Ah, in Java syntax is pretty generous, (they do say Java is a language for lazy programmers), no forced indention and some statements can be transformed
public is the "visibility keyword". static is something you'll learn when you start the OO part of Java. void means that this function does not return as a statement, main(String[] args) means this function is (surprise!) named main and takes the argument, a String[].
How I learned Java: I was an ActionScript / C++ coder, but then school requires us to learn Java. Knowing that relying on school for education is not the way to go, I took a crashcourse™ and composed a markup language parser in Java.
... Yeah. I recommend the Oracle tutorials. It's pretty heavy though, so expect the sea of text like any official tutorials: docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java
I am using JKeyMaster with JNA library.
The project that uses these two libraries, is jarred.
Now when I use that jar in one of my application, and try to run the app (accessing one of the methods in that jar that runs the following method):
this.provider = Provider.getCurrentProvider(false);
...
And if your application wants to be smart about it, use Maven to package the classes into your app or automatically download the jars to the working directory.
Sorry for the late answer, traffic was a nightmare.
I hope you are ready for parsing XML with regex.
First of all, let's define what XML tags would look like!
<tag_name␣(optional space (then whatever that doesnt end with "/"))>(whatever)</␣(optional space)tag_name>
<tag_name␣(optional space)/>...
By the way, post <([^ \>]++) ?[^>]*+>(.*?(?:<([^ \>]++) ?[^>]*+>(?:[^<]*+|(?2))<\/ ?\3>|<[^ \/>]++ ?\/>).*?)<\/ ?\1> in the chat and watch what happens.
there is also other solution declaring the variable without making any sin , that is we search on google and copying the words , then we don't have to think about them !!! :D , brilliant right !!!
Well then it's a HUGE problem, I have to handle the hotkeys in the actual application and not in the library which needs additional modifications now, listeners etc
@BenBeri Trust me. Kylar is good, Kylar is wise. Just make your jar, and when you distribute it, include the jna jar along side it. Then make a script that includes both in the class path.
no-one releases jars that don't have dependencies anymore. Everyone uses LOTS of them. Apache Commons, Google Guice, all kinds of IO frameworks
I am using JKeyMaster with JNA library.
The project that uses these two libraries, is jarred.
Now when I use that jar in one of my application, and try to run the app (accessing one of the methods in that jar that runs the following method):
this.provider = Provider.getCurrentProvider(false);
...
Meh I get the same problem, through when I jar, I don't see the files at all. It looks like Eclipse only jars from the .java files and compiles it then, doesn't use the ready .class files
The issue is you can't have a jar within the jar loaded while your jar is loaded. You need to do what Kylar mentioned to "embed" it in a way that it will be loaded.
In this state, whereever your code tries to call the library it will get that exception because you put the library jar within your jar.