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Java Java Objects Delivering the MVP Applying a Discount Code

Steven Morimoto
PLUS
Steven Morimoto
Courses Plus Student 1,836 Points

In my if statement under the for loop the compiler lists the && as a bad operand and I'm not sure why

I believe that my if statement states that the discountCode must be either a letter or a $ or I should at least get an message saying that that's the wrong code for the given problem.

Order.java
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;
  }

  public void applyDiscountCode(String discountCode) {
    this.discountCode = normalizeDiscountCode(discountCode);
  }

  private String normalizeDiscountCode(String discountCode)
  {
    for(char letter : discountCode.toCharArray())
    {
      if(Character.isLetter(letter) && discountCode.indexOf('$'))
      {
        return discountCode.toUpperCase();
      }   
      else
      {
        throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid discount code");
      }
    }

  }
}
Example.java
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"
    }

  }
}

1 Answer

&& operator is logical and. It compares boolean statements. But discountCode.indexOf returns int, not boolean. Try discountCode.indexOf('$') > 0 , or better one discountCode.contains('$')