问题
This question already has an answer here:
- Random shuffling of an array 27 answers
I am having a tough time trying to create a "shuffleDeck()" method.
What I am trying to do is create a method that will take an array parameter (which will be the deck of cards) shuffle the cards, and return the shuffled array list.
This is the code:
class Card
{
int value;
String suit;
String name;
public String toString()
{
return (name + " of " + suit);
}
}
public class PickACard
{
public static void main( String[] args)
{
Card[] deck = buildDeck();
// display Deck(deck);
int chosen = (int)(Math.random()* deck.length);
Card picked = deck[chosen];
System.out.println("You picked a " + picked + " out of the deck.");
System.out.println("In Blackjack your card is worth " + picked.value + " points.");
}
public static Card[] buildDeck()
{
String[] suits = {"clubs", "diamonds", "hearts", "spades" };
String[] names = {"ZERO", "ONE", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six", "seven", "eight", "nine", "ten", "Jack", "Queen", "King", "Ace" };
int i = 0;
Card[] deck = new Card[52];
for ( String s: suits )
{
for ( int v = 2; v<=14; v++)
{
Card c = new Card();
c.suit = s;
c.name = names[v];
if ( v == 14)
c.value = 11;
else if ( v>10)
c.value = 10;
else
c.value = v;
deck[i] = c;
i++;
}
}
return deck;
}
public static String[] shuffleDeck( Card[] deck)
{
/** I have attempted to get two index numbers, and swap them.
I tried to figure out how to loop this so it kind of simulates "shuffling".
*/
}
public static void displayDeck( Card[] deck)
{
for ( Card c: deck)
{
System.out.println(c.value + "\t" + c);
}
}
}
回答1:
How about:
List<Card> list = Arrays.asList(deck);
Collections.shuffle(list);
Or one-liner:
Collections.shuffle(Arrays.asList(deck));
回答2:
One way is to convert the array to a list, and use java.util.Collections.shuffle(array)
to shuffle it:
Card[] deck = ...;
List<Card> list = Arrays.asList(deck);
Collections.shuffle(list);
If you do still need an array instead of a List, you can add:
list.toArray(deck);
Here is a TIO (Try-it-online) link to see the array to list conversion and shuffling in action.
Code of the TIO copied below as reference:
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.List;
class M{
public static void main(String[] a){
// Original array
Integer[] array = new Integer[]{ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 };
System.out.println("before: " + Arrays.toString(array));
// Convert array to list
List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(array);
// And shuffle that list
Collections.shuffle(list);
System.out.println("after as list: " + list);
// (Optional) then convert the list back to an array,
// and save it in its initial variable (`array` in this case)
list.toArray(array);
System.out.println("after as array: " + Arrays.toString(array));
}
}
回答3:
I see two ways to do it:
-> You can use a shuffle algorithm like the Fisher-Yates shuffle algorithm if you want to implement yourself the method.
-> You can use the shuffle method from Collections
回答4:
If this is for a school project (as I think it is), you might not be allowed to use built-in functions such as Collections::shuffle(). If this is the case, then you must try to simulate randomness (which in programming can be surprisingly hard).
The most common way to create a sense of randomness is to use an RNG (random number generator). As you said
I have attempted to get two index numbers, and swap them.
Correct. One way to shuffle is to pick one card at a time and randomly select another card to swap the position with.
- You know the deck always has 52 cards.
- You have a random generator to select a random index.
- You have a programming language with loop-structures.
With these tools you can implement your own shuffle-function quite easily.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18470094/how-to-shuffle-an-array