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fge
fge
00:07
Weee
Path implementation complete
Now, well, there is FileSystem, WatchService, FileAttributes, FileSystemProvider... Yummy.
00:20
@Unihedron Guess what
00:56
@Michael Guess what
@Joe'sMorgue You got your Asus board?
Just over 3 months
00:57
Now, the networking doesn't work...
STILL not fixed!
Wow...
Gotta love Asus
Last time I had post, it was fine...[over 3 months ago]
01:18
@Michael Test. Are you getting this?
@Joe'sMorgue No.
Rats...
:P
OK. It's not my cord.
It's hardware.
HAS to be. It's the same board, I even tried a LIVE Unix cd, and it won't work either
fge
fge
@Joe'sMorgue what do the system logs say?
01:42
Not sure...
Tonight, I'm not even sure how to get into them in Winders 8.1
Code 10 is a generic error, it could be anything....
It could be hardware, software, or drivers
The Windows setup is the same as when I was using it when the board died. The SSD sat until now.
Forcing a new driver install right now
Or aliens.
They keep messing with my computer!
I have a wireless networking card, going to install that...
01:57
@Unihedron Sure, I don't mind.
No post
Back to square one
Got post
02:23
@Joe i am nt sure whether i sud congratulate you or feel sorry for you..
Thanks @ItachiUchiha I REALLY regret buying Asus...
Put one of my spare ethernet cards in, not recognized by the OS as new hardware.
Right now, I wish I had a USB ethernet adapter.
OakBot Online.
02:43
ask a question:
sh = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("su",null,new File(files_dir));
This code run success and put back log which indicated my program has get the root permission for file located in files_dir
In the code of file, has some operation on /dev/input/eventx, but it failed to open this devices, why?
This sounds more like a Linux question. What does that file path point to?
@Michael It's a Android question. The file is located in /system/lib/myfile
Are you trying to execute that file?
03:06
What did the file do to deserve to die?
03:32
@Michael yeah
@Joe'sMorgue Have no permission to open /dev/input/event
 
1 hour later…
04:40
hai
04:55
morning
05:08
Hallo
I see @ElliottFrisch is lurking around more often during winter :)
05:24
@ComFreak No, but you can make a Supplier of Void
interface Action extends Supplier<Void>
05:35
hi
 
2 hours later…
07:47
Morning!
@Gemtastic and does the pagination give you the restriction (i.e. not to view the homepage without logging in)
08:02
Good morning
mrng
How are you today?
08:41
Morning!
Today is functional interface abuse day. Hooray!
Functional interface abuse day :P
Hooray!!
Hooray!!
08:58
Any idea how to store time zone in database
im getting timezone from android device and i want to store it into database mysql..then i want to schedule push notification account to timezone
@Swap-IOS-Android What database?
mysql
i am using
TimeZone.getDefault().getID()
which returns Australia/Darwin
@Swap-IOS-Android ... Have you tried Google?
Are you sure?
09:06
my question is how can i schedule push notification send method every day morning 10 am according to timezone
@SecondRikudo yes i can store timezone now
but problem is in my web service how can write code which check time according to time zone
urk...
@Swap-IOS-Android With an IDE, a manual, and a functional keyboard.
No pun intended.
09:27
Hello!
Hello @Appu
Howdy!
09:45
Oh hi!
09:55
@Unihedron @Vogel612 instead of data-target in some html page for showing some div or whatever, what is the other way of showing that element?
@Appu java != javascript
@Vogel612 I know :P but I don't want to ask in that room
They themselves change that room name and description to some other names, I have even seen them changing the name to vulgar word
well that's the Javascript guys for you ;)
10:12
JavaScript su- looks around and sees Second Rikudo -'s too hard for me.
That's what happens when the language does not have the concept of immutable variables. They accidentally write over their descriptions strings. :-P
^^^^
inb4scala fanclub
@Unihedron :P :P
(The way we talk about languages as factions are weird. Stack Overflow is such an incredible place. ;P )
typographical error unlikely to help future readers stackoverflow.com/q/27239337/3622940
People really need to learn to use @Override
10:25
I know right? And @FunctionalInterface..
One basic question
I know == with objects checks for reference for comparision
object == object -> reference equality
yes true
So is there a way (by overriding equals() and hashcode()) to make two different references equal?
Different references are different.
