@Tavo you're right just realised it isnt. I am just hopping back and forth in my Java spring project, so I didnt think about that it isnt java haha. Im gonna go ask in the javascript chat :)
I got a String containing "HSSEHSHFH" see http://hastebin.com/hewigegete.cs I want all combinations of substrings that start and end with 'H' In the code I already have it misses one substring and can't figure the right switch in the regex
my attempt not doing this in regex did work. First getting all positions of 'H' into a list and then based on these positions create the substrings. Overall it looked clunckier. Anyways with the regex it seems to work (hopefully for all other combinations aswell :D)
because, why can I do this?
for (Point point : points) {
point.calculated = 0;
for (int k = 0; k < DIMENSION; k++) {
point.calculated += plane.plane.get(k) * point.components.get(k);
}
point.calculated += plane.plane.get(plane.plane.size() - 1);
}
I understand why I can't do it, but not why I can do those last things
The only difference between them is that the one that gets the error is an ArrayList of Floats, and these last ones are ArrayLists of classes created by me
well technically get in this case - > distributions.get(points.indexOf(point)) is getting you a value and not a refernce. so JAva doesnt know how to perform an operation on it
in the other case i.e. planes.get(j) you are actually gettting a ref to an object so now you could access its instance variables or even call a method
so I have two methods and I want them to execute in the same order in two different threads no matter which thread starts first... now I clearly don't understand how this works but can you please look at these two methods and tell me what I'm doing wrong?
private boolean isFirstMethodDone = false;
synchronized void pingFirst() {
msg("This message should appear first.");
if (!isFirstMethodDone) {
isFirstMethodDone = true;
notify();
}
}
synchronized void pingSecond() {
while (!isFirstMethodDone) {
try {
wait();
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
msg("This message should appear after the first message. ");
if I start firstThread first, then I get something like this
[1] First Class 0: constructed [2] First Class 0: This message should appear first. [2] Second Class 0: constructed
if I start the second thread first, then it all works out ok
4] Second Class 0: constructed [6] First Class 0: constructed [6] First Class 0: This message should appear first. [6] Second Class 0: This message should appear after the first message.
without knowing about the rest of your code, i'm betting that you have two different instances of a class that extends Thread or whatever, each with a copy of ifFirstMethodDone, and when it changes in first thread, it does not change in second thread because both threads have two different instances of the variable
ifFirstMethodDone has to be shared between the two threads