3:15 PM
@Eggy It's the same idea as before: for (int j=1; j <= i; j++) { ... }
I'd recommend picking up a Java book or looking at a basic Java syntax tutorial
many other programming languages use the same for
syntax
First you declare and set a counter (you could call it the iterator) int j=1
Second you give it a Boolean expression (j <= i
) to evaluate on each loop. If it's true
, it will execute the code between the curly braces { ... }
; If the condition is false
, execution will "break" out of the loop
Third you give it something to execute at the end of each loop. Most of the time you're incrementing (or decrementing) the counter j++
This is assuming that i
is greater than or equal to 1 to begin with. If you're going from 1 to i
and i is < 1
, then you'll need to decrement (j--
)
That was a good morning exercise :-)
Here's something you can use for any value of int i
(negative or positive)
for (int j=1; i<1 ? j>=i : j<=i; j += (i<1 ? -1 : 1)) { ... }
For example, if i
is equal to -10
, that loop would produce the following sequence: [1,0,-1,-2,-3,-4,-5,-6,-7,-8,-9,-10]