Kudos for asking on here. I'm glad to see Can we make this meta site work for mentoring? being taken to heart.
I just have a few notes of what I'm noticing when I look at your questions. First off, exactly what you said in your question here: they're pretty well the same question, just put in different ways. In the future, try to avoid that. If you come up with further information to better specify your question, edit your original post. In fact, that said, I think a hybrid of the two questions would actually make a pretty acceptable one.
When I look at a question, I generally like to see three main parts:
- The goal
- The attempt
- The problem with the attempt
Now, I say "generally" because of course those three aren't always applicable. But in your case, I'd say they are.
Stepping through, we start with the goal. This was stated in your first, although I feel like you could have been a little more concise, say, "how can I access a field in one class from another class?" Going into detail is great, but if you can come up with a solid, single-statement question that encompasses the entirety of what you're hoping to accomplish, you'll be much more likely to get a fast, spot-on answer. Generally I like to either have that question as the title, or at least bolded in your question. If you want to be really good about it, I also try to state my question at the beginning and rephrased at the end. Then the potential answerer gets to think about your question as they read the details, but then also isn't forced to go up and re-read it again. That sometimes is way too verbose and definitely not necessary, especially if you have a very short question. But it's something to keep in mind if you ever ask a longer one with more attempts.
Speaking of attempts, the last two kind of go together. We have an awesome statement of what you want to accomplish, but now we want to see an attempt. This is something your second one gets right, although I'd still love to see it shortened a bit. It suffers from being more or less a block of code and an error. And that's alright, sometimes, but in your case your code could be whittled down a little bit to fit more of a minimal, complete, and verifiable example. Your attempt doesn't always have to even compile; use it as an aid to show us that yes, you tried some things before you came to us, then give exactly what was wrong.
And an important note on attempts: remember that listing what you've tried serves two purposes. First off, it appeases those of us who'd like to see evidence that you aren't using us strictly as a code-writing service. But in many ways more importantly, it can help clarify your question. There's a reason we don't write code in full sentences, and if you can utilize that conciseness and what we all know from other aspects of coding to transfer that much more information about what you'd like to see work, we'll be that much better able to help you.
You mention wanting to help people in the future and be a helpful member of the community, which is super respectable, so including an error statement as specific as "non-static variable myGrid cannot be referenced from static context" is going to be very likely to get you showing up in search results for people wanting to do exactly what you want to do. Now, of course, the purpose of a question isn't just to put in awesome SEO. But I think that's just a side-effect of yet another detail that could have sped up a response to you.
As for why you can't delete your questions, that's just because there are answers. So yes, moderator attention or marking as a duplicate is probably your best course of action. I would, however, work to make one of them an awesome question before you make any decisions like that, though.
And just a little note, we prefer not to see tags in titles, like you said "in Java" at the end. And another thing, the details about playing boards and whatnot draw from the technical aspects of your question, so I would omit those. It's certainly okay to carry details from your implementation in, especially through variable names that wouldn't benefit to be changed, but in essence you want as much focus on the question as you can have, so extraneous information about what the big-picture program is doesn't often help. That said, when in doubt, you should probably include it.
Given all that, here's the gist of what I would have said:
How do I access a field from one class in another class?
I have created a 2d array and in another class I want to take my array and be able to perform operations on it.
My field is defined in TypeA
, as:
public char[][] vals = new char[8][8];
But now, I'd like to define a function in TypeB
that somehow manipulates its value.
I have tried referencing it directly in TypeB
:
TypeA.vals[0][0] = 'x';
But this gives me a compiler error stating:
Non-static variable myGrid cannot be referenced from static context
How can I access vals
from TypeA
in TypeB
?