I haven't yet switched to 8 so I haven't yet met that class of problems. I wish the designers would have taken advantage of the situation that the language feature's new, and made security checks mandatory (with the caveat that since I'm not familiar with it, I don't know if there are situations where lacking the annotation is new)
10:32
@Unihedron Thanks Capt. O ;)
=javadoc FunctionalInterface
@Unihedron java.lang.FunctionalInterface: An informative annotation type used to indicate that an interface type declaration is intended to be a functional interface as defined by the Java Language Specification. Conceptually, a functional interface has exactly one abstract method. Since [default...
@ItachiUchiha no there isn't..
methods](docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/lang/reflect/…) have an implementation, they are not abstract. If an interface declares an abstract method overriding one of the public methods of java.lang.Object, that also does not count toward the interface's abstract method count since any implementation of the interface will have an implementation from java.lang.Object or elsewhere.
equals as in == sense?
10:32
@kiheru there manual
@OakBot oh come on...
@Vogel612 Type =help to see all my commands.
@Michael extended text is broken ^^^
@Unihedron that's my fault...
10:33
It seems this is going to be more complicated than it should be...
I'll get working on it...
@Vogel612 You put it in a different way then.
Just say no....
that's all you need ;)
@ItachiUchiha You can try to hack the == operator with a Proxy class. No guarantees if it's helpful, but you can try it.
@uni when I write (ob1 == ob2). What does the compiler do?
What would be a valid reason to modify == behaviour? In a language that does not generally allow operator overloading, that would be exceptionally unexpected behaviour.
10:37
@kiheru I just wanted to know, what the compiler does when we are using == Operator
@ItachiUchiha it writes two "load", then an if_acmpeq.
if_acmpeq takes two parameters: If references are equal, branch at offset (param1) at param1 << 8 + param2.
Hope this helps.
and how does it know If references are equal
@ItachiUchiha By having the JIT compiler interpret "if_acmpeq param1 param2" into machine code for "are the two references in the topmost stack equal".
Implementation defined. Most likely it does just compares the pointers
True for HotSpot.
10:39
So it compares the memory address ?
No it compares their references.
That's the most obvious implementation, but a jvm is allowed to do it otherwise as long as it complies with the spec
what do you mean by references? @Unihedron
@ItachiUchiha It depends on their implementation. For HotSpot, the pointer of the referenced addresses are compared.
10:42
@Unihedron Ahh ok
@ItachiUchiha Java is a pass-by-reference language. Not sure what you're getting here. All object (no-primitive) fields stores a reference.
@Unihedron I know that :P and I know that I compares the reference of the objects. I just wanted to know, what does it compare in those references.
4 mins ago, by kiheru
Implementation defined. Most likely it does just compares the pointers
that's not really pass by reference
Java is pass by value. No exceptions. If the variable is of reference type, the passed value is the reference
@kiheru I know, it's a pass-by-value, where your value is a reference.
10:44
4 mins ago, by Unihedron
No it compares their references.
and you said this right after kiheru said about pointers
For understanding the term "pass-by-reference" is used, but that's certainly misleading. I think they should create a term "pass-by-reference-java_style" for this.
so I got confused :)
@Unihedron +1
fge
fge
When you pass-by-reference, you have the ability to modify the reference after the method/function returns; you don't have that option with pass-by-value
That is all there is to it
Calling it pass by value has long precedent. C is also stricty pass by value, but the passed value can be a pointer
Yay pointers!
fge
fge
10:46
I love pointers
So it came down to pointers today. Java -> Pointers :P
fge
fge
Well, an object reference, or even an array reference can be viewed as a pointer somewhat, except you don't have pointer arithmetics available :p
Pointer<?> ptr = Pointer.<Long>consume(0x366F30)
Float val = ((Pointer<Float>) ptr).get();
System.out.println(val);
fge
fge
But that's a far fetched analogy
Yay magic numbers!
Waiting for your disapproval on this @fge:
2 hours ago, by Unihedron
Today is functional interface abuse day. Hooray!
fge
fge
10:48
@Unihedron 0x366F30 is not a long constant, suffix with L :p
@Unihedron today only?
Does the Java room attract weirdoes? I have found out that we like volatile and atomic types, and now pointers...
fge
fge
@kiheru why is that weird? (asks a weirdo)
The people supposedly using a high level, safe language :-D
fge
fge
Well, I do C also
C taught me discipline which is an invaluable lesson
Well I shouldn't say such things Rolls eye to see Uni
10:52
I like C. A simple language that does not try to be everything. I just haven't had a reason to use it lately. It's starting to be too low level for most things I do to justify using C.
