Reputation: 65
I am trying to get a valid input of "y", "Y", "n" , or "N".
If the input is not valid (for example any word that starts with a "y" or "n") I want it to re-prompt the user for input.
So far I have:
while (again.charAt(0) != 'N' && again.charAt(0) != 'n' && again.charAt(0) !='Y' && again.charAt(0) != 'y' ) {
System.out.println ("Invalid Inpur! Enter Y/N");
again = numscan.next();
}
if (again.charAt(0)== 'N' || again.charAt(0) == 'n') {
active = false;
} else {
if (again.charAt(0)== 'Y' || again.charAt(0) == 'y'){
active = true;
random = (int) (Math.random () *(11));
}
}
The problem I am having is if I enter any word that starts with the letter "y" or "n" it senses it as valid input (since it is the character at slot 0). I need help fixing this so I can re-prompt the user when they enter a word that starts with a "y" or "n".
Thanks!
Upvotes: 1
Views: 454
Reputation: 103
Regex could be an alternative to have strict input checks. Following piece of code validates y or n ignoring the case.
while (!again.matches("(?i)^[yn]$")){
System.out.println ("Invalid Inpur! Enter Y/N");
again = numscan.next();
}
active = (again.equalsIgnoreCase("Y"))? true : false;
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 129497
You could just test to make sure the length of the input is 1:
again.length() == 1
But a better approach might be:
while (! (again.equalsIgnoreCase("n") || again.equalsIgnoreCase("y"))) {
...
}
or even
while (! again.matches("[nyNY]")) {
...
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 992817
Assuming again
is a string containing the complete user input, you could use:
while (!again.equals("N") && !again.equals("n") ...
The .equals()
method will match only if the entire string matches.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 28302
It sounds like what you want is:
while (!again.equals("N") && !again.equals("n") && !again.equals("Y") && !again.equals("y") ) {
System.out.println ("Invalid Inpur! Enter Y/N");
again = numscan.next();
}
This way you can also easily add Yes/No, etc later if you want.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 66637
One of the way would be:
First check again
String length
is only ONE character. If not, ask again.
if(again.length() ==1)
{
while (again.charAt(0) != 'N' && again.charAt(0) != 'n' && again.charAt(0) !='Y' && again.charAt(0) != 'y' ) {
System.out.println ("Invalid Inpur! Enter Y/N");
again = numscan.next();
}
.....
}else
{
System.out.println ("Invalid Inpur! Enter Y/N");
again = numscan.next();
}
Upvotes: 1