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Start your free trialRohan Ubhare
6,077 PointsWhy using negative or "not equal to symbol" (!) WON'T work in this.
Instead of the if-else code code why can't I use negation in 'if' and make it work, like:
if (fieldName.charAt(0) != 'm' && !Character.isUpperCase(fieldName.charAt(1))){
throw new IllegalArgumentException(" It doesn't meet requirements.");
}
return fieldName;
The above does not work I have to use the one below
public class TeacherAssistant {
public static String validatedFieldName(String fieldName) {
// These things should be verified:
// 1. Member fields must start with an 'm'
// 2. The second letter in the field name must be uppercased to ensure camel-casing
// NOTE: To check if something is not equal use the != symbol. eg: 3 != 4
if (fieldName.charAt(0) == 'm' && Character.isUpperCase(fieldName.charAt(1))){
}
else {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(" It doesn't meet requirements.");
}
return fieldName;
}
}
3 Answers
Rohan Ubhare
6,077 PointsWhat could be the reason for it not giving the desired results? It looks correct logically??
Shane Robinson
7,324 PointsI'm not sure I understand what your question is (what does your title mean?), but I can tell you that your return statement is in the wrong place. It should be after the if statement, so if the if statement is true it returns the result - if it is false then it throws an error.
if (fieldName.charAt(0) == 'm' && Character.isUpperCase(fieldName.charAt(1))) {
return fieldName;
} else {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(" It doesn't meet requirements.");
}
Rohan Ubhare
6,077 PointsCheck the title again. I corrected it. I meant it doesn't work using negation whereas it should?
Shane Robinson
7,324 PointsAh okay I see now, you are basically trying to reverse it. I'm not entirely sure whether or not that would work under normal circumstances, but for these questions they are pretty strict in how they want you to answer the question - so that is probably the issue here.
Shane Robinson
7,324 PointsActually, I am fairly sure that would not deliver the desired results under normal circumstances either. It wouldn't produce an error, but it would give you different results than what they are looking for.
Shane Robinson
7,324 PointsShane Robinson
7,324 PointsYeah I believe you are correct, there is no output to go by but it does logically make sense that it would have the same output as the original. I was thinking about it wrong at first. I still believe the reason the quiz doesn't accept it is because they are strict in the code they are looking for.
Also, the return statement being outside of the if block means it could possibly execute if the if statement doesn't hit the error for some reason but it isn't the return you are looking for. If that makes sense. It is kind of poor design, I don't see a way an error could get by it but that sort of thing happens unexpectedly in code all the time.