/*
Here is another short example.
Call this file "Example2.java".
*/
class Example2 {
public static void main(String args[]) {
int num; // this declares a variable called num
num = 100; // this assigns num the value 100
System.out.println("This is num: " + num);
num = num * 2;
System.out.print("The value of num * 2 is ");
System.out.println(num);
}
}
When you run this program, you will see the following output:
This is num: 100
The value of num * 2 is 200
Let's take a close look at why this output is generated. The first new line in the program
is shown here:
int num; // this declares a variable called num
This line declares an integer variable called num. Java (like most other languages) requires
that variables be declared before they are used.
Following is the general form of a variable declaration:
type var-name;
Here, type specifies the type of variable being declared, and var-name is the name of the variable.
If you want to declare more than one variable of the specified type, you may use a comma-
separated list of variable names. Java defines several data types, including integer, character,
and floating-point. The keyword int specifies an integer type.
In the program, the line
num = 100; // this assigns num the value 100
assigns to num the value 100. In Java, the assignment operator is a single equal sign.
The next line of code outputs the value of num preceded by the string "This is num:".
System.out.println("This is num: " + num);
In this statement, the plus sign causes the value of num to be appended to the string that
precedes it, and then the resulting string is output. (Actually, num is first converted from an
integer into its string equivalent and then concatenated with the string that precedes it. This
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