16.5. StudentAnswerSheet - Part A¶
The following is a free response question from 2007. It was question 3 on the exam. You can see all the free response questions from past exams at https://apstudents.collegeboard.org/courses/ap-computer-science-a/free-response-questions-by-year.
Question 3. Consider a system for processing student test scores. The following class will be used as part of this system and contains a student’s name
and the student’s answers for a multiple-choice test. The answers are represented as strings of length one with an omitted answer being represented by a string containing a single question mark ("?"
).
These answers are stored in an ArrayList
in which the position of the answer corresponds to the question number on the test (question numbers start at 0).
A student’s score on the test is computed by comparing the student’s answers with the corresponding answers in the answer key for the test.
One point is awarded for each correct answer and 1/4 of a point is deducted for each incorrect answer. Omitted answers (indicated by "?"
) do not change the student’s score.
public class StudentAnswerSheet
{
private List<String> answers;
/** @param key the list of correct answers, represented as strings
* of length one
* Precondition: key.size() is equal to the number of answers in
* this answer sheet
* @return this student's test score
public double getScore(List<String> key)
{
/* to be implemented in part (a) */
}
/** @return the name of the student
*/
public String getName()
{
/* implementation not shown */
}
// There may be other fields, constructors, and methods
}
The following table shows an example of an answer key, a student’s answers, and the corresponding point values that would be awarded for the student’s answers. In this example, there are six correct answers, three incorrect answers, and one omitted answer. The student’s score is ((6 * 1) - (3 * 0.25)) = 5.25.
Part a. Write the StudentAnswerSheet
method getScore
. The parameter passed to method getScore
is a List
of strings representing the correct answer key for the test being scored. The method
computes and returns a double
that represents the score for the student’s test answers when compared
with the answer key. One point is awarded for each correct answer and 1/4 of a point is deducted for each
incorrect answer. Omitted answers (indicated by "?"
) do not change the student’s score.
16.5.1. Try and Solve It¶
Complete method getScore
below.
The code below has a main method for testing the getScore
method.
Complete method getScore
below.