Concept explainers
(Integer Value of a Character) Here’s another peek ahead. In this chapter, you learned about integers and the type int. Java can also represent uppercase letters, lowercase letters and a considerable variety of special symbols. Every character has a corresponding integer representation. The set of characters a computer uses together with the corresponding integer representations for those characters is called that computer’s character set. You can indicate a character value in a program simply by enclosing that character in single quotes, as in ‘A’.
You can determine a character’s integer equivalent by preceding that character with (int), as in
(int) ‘A’
An operator of this form is called a cast operator. (You’ll learn about cast operators in Chapter 4.) The following statement outputs a character and its integer equivalent:
System.out.printf("The character %c has the value %d%n", ‘A’, ((int) ‘A’));
When the preceding statement executes, it displays the character A and the value 65 (from the Unicode® character set) as part of the string. The format specifier %c is a placeholder for a character (in this case, the character ‘A’).
Using statements similar to the one shown earlier in this exercise, write an application that displays the integer equivalents of some uppercase letters, lowercase letters, digits and special symbols. Display the integer equivalents of the following: A B C a b c 0 1 2 $ * + / and the blank character.

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Chapter 2 Solutions
EBK JAVA HOW TO PROGRAM, LATE OBJECTS
- Solve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forward"Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forward
- Solve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSpecifications: Part-2Part-2: DescriptionIn this part of the lab, we will illuminate two 7-segment displays. You will need to understand 2's Complement todetermine when the input 4-bit binary number corresponds to a negative or positive number. To understand how anLED display works in Digital, please refer to the playWithLED_Display.dig file provided. You should play withdifferent input combinations to see how it influences the LED Display value. In the screenshot below, note how I wasable to generate the display of “3” on the Hex display by lighting up only certain input wires to the unit. Here is a picture of how the different segments light up to produce the different displays: Note in the picture above that we showed displays only from 0-8 since in 4-bit 2s complement representation, 8 is thelargest modulus value you can represent (the range of integers would be -8 to +7).Your circuit in Part-2 must accept a 4-bit 2's complement input {in3, in2, in1, in0} where in3 is the most…arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forward
- Solve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forward
- Solve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forwardSolve this "Do not use AI tools. Solve the problem by hand on paper only and upload a photo of your handwritten solution."arrow_forward
- EBK JAVA PROGRAMMINGComputer ScienceISBN:9781337671385Author:FARRELLPublisher:CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENTC++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program...Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102087Author:D. S. MalikPublisher:Cengage LearningMicrosoft Visual C#Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102100Author:Joyce, Farrell.Publisher:Cengage Learning,
- Programming with Microsoft Visual Basic 2017Computer ScienceISBN:9781337102124Author:Diane ZakPublisher:Cengage LearningC++ for Engineers and ScientistsComputer ScienceISBN:9781133187844Author:Bronson, Gary J.Publisher:Course Technology PtrProgramming Logic & Design ComprehensiveComputer ScienceISBN:9781337669405Author:FARRELLPublisher:Cengage




