I'm working on creating a new snapshot version of a multi-module pom. Maven is pissed it can't find it in nexus. Of course not, I'm trying to create it, that's the point.
Okay, if the user drags a treeitem to the "combine" treeview, I want that treeitem in the source treeview to change icon to a V(like a checked icon)
Now I do it manually, but then I get a problem with removing that icon if the user removes the treeitem..
So I thought it would be better with a listener? Like if treeItem exists in treeViewcombined then change treeview.combined.treeitem.graphic to V if not remove the icon
I have come across a few questions , mostly by new accounts or guest accounts, which lack proper structure and/or are difficult to understand. Such questions get downvoted ASAP (amassing -6 to -7 votes in a matter of minutes). A few people still comment trying to get the author of the question to...
* Say I have 2 treeviews * Treeview 1 is the source * Treeview 2 is where the user drags treeitems to * If a treeitem in treeview 1 exists in treeview 2, then that treeitem should change it's icon to a green V, in treeview 1
@BenBeri You may not ask to ask. You either ask your question or don't, as we have no clue what you're going to ask to decide whether it's within bounds to answer.
@Goldbones If you want to show like that, make sure that it's not null. Check whether you are setting value to that instance variable before you use it. There is nothing that others can do about it, or let me know if you still wanna specify much details.
Possible Duplicate:
Java Reflection: How to get the name of a variable?
I´ve find various discussions on this topic but never any satisfying answer..
A anyVariableName = new A();
How can I get the name of the variable anyVariableName and get string "anyVariableName" as a result?
Is ...
Having a lot of fields doesn't make it impossible maintaining the properties file. That's the straightforward approach, and you should do that. If you can't, then it's simply an XY Problem.
I don't have much to say right now, I got sick in the beginning of the week so I've mainly just been fibbing with my old stuff and started a little on my course examination project. But I thought I should post something here because... Days of nothing happening. But my kittens survived the winter so I've got that thing going for me which is nice.
@Goldbones It really depends on what you're really trying to do. If the fields are accessible, simply accessing with reflection will do: class.getDeclaredFields(). Otherwise, you will have to define them, either by writing the list so it's set up, or declare annotations to use .getFieldsWithAnnotation(MyAnnotation.class) (or something, haven't used reflection in a while)
@MayukhNair It depends. If they have an API, use their API. If they don't, hack out an open source API, then use it. If you're not good enough for building a library, learn how to scrap.
public, and default if in same package (caller sensitive), and protected if in same hierarchy (caller sensitive), and private as well if in same class (caller sensitive)
I had a friend that owned a store...The guy called because it wasn't working. He tried to get him to do basic troubleshooting over the phone, but wouldn't. He went out there, and the cord was unplugged. He REFUSED to pay the $80 for a home visit because it took him 3 seconds to diagnose/fix!
My friend took him to small claims, each told their side, and the judge said "You were asked to check it, and you refused. He came out, it's an $80 fee. Next case!"