Milestone: SpaceX has successfully landed back a rocket on Earth after that same rocket delivered a satellite on a geostationary orbit (~36000 km altitude)
I think I just decided to do a "hacky" solution and reposition the ImageView instead of trying to manipulate the "image inside", since I didn't find anything in the API that would imply being able to shift anything inside
"There's a silly notion that failure's not an option at NASA. Failure is an option here. If things are not failing, you are not innovating enough." (link)
"Elon has really opened the checkbook for me," says Bob Reagan, the ponytailed, gravel-voiced VP of manufacturing. "All he ever asks me is, 'What do you need?' "
I've heard from several sources that it's better design to implement an interface than to use inheritance. Of course, that won't actually be all scenarios, but I'm wondering what would be best in my case
I've got a super class with a bunch of subclasses (obviously). I would like to be able to treat the subclasses as an instance of the superclass at some points. So I need inheretance
But would it be better to implement an interface in the super class, rather than use inheritance to do everything? Basically wondering about the advantages of composition over inheritance
Sorry, I feel like this is really vague...just trying to work through it. That's why I'm here not asking an official question XD
I want to make a custom button that consists of a big and a small square, which have these colors respectively: #2980b9 #3498db.
The small square would be inside of the big one, and it would increment it's size when the cursor is placed above or if it's clicked, and at the same time the color wou...
But actually, that is not the entire thing. This is ALL what the console says:
at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEvent(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.retargetMouseEnterExit(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.trackMouseEnterExit(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.processMouseEvent(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.LightweightDispatcher.dispatchEvent(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.Container.dispatchEventImpl(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.Window.dispatchEventImpl(Unknown Source)
at java.awt.Component.dispatchEvent(Unknown Source)
It gets the cursor's x position and it compares it with the smalSquare's one. I think that the problem has to do with the square having a position that depends on the frame's size, but I don't know what to do.
Thanks @DRich. For anyone who has, I am trying to understand setting up filters in conjunction with using a handler (ex:- Jaxwshandler) and having tough luck finding any such examples.