For Loop on ArrayList Exception - android

I apologize for the limited title, but I don't know how to describe this problem exactly. I have a for loop that iterates through an arrayList containing an object. One of the objects methods is a boolean that is set at a different point in time. The point of the for loop is to go through the arrayList and remove each item that contains the boolean as false.
if(!arrayList.isEmpty()){
int len = arrayList.size();
for(int i=0; i<len; i++){
if(!arrayList.get(i).isStartTimer()){
arrayList.remove(i);
}
}
}
The for loop always leaves one too many objects in the array. This is because each time the for loop cycles the len drops down one because of the removed item in the array and on the last object it cancels the for loop before it can remove the object. I understand the problem, but I can't figure out how to fix it. I have tried doing something such as len+1 but it throws an indexOutOfBounds exception when I do anything to it. Any ideas? Also, is this the best way to do what I am trying to do?

you can switch to while:
if( ! arrayList.isEmpty() ){
int i = 0;
while( i < arrayList.size() ) {
if( ! arrayList.get(i).isStartTimer() ){
arrayList.remove(i);
continue; // skip i++
}
i++;
}
}

You should loop backwards so that you don't use indicies that come after the items you removed.
for (int i = arrayList.size() - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
}
Alternatively, you can just decrement i to use the next index, and get rid of the len variable so that the ending condition uses the actual length.

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Intro screen gets crashed when sliding in viewpager ArrayIndex err [duplicate]

