Question: Why i’m getting error here “NULL EXCEPTION”?
public class BookTest
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
Book bookArray[] = new Book[6];
String dataArray [][] = {{“Java”,”Davis”,”123″,”Wiley”,”London”,”25.50″,”Book”},
{“Where’s my car”, “Aston Kutcher”,”777″,”ORiely”,”Dallas”,”5.95″,”Fiction”,”123″,”456″},
{“Earthquakes”,”ChuckBerry”,”435″,”LABooks”,”LA”,”75.00″,”NonFiction”},
{“C++”,”Jones”,”456″,”Random”,”NY”,”10.75″,”Book”},
{“Doom”,”The Rock”,”918″,”Sans Publishing”,”LA”,”12.50″,”Fiction”,”1233″,”2323″},
{“Universal Studios”,”Walt”,”987″,”Dell”,”Houston”,”29.90″,”NonFiction”}};
for (int i=0; i
if (dataArray[i][6].equals("Fiction"))
bookArray[i]=new Fiction (dataArray[i][0],dataArray[i][1], Integer.parseInt(dataArray[i][2]), new Publisher(dataArray[i][3],dataArray[i][4]), Double.parseDouble(dataArray[i][5]),i, new Background(dataArray[i][7], dataArray[i][8]));
if (dataArray[i][6].equals("NonFiction"))
bookArray[i]= new NonFiction(dataArray[i][0],dataArray[i][1], Integer.parseInt(dataArray[i][2]), new Publisher(dataArray[i][3],dataArray[i][4]), Double.parseDouble(dataArray[i][5]),"History");
}// end of FOR Loop
for (int j=0; j<6;j++)
{
System.out.println("hello");
System.out.println();
System.out.printf(bookArray[j].toString());
} //end of for with j
} //end of main
} //end class BookTest
JAVA programming
Line 48: System.out.printf(bookArray[j].toString());
Answer:
Answer by someone
What is the exact error? What line in the code?
Question: Does anybody here every take a course called “Science Fiction” in College?
if you did, is it hard to pass?
Answer:
Answer by bdts739
I took one in high school, it was basically a languge arts class that focused on sci fi. If you like sci fi then it shouldn’t be to bad.
Question: what dose my lil sis need to do here? (BEST ANSWER)?
(5-paragraph essay using evidence from the Science Fiction novel to comment on real-life society based on what is discussed in the novel’s society)
* Include the Science Fiction Title and Author in your introduction paragraph. Briefly describe the main idea of your essay, what this science fiction novel represents from real society.
* Explain at least 3 pieces of evidence that support the main topic from the Science Fiction novel in at least three separate paragraphs. These paragraphs should be the evidence that support the commentary on real-life society from the novel (cite your direct quotes).
* Conclude by tying up the loose ends, and reinstating what evidence supports real-life society’s commentary.
can you explain it to her in easier words(shes in 5th grade)
shes doing this book: The True Meaning of Smekday
(2007)
A novel by
Adam Rex
It all starts with a school essay. When twelve-year-old Gratuity (“Tip”) Tucci is assigned to write five pages on “The True Meaning of Smekday” for the National Time Capsule contest, she’s not sure where to begin. When her mom started telling everyone about the messages aliens were sending through a mole on the back of her neck? Maybe on Christmas Eve, when huge, bizarre spaceships descended on the Earth and the aliens – called Boov – abducted her mother? Or when the Boov declared Earth a colony, renamed it “Smekland” (in honor of glorious Captain Smek), and forced all Americans to relocate to Florida via rocketpod? In any case, Gratuity’s story is much, much bigger than the assignment. It involves her unlikely friendship with a renegade Boov mechanic named J.Lo.; a futile journey south to find Gratuity’s mother at the Happy Mouse Kingdom; a cross-country road trip in a hovercar called Slushious; and an outrageous plan to save the Earth from yet another alien invasion. Fully illustrated with “photos,” drawings, newspaper clippings, and comics sequences, this is a hilarious, perceptive, genre-bending novel by a remarkable new talent.
