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Jonathan Hartmayer
5,626 PointsLetters validation: better solution?
Did anyone get a cleaner or simpler solution than the following:
public class Order {
private String itemName;
private int priceInCents;
private String discountCode;
public Order(String itemName, int priceInCents) {
this.itemName = itemName;
this.priceInCents = priceInCents;
}
public String getItemName() {
return itemName;
}
public int getPriceInCents() {
return priceInCents;
}
public String getDiscountCode() {
return discountCode;
}
private String normalizeDiscountCode(String discountCode) {
for (int i = 0; i < discountCode.length(); i++) {
if (!Character.isLetter(discountCode.charAt(i))) {
if (discountCode.charAt(i) != '$') {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid discount code");
}
}
} return discountCode.toUpperCase();
}
public void applyDiscountCode(String discountCode) {
this.discountCode = normalizeDiscountCode(discountCode);
}
}
public class Example {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// This is here just for example use cases.
Order order = new Order(
"Yoda PEZ Dispenser",
600);
// These are valid. They are letters and the $ character only
order.applyDiscountCode("abc");
order.getDiscountCode(); // ABC
order.applyDiscountCode("$ale");
order.getDiscountCode(); // $ALE
try {
// This will throw an exception because it contains numbers
order.applyDiscountCode("ABC123");
} catch (IllegalArgumentException iae) {
System.out.println(iae.getMessage()); // Prints "Invalid discount code"
}
try {
// This will throw as well, because it contains a symbol.
order.applyDiscountCode("w@w");
}catch (IllegalArgumentException iae) {
System.out.println(iae.getMessage()); // Prints "Invalid discount code"
}
}
}
2 Answers

Rares Conea
Courses Plus Student 15,000 Pointsprivate String normalizeDiscountCode(String discountCode){ for(int i = 0 ; i < discountCode.length(); i++){ if(!(Character.isLetter(discountCode.charAt(i)) || discountCode.charAt(i) == '$')){ throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid discount code"); } } return discountCode.toUpperCase(); }

Rares Conea
Courses Plus Student 15,000 PointsYou can use lambdas: https://i.imgur.com/mU2FQJD.png
To make this work make sure you add these lines: import java.util.List; import java.util.stream.Collectors;
Jonathan Hartmayer
5,626 PointsJonathan Hartmayer
5,626 PointsThanks for the response. Yes, that works too. I guess my question was if there was a solution that didn't require a for loop?