What does ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException mean and how do I get rid of it?
Here is a code sample that triggers the exception:
String[] names = { "tom", "bob", "harry" };
for (int i = 0; i <= names.length; i++) {
System.out.println(names[i]);
}
Your first port of call should be the documentation which explains it reasonably clearly:
Thrown to indicate that an array has been accessed with an illegal index. The index is either negative or greater than or equal to the size of the array.
So for example:
int[] array = new int[5];
int boom = array[10]; // Throws the exception
As for how to avoid it... um, don't do that. Be careful with your array indexes.
One problem people sometimes run into is thinking that arrays are 1-indexed, e.g.
int[] array = new int[5];
// ... populate the array here ...
for (int index = 1; index <= array.length; index++)
{
System.out.println(array[index]);
}
That will miss out the first element (index 0) and throw an exception when index is 5. The valid indexes here are 0-4 inclusive. The correct, idiomatic for statement here would be:
for (int index = 0; index < array.length; index++)
(That's assuming you need the index, of course. If you can use the enhanced for loop instead, do so.)
if (index < 0 || index >= array.length) {
// Don't use this index. This is out of bounds (borders, limits, whatever).
} else {
// Yes, you can safely use this index. The index is present in the array.
Object element = array[index];
}
See also:
The Java Tutorials - Language Basics - Arrays
Update: as per your code snippet,
for (int i = 0; i<=name.length; i++) {
The index is inclusive the array's length. This is out of bounds. You need to replace <= by <.
for (int i = 0; i < name.length; i++) {
From this excellent article: ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException in for loop
To put it briefly:
In the last iteration of
for (int i = 0; i <= name.length; i++) {
i will equal name.length which is an illegal index, since array indices are zero-based.
Your code should read
for (int i = 0; i < name.length; i++)
^
It means that you are trying to access an index of an array which is not valid as it is not in between the bounds.
For example this would initialize a primitive integer array with the upper bound 4.
int intArray[] = new int[5];
Programmers count from zero. So this for example would throw an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException as the upper bound is 4 and not 5.
intArray[5];
What causes ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException?
If you think of a variable as a "box" where you can place a value, then an array is a series of boxes placed next to each other, where the number of boxes is a finite and explicit integer.
Creating an array like this:
final int[] myArray = new int[5]
creates a row of 5 boxes, each holding an int. Each of the boxes has an index, a position in the series of boxes. This index starts at 0 and ends at N-1, where N is the size of the array (the number of boxes).
To retrieve one of the values from this series of boxes, you can refer to it through its index, like this:
myArray[3]
Which will give you the value of the 4th box in the series (since the first box has an index of 0).
An ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException is caused by trying to retrieve a "box" that does not exist, by passing an index that is higher than the index of the last "box", or negative.
With my running example, these code snippets would produce such an exception:
myArray[5] //tries to retrieve the 6th "box" when there is only 5
myArray[-1] //just makes no sense
myArray[1337] //way to high
How to avoid ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
In order to prevent ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException, there are some key points to consider:
Looping
When looping through an array, always make sure that the index you are retrieving is strictly smaller than the length of the array (the number of boxes). For instance:
for (int i = 0; i < myArray.length; i++) {
Notice the <, never mix a = in there..
You might want to be tempted to do something like this:
for (int i = 1; i <= myArray.length; i++) {
final int someint = myArray[i - 1]
Just don't. Stick to the one above (if you need to use the index) and it will save you a lot of pain.
Where possible, use foreach:
for (int value : myArray) {
This way you won't have to think about indexes at all.
When looping, whatever you do, NEVER change the value of the loop iterator (here: i). The only place this should change value is to keep the loop going. Changing it otherwise is just risking an exception, and is in most cases not necessary.
Retrieval/update
When retrieving an arbitrary element of the array, always check that it is a valid index against the length of the array:
public Integer getArrayElement(final int index) {
if (index < 0 || index >= myArray.length) {
return null; //although I would much prefer an actual exception being thrown when this happens.
}
return myArray[index];
}
To avoid an array index out-of-bounds exception, one should use the enhanced-for statement where and when they can.
The primary motivation (and use case) is when you are iterating and you do not require any complicated iteration steps. You would not be able to use an enhanced-for to move backwards in an array or only iterate on every other element.
You're guaranteed not to run out of elements to iterate over when doing this, and your [corrected] example is easily converted over.
The code below:
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(int i = 0; i< name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] + "\n");
}
...is equivalent to this:
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(String firstName : name) {
System.out.println(firstName + "\n");
}
In your code you have accessed the elements from index 0 to the length of the string array. name.length gives the number of string objects in your array of string objects i.e. 3, but you can access only up to index 2 name[2],
because the array can be accessed from index 0 to name.length - 1 where you get name.length number of objects.
Even while using a for loop you have started with index zero and you should end with name.length - 1. In an array a[n] you can access form a[0] to a[n-1].
For example:
String[] a={"str1", "str2", "str3" ..., "strn"};
for(int i=0; i<a.length(); i++)
System.out.println(a[i]);
In your case:
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(int i = 0; i<=name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n');
}
For your given array the length of the array is 3(i.e. name.length = 3). But as it stores element starting from index 0, it has max index 2.
So, instead of 'i**<=name.length' you should write 'i<**name.length' to avoid 'ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException'.
So much for this simple question, but I just wanted to highlight a new feature in Java which will avoid all confusions around indexing in arrays even for beginners. Java-8 has abstracted the task of iterating for you.
int[] array = new int[5];
//If you need just the items
Arrays.stream(array).forEach(item -> { println(item); });
//If you need the index as well
IntStream.range(0, array.length).forEach(index -> { println(array[index]); })
What's the benefit? Well, one thing is the readability like English. Second, you need not worry about the ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
The most common case I've seen for seemingly mysterious ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsExceptions, i.e. apparently not caused by your own array handling code, is the concurrent use of SimpleDateFormat. Particularly in a servlet or controller:
public class MyController {
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy");
public void handleRequest(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse res) {
Date date = dateFormat.parse(req.getParameter("date"));
}
}
If two threads enter the SimplateDateFormat.parse() method together you will likely see an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException. Note the synchronization section of the class javadoc for SimpleDateFormat.
Make sure there is no place in your code that are accessing thread unsafe classes like SimpleDateFormat in a concurrent manner like in a servlet or controller. Check all instance variables of your servlets and controllers for likely suspects.
You are getting ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException due to i<=name.length part. name.length return the length of the string name, which is 3. Hence when you try to access name[3], it's illegal and throws an exception.
