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Start your free trialChaz Hall
1,970 PointsScrabble- Why does he name the game, game?
I don't understand why the instructor names the constructor game game. That is very confusing to me. Please explain. Thanks.
2 Answers
jcorum
71,830 PointsHe didn't name the constructor game game. The name of the constructor is Prompter, the same as the class name. He is creating the constructor to take a game object as an argument. To create a formal parameter or argument for the constructor he needs both a type and a name. The type is Game, and the name of the parameter is game. He then creates a private member (instance) variable named mGame of type Game to store the passed in game object in.
What this all adds up to is that when you create a Prompter object you will need to pass it a game.
E.g.,
Game g = new Game();
Prompter p = new Prompter(g);
As he says: "So now if you go to create a prompter, you'll give it a game object. And we will store that in a private variable called mGame."
Michelle Miller
610 PointsSo is my understanding here correct?
He has created a Game class in the Game.java file.
He is using that class to create a Game object within the Prompter class.
So, Prompter (TYPE=Game, NAME=[string]) to create a new prompter object.
Am I understanding that correctly?
jcorum
71,830 PointsYes, the file name for a class must be the same as the class. So for a Game class it's Game.java
Not quite: he uses that class to create a Game object in the Hangman class:
Game game = new Game("treehouse");
In the Prompter class he writes a constructor that takes a game as input (as it's formal parameter):
public Prompter(Game game) {
mGame = game;
}
In the Hangman class he uses this constructor to create a Prompter object named prompter:
Prompter prompter = new Prompter(game);
The game object he passes to the Prompter constructor in this statement is the one created above: Game game = new Game("treehouse");
Hope this helps.