You have been using methods in the previous section, and have seen how useful
the inbuilt ones can be. In this section, you'll learn to write your own methods.
A method is just a chunk of code that does a particular job. But methods are
set out in a certain way. You have a method header, and a method body. The header
is where you tell Java what value type, if any, the method will return (an int
value, a double value, a string value, etc). As well as the return type, you
need a name for your method, which also goes in the header. You can pass values
over to your methods, and these go between a pair of round brackets. The method
body is where you code goes.
The method's return type goes first, which is an int type in
the code above. After the method type, you need a space followed by the name
of your method. We've called the one above total. In between a pair of
round brackets we've told Java that we will be handing the method a variable
called aNumber, and that it will be an integer.
To separate this method from any other code, you need a pair of curly brackets. Your code for the method goes between the curly brackets. Note the word return in the method above. This is obviously the value that you want to return from your method, after your code has been executed. But it must be of the same type as the return type in the method header. So the return value can't be a string if you started the method with int total.
Sometimes you don't want Java to return anything at all. Think of Trim in the previous section. You may only want the Trim method to get on with its job, and not return anything to you. A method that doesn't return any value at all can be set up with the word void. In which case, it doesn't need the return keyword. Here's a method that doesn't return a value:
All the method above does is to print some text. It can just get on with its
job, so we've set it as a void method. There's no return value.
Methods don't need to have values passed to them. You can just execute some code. Here's a void method without any values being passed over:
And here's an int method that has no values being passed:
As you can see, the round brackets are empty in both methods. But they are
still needed. Miss the round brackets out and you'll get an error message.
In the next lesson, you'll learn how to call your methods into action.
The Structure of a Method
A method is just a chunk of code that does a particular job. But methods are
set out in a certain way. You have a method header, and a method body. The header
is where you tell Java what value type, if any, the method will return (an int
value, a double value, a string value, etc). As well as the return type, you
need a name for your method, which also goes in the header. You can pass values
over to your methods, and these go between a pair of round brackets. The method
body is where you code goes.
To separate this method from any other code, you need a pair of curly brackets. Your code for the method goes between the curly brackets. Note the word return in the method above. This is obviously the value that you want to return from your method, after your code has been executed. But it must be of the same type as the return type in the method header. So the return value can't be a string if you started the method with int total.
Sometimes you don't want Java to return anything at all. Think of Trim in the previous section. You may only want the Trim method to get on with its job, and not return anything to you. A method that doesn't return any value at all can be set up with the word void. In which case, it doesn't need the return keyword. Here's a method that doesn't return a value:

Methods don't need to have values passed to them. You can just execute some code. Here's a void method without any values being passed over:


In the next lesson, you'll learn how to call your methods into action.
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