Resolved code:
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(int i = 0; i < name.length; i++) { //use < insteadof <=
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n');
}
It's defined in the Java language specification:
The public final field length, which contains the number of components
of the array. length may be positive or zero.
That's how this type of exception looks when thrown in Eclipse. The number in red signifies the index you tried to access. So the code would look like this:
myArray[5]
The error is thrown when you try to access an index which doesn't exist in that array. If an array has a length of 3,
int[] intArray = new int[3];
then the only valid indexes are:
intArray[0]
intArray[1]
intArray[2]
If an array has a length of 1,
int[] intArray = new int[1];
then the only valid index is:
intArray[0]
Any integer equal to the length of the array, or bigger than it: is out of bounds.
Any integer less than 0: is out of bounds;
P.S.: If you look to have a better understanding of arrays and do some practical exercises, there's a video here: tutorial on arrays in Java
For multidimensional arrays, it can be tricky to make sure you access the length property of the right dimension. Take the following code for example:
int [][][] a = new int [2][3][4];
for(int i = 0; i < a.length; i++){
for(int j = 0; j < a[i].length; j++){
for(int k = 0; k < a[j].length; k++){
System.out.print(a[i][j][k]);
}
System.out.println();
}
System.out.println();
}
Each dimension has a different length, so the subtle bug is that the middle and inner loops use the length property of the same dimension (because a[i].length is the same as a[j].length).
Instead, the inner loop should use a[i][j].length (or a[0][0].length, for simplicity).
For any array of length n, elements of the array will have an index from 0 to n-1.
If your program is trying to access any element (or memory) having array index greater than n-1, then Java will throw ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException
So here are two solutions that we can use in a program
Maintaining count:
for(int count = 0; count < array.length; count++) {
System.out.println(array[count]);
}
Or some other looping statement like
int count = 0;
while(count < array.length) {
System.out.println(array[count]);
count++;
}
A better way go with a for each loop, in this method a programmer has no need to bother about the number of elements in the array.
for(String str : array) {
System.out.println(str);
}
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException whenever this exception is coming it mean you are trying to use an index of array which is out of its bounds or in lay man terms you are requesting more than than you have initialised.
To prevent this always make sure that you are not requesting a index which is not present in array i.e. if array length is 10 then your index must range between 0 to 9
ArrayIndexOutOfBounds means you are trying to index a position within an array that is not allocated.
In this case:
String[] name = { "tom", "dick", "harry" };
for (int i = 0; i <= name.length; i++) {
System.out.println(name[i]);
}
name.length is 3 since the array has been defined with 3 String objects.
When accessing the contents of an array, position starts from 0. Since there are 3 items, it would mean name[0]="tom", name[1]="dick" and name[2]="harry
When you loop, since i can be less than or equal to name.length, you are trying to access name[3] which is not available.
To get around this...
In your for loop, you can do i < name.length. This would prevent looping to name[3] and would instead stop at name[2]
for(int i = 0; i<name.length; i++)
Use a for each loop
String[] name = { "tom", "dick", "harry" };
for(String n : name) {
System.out.println(n);
}
Use list.forEach(Consumer action) (requires Java8)
String[] name = { "tom", "dick", "harry" };
Arrays.asList(name).forEach(System.out::println);
Convert array to stream - this is a good option if you want to perform additional 'operations' to your array e.g. filter, transform the text, convert to a map etc (requires Java8)
String[] name = { "tom", "dick", "harry" };
--- Arrays.asList(name).stream().forEach(System.out::println);
--- Stream.of(name).forEach(System.out::println);
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException means that you are trying to access an index of the array that does not exist or out of the bound of this array. Array indexes start from 0 and end at length - 1.
In your case
for(int i = 0; i<=name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n'); // i goes from 0 to length, Not correct
}
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException happens when you are trying to access
the name.length indexed element which does not exist (array index ends at length -1). just replacing <= with < would solve this problem.
for(int i = 0; i < name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n'); // i goes from 0 to length - 1, Correct
}
According to your Code :
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(int i = 0; i<=name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n');
}
If You check
System.out.print(name.length);
you will get 3;
that mean your name length is 3
your loop is running from 0 to 3
which should be running either "0 to 2" or "1 to 3"
Answer
String[] name = {"tom", "dick", "harry"};
for(int i = 0; i<name.length; i++) {
System.out.print(name[i] +'\n');
}
Each item in an array is called an element, and each element is accessed by its numerical index. As shown in the preceding illustration, numbering begins with 0. The 9th element, for example, would therefore be accessed at index 8.
IndexOutOfBoundsException is thrown to indicate that an index of some sort (such as to an array, to a string, or to a vector) is out of range.
Any array X, can be accessed from [0 to (X.length - 1)]
I see all the answers here explaining how to work with arrays and how to avoid the index out of bounds exceptions. I personally avoid arrays at all costs. I use the Collections classes, which avoids all the silliness of having to deal with array indices entirely. The looping constructs work beautifully with collections supporting code that is both easier to write, understand and maintain.
If you use an array's length to control iteration of a for loop, always remember that the index of the first item in an array is 0. So the index of the last element in an array is one less than the array's length.
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException name itself explains that If you trying to access the value at the index which is out of the scope of Array size then such kind of exception occur.
In your case, You can just remove equal sign from your for loop.
for(int i = 0; i<name.length; i++)
The better option is to iterate an array:
for(String i : name )
System.out.println(i);
This error is occurs at runs loop overlimit times.Let's consider simple example like this,
class demo{
public static void main(String a[]){
int[] numberArray={4,8,2,3,89,5};
int i;
for(i=0;i<numberArray.length;i++){
System.out.print(numberArray[i+1]+" ");
}
}
At first, I have initialized an array as 'numberArray'. then , some array elements are printed using for loop. When loop is running 'i' time , print the (numberArray[i+1] element..(when i value is 1, numberArray[i+1] element is printed.)..Suppose that, when i=(numberArray.length-2), last element of array is printed..When 'i' value goes to (numberArray.length-1) , no value for printing..In that point , 'ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException' is occur.I hope to you could get idea.thank you !
You can use Optional in functional style to avoid NullPointerException and ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException :
String[] array = new String[]{"aaa", null, "ccc"};
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
String result = Optional.ofNullable(array.length > i ? array[i] : null)
.map(x -> x.toUpperCase()) //some operation here
.orElse("NO_DATA");
System.out.println(result);
}
Output:
AAA
NO_DATA
CCC
NO_DATA
In most of the programming language indexes is start from 0.So you must have to write i<names.length or i<=names.length-1 instead of i<=names.length.
You could not iterate or store more data than the length of your array. In this case you could do like this:
for (int i = 0; i <= name.length - 1; i++) {
// ....
}
Or this:
for (int i = 0; i < name.length; i++) {
// ...
}

