@SecondRikudo The only thing I have right now is the samples provided with JavaFX. In those samples there are NameOfTheApplicationController.java That's what I want to understand.
The error log is showing me in line 20, column 1620 or something like that. But it is not showing in which application context does this error belong to.
@deckard well that is more or less what it is. When you write a fxml, for example, you need to map the actions of buttons to methods, you do it inside controllers.
This project is based on what my "teacher" taught us. I've mainly made it to suit his tastes. I know it's probably shit since I had to make it and learn Spring and thymeleaf and Javascript in one week :P
Everything not vanilla java in that project I learned in one week
I'm still working on a parser that can parse log entries from a game called HearthStone, the overall idea is that it will read the log file live when the game is running, parses the log file and show interesting and useful data in real time.
For the question the focus is on the API I have create...
@Vogel612 I assume this becomes problematic because there are in practice gonna be one cart for each person using the site, a singleton would make anyone connecting to the site use the one and the same cart?
hey guys, is it possible to specify the columns of a csv file you want parsed as arguments in a jar file, and then have the program only produce a new file consisting of those columns (i.e. 0,3,5)? I can't get my head around as to how I'd do this :s
@SecondRikudo I think that's a beautiful simile. You graba cart when you enter the store (creat a client-side cart) and put your items into it, then you send it to the server when you make your purchase
a friend of mine gave me a speech about that i MUST destroy every object/variable i dont have use anymore and basically doing all the garbage collection my-self in java if i want to focus on performance and good code.. we had a little conflict, i said it's not fully-true and he said the exact opposite. who is right and is it exactly true?
@Vogel612 in short, you save the cart data to localStorage, and when it comes time to checkout, you send all items to the server for checkout (with all logic associated with it).
Instead of performing extra HTTP requests this way or another (which you have to do, if you want the server to be aware of the cart), you save things locally.
This also saves a crapton of memory server-side if you have a lot of users.
I still wonder how I get my server sided beans to the local storage... do I do a GET when the user adds to cart and save that item reference to the local storage?
I'd probably check the product in the cart for availability (against a db) and if it isn't available, just throw it out (possibly with a warning to the user)
Or if I really want to, I can detect how long it passed since the user visited (by keeping lastVisitTime in localStorage, for instance), and if it's above a certain threshold, make the check.
@Gemtastic Server is not aware of the cart.
Until you POST to /checkout
Client side has something like this in its localStorage:
When you go to the checkout I'd make an update with the server that would check the current (and up to date) database, which can also alert to if a ware has been sold out
@SecondRikudo Unless you only want one customer to shop at a time ;P
Ok, my stance on any sane take in garbage in Java is that Object construction is not expensive. However, usually it is the field allocation and assignment that makes it difficult for a classloader to unload the methods belonging to the class, which is usually the cause of why people mistaken "objects are expensive" while it's actually not true.
By using Foo foo; and having a reference to a Foo object still alive, the dependency is established and the class Foo is forced to be loaded. So as long as any Foo object is still weakly+ referencable, the classloader will have to remember the type.
@SecondRikudo Well the thing is, with all that stress and no knowledge, it all seemed so much harder, I had no idea what I was doing or where to look (didn't help that I picked Java configuration which there's even less material to learn from)...
And if your types aren't insane to that degree, you should never worry about collecting garbage, because whatever you can do puts a stress for the JVM to ensure that to be done, while if you don't garbage collect and allow the JVM to do it, it gets to be done in the best way depending on the environment.
Well, some of the things we actually went through in class was the vanilla way of making a web-server, but the course requires at least one framework and JavaScript
The thing is, the last two courses my school hired a company to supply us with teachers, only the guys they've sent us are code monkeys who only know copy-paste