A good answer might be:

It would be nice if the user could say how many terms to sum up.


Improved Program Skeleton

The user might want to see the sum of the first 10 terms, for example:

1/1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + 1/4 +  1/5 +  1/6 +  1/7 +  1/8 +  1/9 +  1/10 

Here is the program again, with new blanks for the improvements. Now the number of terms to sum up (e.g., 10) is a parameter for the value() method:

import java.io.* ;
class HarmonicSeries
{
  double value( int ___________ )
  {
    int term=1 ;
    double sum = 0.0;
    
    while ( term <= ___________ )
    {
      sum += 1.0/term;           // add the next term to sum
      term++ ;                   // increment term
    }

    return sum;
  } 
}

class HarmonicTester
{
  public static void main ( String[] args ) throws IOException
  {
    BufferedReader stdin  = new BufferedReader( new InputStreamReader(System.in) );
    HarmonicSeries series = new HarmonicSeries();

    System.out.println("How many Terms?");
    int limit = Integer.parseInt( stdin.readLine() );

    System.out.println("Sum of " + limit + " terms:" + series.value( limit ) );

  }
}


QUESTION 12:

Fill in the blanks to complete the program.