Issue with String<List> IndexOutOfBoundsException in Android

I have used the following code to extract data from List, when I tried using below code I got IndexOutOfBoundsException,
what is the reason for this, can anyone help me to stop the issue
for (int k = 0; k < extraItemEntityArray.length(); k++) {
JSONObject objectE = extraItemEntityArray
.getJSONObject(k);
if ((objectE.getString("Description")) != null
&& (objectE.getString("Type"))
.equals("E")) {
topDescription.add(objectE
.getString("Description"));
resultTopping.add(topDescription.get(k)); //exception occurs here
}
}
exception screen shot
Check the length of extraItemEntityArray and topDescription arrays.
topDescription length is less than the length of extraItemEntityArray and hence it is throwing IndexOutOfBoundException
The cause of exception is clear: you're trying to get the element with index which is greater than the list's size. Second, the error arises when the code inside the if block wasn't executed for at least one time, in this case k becomes greater than the resultTopping size, resulting in the ArrayOutOfBoundsException.
Probably the easiest way to rewrite your if statement and get rid of exception is this:
if ((objectE.getString("Description")) != null && (objectE.getString("Type")).equals("E")) {
final String desc = objectE.getString("Description");
topDescription.add(desc);
resultTopping.add(desc);
}
Because of the if statement, at least once, the code is not executing the line:
topDescription.add(objectE.getString("Description"));
Then, normally, when u try to get a value it can be out of the bounds.
If you want to get the latest value always, replace these lines:
topDescription.add(objectE.getString("Description"));
resultTopping.add(topDescription.get(k));
with the following
String desc = objectE.getString("Description");
topDescription.add(desc);
resultTopping.add(desc);
Because it s necessarily the same thing ;)