Answer:
Answer by Susan C
she should do her own homework…
Choose two works from one of the “genre” groups (fiction, poetry, drama). You will be required to write a “comparison and contrast” research paper composition. The tentative thesis statement emailed to me on the due date should reveal that you have at least scratched the surface of a topic to determine it’s topography and where you would like to “land”.
Science fiction has long been a favorite subject of Hollywood film makers. Great science fiction movies were being made as early as the 1930s and have provided a solid foundation for modern day science fiction. Letâ??s take a closer look at just a few of these Hollywood Science Fiction Classics.
The Invisible Man was released in 1933 and was directed by James Whale. Based on the H.G. Wells novel of the same name, it tells the story of scientist Dr. Jack Griffin who has invented a serum that makes him completely invisible. However, the serum comes with the terrible side effect of gradually driving its user insane. Under its influence, Dr. Griffin robs and kills a number of people. A very creepy film that starts out with a good deal of humor, but settles in to become deadly serious. The film features convincing special effects for a movie produced in the 1930s.
One of my favorite science fiction classics is Forbidden Planet, directed by Fred M. Wilcox. Released in 1956, this is perhaps the most highly regarded sci-fi film of the 1950s. It tells the story of Dr. Edward Morbius and his daughter Altaira who are the last two remaining survivors of a colonization attempt on the planet Altair-4. It is the year 2200 and a group of scientists on a space mission from Earth have just landed in search of Dr. Morbius and the previous missions crew.
They find Dr. Morbius to be somewhat unreceptive to their arrival, as he wishes to remain isolated in order to continue his work studying the numerous remains of a once-flourishing society of Krell which is now extinct. Using Krell technology, Morbius is able to greatly increase his IQ, and in doing so has brought to life a mysterious creature through his own subconscious mind. This is classic 1950s Sci-fi, and introduced what is probably the most popular robot of all-time â?? Robbie the robot.Â
Last, but certainly not least, we have War Of The Worlds, based on another H.G. Wells novel of the same name. This spectacular movie was released in 1953 and featured breath-taking special effects that were rewarded with an Oscar. The plot revolves around a meteor crashing near a small town in the California Mountains. However, this is something more than just a meteor with many more having landed around the globe.
These meteors are carrying Martians with the intention of destroying the unsuspecting human population. Seemingly unstoppable, they begin to destroy the major cities of the world. All manor of defense, including the Atomic Bomb, are tried without success. Can anything stop this Martian invasion? Easily one of the greatest science fiction movies of the 1950s.
It was classic science fiction movies like these that helped kick start a whole new genre of films that capture our imagination to this day.Â
Carl DiNello is a Blog Owner whose passion is Hollywood history and those movies from the 1920s – 1950s that make up this rich history. http://www.HollywoodMovieMemories.com… Movies to Remember and Discover!
Browse the Hollywood Movie Memories Film Store.
Here are some memoir writing tips. The telling of stories is at least as old as the tribal campfire. In stories we commiserate we enlighten we instruct. We pass along traditions and secure history. We ask questions and conjure up answers. The memoir perhaps the original storyline genre, is becoming very popular these days.
With the turn of the millennium and the rise of technology, both of which threaten to separate us from our pasts, maybe we find comfort in the stories of our personal lives and in the preservation of our histories. But something else is at work here too, when we write our pasts we also write the present and the future.
The act of writing the act of giving voice to our experiences, thoughts and feelings, changes how we are in the moment and how we move forward. When the past is securely nailed to the page, we can use it as an anchor while we adventure into the rest of our lives into even the unfathomable twenty first century.
Much of the material we need for our memoir we carry in our heads and in our hearts. By definition our memoirs are composed of memories; our memories. A full bodied memoir however is likely to reach beyond the bounds of our personal experience.
It will likely place our experience in the perspective of the times, places and people of the original moments. Doing research looking for information outside of our memories can also inspire refreshed memories and fuller ones.
When you get together with your siblings, you will be surprised how much you remember about an incident when each of you spins your own version of it. The best memoir writing tips you can take advantage of however is to remember to have fun writing it.
Get more memoir writing tips with these easy to use memoir writing tips.
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