}
3 Answers
Dekel Zoaretz
14,864 PointsAs far as I can see the post.getAuthor()
is returning a reference to the user object that is being populated in the ForumPost constructor.
public class ForumPost {
private User author;
...
public ForumPost(User author, String title, String description)
{
this.author = author;
...
}
public User getAuthor() {
return author;
}
...
}
andren
28,558 PointsThe getAuthor
method returns author
which contains a User
object. When you chain method calls together like is done in this line post.getAuthor().getFirstName()
you call the second method on the thing returned by the first method.
So getFirstName()
is being called on the User
object that the getAuthor()
method returns. Which means the methods are in fact being called on a User
object. It's just one being returned from a method rather than one defined within the class. Which is a completely valid thing to do.
It's technically no different from doing something like this:
public void addPost(ForumPost post) {
User author = post.getAuthor();
System.out.printf("A new post in %s topic from %s %s about %s is available",
topic,
author.getFirstName(),
author.getLastName(),
post.getTitle()
);
}
They are just skipping out on creating a variable to hold the User
object.
Steven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 PointsThanks! It took me awhile to figure out that author was the object for accessing the User class
Steven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 PointsOk, now I see. Thank you! And I had so much trouble with the User object in the ForumPost class!
Steven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 PointsSteven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 PointsThanks. Now it makes sense