For loop in android stopping short and restarting

The loop below seems to stop short, and then restart. It is not inside of another loop. The first Log call prints 36, thus the outer for loop should run 36 times. The Log call inside of the loop though, which is meant to print the number of times the loop has run, prints "0" up to "4" meaning the loop only ran 5 times. Would there be any reason for this process to start over so that the first Log call fires again, and the loop again runs through only 5 times? This occurs twice according to my Logcat output.
ArrayList<RunData_L> rdUP = t.getMyPositiveRunData();
ArrayList<RunData_L> rdDOWN = t.getMyNegativeRunData();
Log.d("rdUP size", rdUP.get(0).getMyMeasurementData().size() + "");
for (int i = 0; i < rdUP.get(i).getMyMeasurementData().size(); i++) {
Log.d("i", i + "");
ArrayList<BigDecimal> tempUP = new ArrayList<BigDecimal>(), tempDOWN = new ArrayList<BigDecimal>();
for(int j = 0; j < rdUP.size(); j++) {
tempUP.add(rdUP.get(j).getMyMeasurementData().get(i));
tempDOWN.add(rdDOWN.get(j).getMyMeasurementData().get(i));
}
pdUP.add(tempUP);
pdDOWN.add(tempDOWN);
}
I suspect as per my comment that the use of rdUP.get(j) in the inner loop is causing the problem.
You first test to see the size of rdUP.get(i).getMyMeasurementData() in the outer loop as your bounding condition for the loop and so i runs from 0 to the size of rdUP.get(i).getMyMeasurementData().
Your inner loop then says go through each element of rdUP and get the i th value from rdUP.get(j).getMyMeasurementData(). How do you know that the j th rdUP has enough elements to satisfy your get(i) ?

android and for loop

I have a problem with a for loop.
this is my code
int i;
int from= Integer.valueOf(field_from.getText().toString());
int to = Integer.valueOf(field_to.getText().toString());
Log.d("wec", "from->"+from+" to->"+to);
for(i=from; from < to; i++){
Log.d("wec", "i->"+i);
}
The value of field_from is 1 and the value of field_to is 10
When i run the script the application be crazy because start a loop from 100 to infinite
Anyone know why?
for(i=from; from < to; i++)
You are iterating over the condition from < to. Neither of the two variables change in the loop.
your comparison logic is wrong in for loop
instead of ( from < to)
you should have (i < to) in for loop
for(i=from; i < to; i++){
Log.d("wec", "i->"+i);
use this.
Wrong condition in the for loop, should be i < to, not from < to.

Android - For loop not incrementing integer

I have a for loop which allows me to work out a level of a player, however the level doesn't get incremented after each loop, heres my code:
int[] Level_XP = new int[] {0,Level1, Level2, Level3, Level4, Level5, Level6, Level7, Level8, Level9, Level10,
Level11, Level12, Level13,Level14, Level15, Level16, Level17, Level18, Level19, Level20,
Level21, Level22, Level23, Level24, Level25, Level26, Level27, Level28, Level29, Level30,
Level31, Level32, Level33, Level34, Level35, Level36, Level37, Level38, Level39,Level40,
Level41, Level42, Level43, Level44, Level45, Level46, Level47, Level48, Level49, Level50};
int level;
for (level = 1; User_XP < Level_XP[level];level++) { }
Minimum_Percentage = Level_XP[level];
Maximum_Percentage = Level_XP[level+1];
User_Level.setText(Integer.toString(level));
I have intialised all the integers and there is an array being used, can anyone help me to actually increase the level after each loop? As this way the level only stays at level 1.
Your for-loop is empty. That's why nothing happens there.
for (level = 1; User_XP < Level_XP[level];level++) { }
You didn't write anything in the curly braces. So your loop will be empty.
int level ;
for (level = 1; User_XP < Level_XP[level];level++) { }
Minimum_Percentage = Level_XP[level];
Maximum_Percentage = Level_XP[level+1];
User_Level.setText(Integer.toString(level));
There are quite a few problems with the above statements, even some code goes in the for loop.
What if User_XP < Level_XP[level]; is always true ? You pass the array length and an exception is generated.
If condition satisfied for the very last element of the Level_XP in for loop, then
Maximum_Percentage = Level_XP[level+1]; // This causes exception

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