Question: Why is object called an instance of a class.
user6110959
My answer to that: Each object possesses the data members and member functions defined in its blueprint/plan/template- the class. Therefore, it's called an instance of a class.
@unserializable "RFC 959 specifies that a username may consist of a sequence of any of the 128 ASCII characters except <CR> and <LF>. Guess what the JRE implementers forgot? Exactly − to check for the presence of <CR> or <LF>."
Hey, elipse says: objc[29893]: Class JavaLaunchHelper is implemented in both /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_102.jdk/Contents/Home/bin/java and /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.8.0_102.jdk/Contents/Home/jre/lib/libinstrument.dylib. One of the two will be used. Which one is undefined.
Also if I look into my run configuration I have the choice between 1.8.0_102 and 1.8.0_112 and 102 one is marked as default? I'm kinda confused. I tried to start a Java appletviewer
I'm looking for some help to find a way to apply my ideas :D
The idea is easy : get back colors of pixels on a web page to analyse them (look at the changes) so I found that java.awt.Robot can help me
BUT it will be dependent of the resolution of the screen and the browser, i started to work on it, and then i just realized that it will work only on 1920*1080 and on Chrome ... so not very easy to share ..
because if i write : robot.getPixelColor(1500,1200) it will work on my laptop, but if i do it on another laptop with a resolution of 1200*960 it won't work
and each browser has his own design, the image won't be exactly at the same height from the top on each
@azro Why are you trying to do that? Also, even on two machines with the same browser window size (window might not be maximized btw) and browser the page can still be rendered differently e.g. different fonts present, font antialiasing options, zoom, position of scrollbars, etc.
You could just compare text resources, and also parse, load, and compare image resources, I suppose. But it really depends on why you'd want to do that.
I mean maybe the goal is to see how different browsers render things differently, although it doesn't sound like it.