I have always had a problem with that guy. Ask Emmanuel sometime...he has witnessed it. The guy has spouted off stupid shit plenty of times before to me
@323go Please stop. it doesn't make any sense to discuss here. If you have any issue then open thread on meta.stackoverflow.com. You are welcome!!!! — TGMCians11 secs ago
This is where my java lacks - too many different types of buffered readers/writers and streams. My suggestion would be to look into finding a buffer that you can read from while you're writing to it - so the audio you can record can be written in, and read back to the audo playback at the same time.
Second suggestion would be to implement something like a circular buffer. So you may write 400-500ms of audio to a file, and send it off to be played back, and in a new file record another 400-500ms while the other audio plays back. When the file is finished playing you can remove it completely. Though I have a sneaky feeling you're going to get a bunch of I/O lag and it won't be so hot / there will be delays and stutters.
That would be my first suggestion - somewhere in the depths of java, you'd have to see if there's a buffered stream that can be read and written to, but i don't think that's a thing, so all i can think of is a circular buffer.
Someone else here might have a better clue how those damned things work properly so you may just be able to pass around streams, rather than file input streams - meaning you should be able to make a circular buffer in memory, rather than writing to disc the whole time.
Criticism #1 - your opening tutorial has an "OK" button for the first tip, but then it goes away for the other tips, and I have to guess that I touch the screen to make it go away
#2 - clicked on "Physics" on the main screen, and then on the bottom right there's a menu-style button that moves in a disconcerting way when I click on it
#3 - when I go to Physics -> Electric Charges and Fields -> Some icon with lots of horizontal arrows, then I get a screen that is full of question marks
the design is very slick/smooth, but the navigation is terrible. The app is responsive, and without seeing the code it's hard to say how well/poorly it's written.
TGMCians pointed out something fairly important in the start of this conversation, which is that you seem to have everything in a package named "mainpackage" or something like that