Java/C2/Arithmetic-Operations/English-timed
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Revision as of 17:25, 20 March 2015 by Sandhya.np14 (Talk | contribs)
Time | Narration |
00:01 | Welcome to the tutorial on Arithmetic Operations in Java. |
00:05 | In this tutorial, you will learn about the various Arithmetic Operations namely
Addition Subtraction Multiplication Division and How to use them. |
00:16 | For this tutorial, we are using:
Ubuntu 11.10, JDK 1.6 and Eclipse 3.7 |
00:24 | To follow this tutorial, you must have eclipse installed on your system |
00:28 | and you must know how to create, save and run a file in Eclipse. |
00:32 | If not, for relevant tutorial please visit our website as shown. |
00:42 | Here is a list of operators and the mathematical operations they perform
|
00:54 | We shall look at each of them in detail. |
01:05 | Here we have 'Eclipse IDE' and the skeleton required for the rest of the code. |
01:10 | We have created a class by name Arithmetic Operations and added the main method. |
01:17 | Let us add some variables. |
01:22 | int x = 5; |
01:26 | int y = 10;
int result |
01:35 | 'x' and 'y' will be the operands and the result will store the output of operations. |
01:41 | Let us add them and print the result. Result= x+y; system. out. println in paranteses result. |
02:10 | Save it with Control S and control F11 to Run. |
02:17 | We see that the output of addition has been stored in result and the value has been printed. |
02:24 | Now Let us change the values. x=75, y = 15 |
02:37 | Save it, Run. |
02:42 | we see that the output has changed accordingly. |
02:48 | Now let us try negative values. y = -25 |
02:57 | Save, Run. |
03:02 | we see that the output of 75 plus -25 has been printed. |
03:10 | Now let us try subtraction. y = 5 and change x+y to x-y. |
03:25 | Save it, Run. |
03:32 | we see that the output of 75-5 has been printed. |
03:38 | Now Let us try multiplication. Change minus to asterisk. |
03:46 | Save and Run. |
03:52 | we see that by using asterisk we could multiply 75 by 5. |
03:58 | Now let us try division. Remove asterisk and type slash. |
04:07 | Save it, Run. |
04:13 | As we can see, the output is as expected. |
04:18 | Now let us see what happens when the expected result is a decimal point number. |
04:24 | Change 5 to 10 |
04:28 | The result must be 7.5 |
04:30 | So, let us change the result to a float. |
04:43 | Save it, Run. |
04:50 | Note that although the expected result is 7.5, we get output as 7.0 |
04:57 | This is because both the operands involved in the division are integers. |
05:01 | Let us change 'y' to a float. y=10f |
05:15 | Save, Run. |
05:21 | Now we can see that the result is as expected. |
05:24 | Keep in mind that when the expected result is a float, one of the operands must be a float to get the expected output. |
05:32 | Now let us see what happens when there is more than one operator. Remove all the operands. |
05:48 | int result= 8+4-2. Save it, run. |
06:09 | As we can see, the output is as expected. |
06:12 | Now change minus to a slash. |
06:19 | Now the output would be 6 if the addition is done before division. |
06:25 | Or it would be 10 if division is done before addition. |
06:30 | Let us Run and see the output. |
06:38 | As we can see, the output is 10 and the division is done before addition. This is because the division operator has more precedence than the addition operator. |
06:50 | In such situations, if we need to override the precedence, we use parentheses. |
07:04 | By adding parentheses, we instruct Java to do the addition before the division. |
07:10 | Let us run the file now. |
07:15 | As we can see, addition has been performed first and the output is 6 as expected. |
07:22 | As a rule, keep in mind to use parentheses when the order of operations is not clear. |
07:36 | This brings us to the end of this tutorial. |
07:40 | We have learnt: |
07:41 | * How to perform basic mathematical operations in Java. |
07:44 | * operator precedence and |
07:45 | How to override it. |
07:49 | As an assignment for this tutorial- find out what is meant by the modulo operator and what it does. |
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08:39 | This tutorial has been contributed by TalentSprint. Thanks for joining. |
Contributors and Content Editors
Arya Ratish, Gaurav, Krupali, PoojaMoolya, Priyacst, Sandhya.np14, Sneha