A thread is nothing more but a process scheduled by the OS, ultimately; the difference between bona fide processes and "threads" is the amount of resources they have in common
@RishabhGour see what I just said
There was a time when threads were treated as peculiar entities by the OS scheduler and even the JVM itself; but nowadays this is not the case anymore
I wonder if there's anyway to sort of like "fake" a session flush, or perform a read of the data to see if the version has changed.. Anyone know if this is possible
I'll obviously check the docs, but in case anyone knows off the top of their head
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/11/12/pay-to-pitch-to-randoms-the-next-big-idea/ CommitStrip Pay to pitch to randoms, the next big idea! CommitStrip 1447352405
The method call is on a 2-minute timer.. so basically I do a session flush after each existing record is updated in the code, if a stalestateexception is thrown then it backs out and rollsback.. Then once the next two minutes passes and it gets called again, it goes back in and fixes the one entry
When I think about it, I don't think I could really fix it any other way.. so whatevs
The database is probably a good candidate for my issue too I think.. I don't know if it's capable of rolling back INSERT operations
I'll leave my question open until monday, if I don't get a better solution I'll self-answer
Eclipse at work, but I use IntelliJ for Android (or have recently), and it's not too shabby. I don't really have any preference towards either currently
Well, I see no advantages to it; but then I've been using IDEA exclusively for too many years; Eclipse may have caught up in some aspects but I'm not interested anymore
Yeah, but I'd rather take broken setup instructions for Eclipse that barely work over a complete lack of setup instructions for IDEA, but that's just because I'm currently fighting with project setup.