Important Notice:

Practice-It will be discontinued as of November 1st, 2024. After this date, the website will remain online for a transitional period, but login will be restricted to University of Washington NetID authentication. This marks the next phase towards the platform's full retirement. Thank you for your use and support of the application over the years.

If you are looking for an alternative, a similar tool, CodeStepByStep, was developed independently by the original author of Practice-It, and is available at codestepbystep.com**

logo Practice-It logo

BJP4 Exercise 8.11: transactionFeeBankAccount

Language/Type: Java classes instance methods
Related Links:
Author: Roy McElmurry (on 2016/09/08)

Suppose that you are provided with a pre-written class BankAccount as shown below. (The headings are shown, but not the method bodies, to save space.) Assume that the fields, constructor, and methods shown are already implemented. You may refer to them or use them in solving this problem if necessary.

Write an instance method named transactionFee that will be placed inside the BankAccount class to become a part of each BankAccount object's behavior. The transactionFee method accepts a fee amount (a real number) as a parameter, and applies that fee to the user's past transactions. The fee is applied once for the first transaction, twice for the second transaction, three times for the third, and so on. These fees are subtracted out from the user's overall balance. If the user's balance is large enough to afford all of the fees with greater than $0.00 remaining, the method returns true. If the balance cannot afford all of the fees or has no money left, the balance is left as 0.0 and the method returns false.

// A BankAccount keeps track of a user's money balance and ID,
// and counts how many transactions (deposits/withdrawals) are made.
public class BankAccount {
    private String id;
    private double balance;
    private int transactions;
    
    // Constructs a BankAccount object with the given id, and
    // 0 balance and transactions.
    public BankAccount(String id)
    
    // returns the field values
    public double getBalance()
    public String getID()
    public String getTransactions()
    
    // Adds the amount to the balance if it is between 0-500.
    // Also counts as 1 transaction.
    public void deposit(double amount)
    
    // Subtracts the amount from the balance if the user has enough money.
    // Also counts as 1 transaction.
    public void withdraw(double amount)
    
    // your method would go here
}

For example, given the following BankAccount object:

BankAccount savings = new BankAccount("Jimmy");
savings.deposit(10.00);
savings.deposit(50.00);
savings.deposit(10.00);
savings.deposit(70.00);

The account at that point has a balance of $140.00. If the following call were made:

savings.transactionFee(5.00);

Then the account would be deducted $5 + $10 + $15 + $20 for the four transactions, leaving a final balance of $90.00. The method would return true. If a second call were made,

savings.transactionFee(10.00);

Then the account would be deducted $10 + $20 + $30 + $40 for the four transactions, leaving a final balance of $0.00. The method would return false.

Type your solution here:


This is a partial class problem. Submit code that will become part of an existing Java class as described. You do not need to write the complete class, just the portion described in the problem.

You must log in before you can solve this problem.


Log In

If you do not understand how to solve a problem or why your solution doesn't work, please contact your TA or instructor.
If something seems wrong with the site (errors, slow performance, incorrect problems/tests, etc.), please

Is there a problem? Contact a site administrator.