CISC181 S2017 Lab1
- Download Android Studio and install it on your machine
- Either on your machine or on an eCalc machine in lab:
- Make a new project following these instructions
- Confirm that you can build and run it (by pressing the green triangle button or choosing "Run" from the Run menu)
- As explained in the subsections below, modify static void main() and create two other methods: static void heronsFormula() { ... } and static void convertSeconds() { ... }
- Submit your MyClass.java on Sakai by Friday, February 17
Use proper naming and formatting style throughout your code.
static void main()
Your main() should do the following:
- Tell the user (using println()) that they can choose either of the two functions above
- Prompt the user to enter a number to choose one of the options (1 for Heron's, 2 for convert seconds) and use the Scanner class to read it
- If a valid choice is made, call the corresponding function immediately. Otherwise print an error message
- Let the program end (no loop -- just print prompt, read response, and execute one time)
static void heronsFormula()
You will compute several geometric identities involving a general triangle with sidelengths a, b, and c as shown below.
Your function should:
- Declare these sidelength variables as double, prompt the user to enter them, and read each in using the Scanner class.
- Heron's Formula gives a method to compute the area A of the triangle (ignore the fact that A is also the name of one of the triangle vertices). Follow the link and use the first formula to:
- Derive the semi-perimeter s and area A from a, b, and c using Java math expressions and/or functions
- Report both s and A with System.out.println().
- The Law of Cosines can be used to calculate the angle γ (gamma) between a and b (second formula in Applications section of link). Math.acos() will give the angle in radians; please convert it to degrees and report it with System.out.println()
- You might notice a lot of decimal places printed in your answers. Change your println() to format as necessary to only print 2 digits after the decimal for s, A, and γ.
static void convertSeconds()
This method should ask the user to enter an integer which represents a length of time t in seconds, and then compute and print out the number of d days, h hours, m minutes, and s seconds corresponding to t on separate lines.
When you are satisfied that you can calculate d, h, m, and s correctly, use branching to modify your printing so that you:
- Start with the first non-zero time unit (i.e. do not print leading zero values)
- Print "1 day" instead of "1 days", "1 hour" instead of "1 hours", etc. where appropriate (i.e., do not use plural for a value of 1). Some example outputs are below:
If the user inputs "67", the output should be
1 minute 7 seconds
and if they input "8880" the output should be
2 hours 28 minutes 0 seconds
For this function you may assume that t is positive, and you do not have to use a long