Applets are mistakes and should be destroyed asap..
@Gemtastic :D :D
> Both EFS-Web, the USPTO’s online patent application and document submission tool, and Private PAIR, a secure portal for learning the status of a patent application, utilize Java programming script for authenticating users when they sign in to those services. The USPTO has posted guidance from computer technology corporation Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL) recommending the use of alternative browsers such as Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer to access these services in the future
@fge guavafinalclasscom.google.common.io.Closer: A Closeable that collects Closeable resources and closes them all when it is closed. This is intended to approximately emulate the behavior of Java 7's try-with-resources statement in JDK6-compatible code. ...
Running on Java 7, code using this should be approximately equivalent in behavior to the same code written with try-with-resources. Running on Java 6, exceptions that cannot be thrown must be logged rather than being added to the thrown exception as a suppressed exception. (1/6)
> Note that unlike the close method of Closeable, this close method is not required to be idempotent. In other words, calling this close method more than once may have some visible side effect, unlike Closeable.close which is required to have no effect if called more than once. However, implementers of this interface are strongly encouraged to make their close methods idempotent.
Well, I do understand that it isn't required to be; after all if you use it in a try-with-resources, it is guaranteed that .close() will be called only once
Unless you're dead stupid and try and close it in the try block as well
well i hope there was a way to do this in java 2DPoint:=Pair<Double,Double> which prevented me from typing new Pair<Double,Double>(3.0,5.6) again and again
@Vogel612 that's because I wrote "mapToInt(Integer::parseInt())" only and got a compile error but anyways I'm sorry as I didn't knew it was too basic for anyone
what does this mean: `boxed():Returns a Stream consisting of the elements of this stream, each boxed to an Integer.` I supose the explaination shouldn't use the method name itself. Now I can't understand what is boxed :(
Integer is an object and also the wrapper class for a primitive int; boxing is turning a primitive type into its wrapper class, unboxing is the reverse
@Unihedron morning sir! i know since the day i came here, i was more to JSP. NOw i got a new project to be done for bank. Actually a sub-system. You always told JSPs are deprecated. Then what is the best alternative for JSP in 2015?