No. The programmer probably wants
the three statements after the else
to be part of a false block,
but has not used braces to show this.
The false block was not put inside braces:
if ( num < 0 ) System.out.println("The number " + num + " is negative"); else System.out.println("The number " + num + " is positive"); System.out.print ("positive numbers are greater "); System.out.println("or equal to zero "); System.out.println("Good-bye for now");
Our human-friendly indenting shows what we want, but the compiler ignores indenting. The compiler groups statements according to the braces. What it sees is the same as this:
if ( num < 0 ) System.out.println("The number " + num + " is negative"); // true-branch else System.out.println("The number " + num + " is positive"); // false-branch System.out.print ("positive numbers are greater "); // always executed System.out.println("or equal to zero "); // always executed System.out.println("Good-bye for now"); // always executed
How would you fix the above?