What two variables do you expect a Point
object to have?
A point consists of a pair of numbers, (x, y)
.
In a mathematics book, point is given a precise mathematical definition.
For programming, a precise software description of class Point
is needed.
The Java class libraries come with descriptions of the classes within them.
The documentation for Point
is
found in the Java documentation.
Look at the documentation on your hard disk
or use Google to see it.
You will see something like the following:
public class java.awt.Point // Fields int x; int y; // Constructors Point(); // creates a point at (0,0) Point(int x, int y); // creates a point at (x,y) Point( Point pt ); // creates a point at the location given in pt // Methods boolean equals(Object obj); // checks if two point objects hold equivalent data void move(int x, int y); // changes the (x,y) data of a point object String toString(); // returns character data that can be printed (I've left out some methods we won't be using.)
The documentation shows the data
that an object of class Point
contains (its variables),
the methods that are used to manipulate that data,
and
the constructors that create objects of
that class.
Sometimes (as here) variables are called fields.
The two variables are named x
and y
and are of type int
.
There are three constructors listed for Point
.
Each one creates the same type of object.
What is the difference between the constructors?