@fge Hexadecimal notations are automatically ints, 0x366F30L isn't valid syntax I think.
@kiheru What do you mostly do?
fge
fge
@Unihedron it is ;)
goes to verify
@ItachiUchiha Java, as a hobby. And then the occasional utility I write for myself, but these rarely need performance, or access to low level system stuff
fge
fge
10:55
@Unihedron any valid numeric constant for an integer can be suffixed with L and that will make it a long
@fge Gotcha, and it's true as well! TIL
fge
fge
That is valid for decimal, octal, hexadecimal and binary constants
@kiheru As a hobby? What do you do otherwise? Hope I am not getting personal :P
How do you write binary/octal constants?
fge
fge
@kiheru have you ever been dissatisfied with Java performance? Me, never...
10:56
@kiheru Bithacking is fun though.
@fge I takes time to start, but once the beast is ON, there is no stopping it :)
fge
fge
@Unihedron binary: 0b01001010..., octal: my bad, you can't
@ItachiUchiha unemployed/student (should finish a degree that's been almost done for years)
fge
fge
Sure wish you could though
@kiheru almost done?
10:57
Java: It runs faster and faster. JavaScript: It runs slower and slower.
fge
fge
Oh, yes you can
Example: 010L --> that 8 in decimal
I don't compare Java with JavaScript, both were made for achieving different objectives
@fge So append with 0?
@Unihedron opinions on quickly hacked up regex to tokenize messages into "words", please: regex101.com/r/gU9xT4/2
@fge No, the performance has been good enough. The only case where I have wished for more is being able to write shader code for GPUs. More an API limitation than a language issue. (And I wish java has unsigned byte, but that's more for convenience and readability than speed issue)
11:00
@Vogel612 i cri evertim
fge
fge
@Unihedron disagree; JS runs faster and faster. The problem is, JS libraries are more and more complex. A phenomenon always seen with languages seeing a performance boost, and which is all the worse that languages allow for so-called "advanced" language features
@Unihedron ahem...
fge
fge
@Unihedron no, prefix with 0; and of course, since this is octal, valid digits range from 0 to 7
how bad is it on a scale from 1 to cthulu?
...... 1
This scale is not very constructive though.
11:01
hmm... to big dimensions eh..
okay, from 1 to eeeek
eeeek!
What are you trying to do though?
fge
fge
@Vogel612 uh, why don't you just use the URI class?
@fge because that doesn't work for chat-messages
fge
fge
Parsing URIs (that includes URLs) with regexes is wasteful
The choice to keep the C style octals was unfortunate. The feature was really outdated when java was designed, and is responsible for more bugs than intentional use
11:02
@Unihedron I am trying to get a proper message split done that respects Se-flavor links and tags...
fge
fge
@Vogel612 eh? Where's the problem? Just separate into words and for each word which may look like a URI (use a simple regex for that) try and make it a URI
Done!
@fge you're completely missing the point...
fge
fge
No, I don't
You are
it's not about the URI's...
nobody effing cares about URI's...
Shouldn't you turn [\*\-] into [-*_]?
fge
fge
11:04
So why does your regex try and match http at the beginning, hmm?
@fge markdown
=javadoc FunctionalInterface
@Vogel612 java.lang.FunctionalInterface: An informative annotation type used to indicate that an interface type declaration is intended to be a functional interface as defined by the Java Language Specification. Conceptually, a functional interface has exactly one abstract method. Since [default...
methods](docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/lang/reflect/…) have an implementation, they are not abstract. If an interface declares an abstract method overriding one of the public methods of java.lang.Object, that also does not count toward the interface's abstract method count since any implementation of the interface will have an implementation from java.lang.Object or elsewhere.
^^ that's why
And why is <token> in your regex?
11:06
@Vogel612 How does the bot handle Classes which are defined in multiple packages with same name?
=javadoc String
Which one do you mean?
* javax.print.DocFlavor.STRING
* java.lang.String
I hate to say it, but your regex sucks. It only works because \b.*\b matches everything as long as there's a non-word character in your line.
@ItachiUchiha satisfied?
So that's no expected behaviour.
11:06
@Unihedron I feared something along these lines....
=javadoc java.lang.String
@ItachiUchiha java.lang.String: The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc", are implemented as instances of this class.
wow
Nice work @uni @Vogel612 @Michael :)
@ItachiUchiha that was all done by @Michael
okay... updated a bit: regex101.com/r/gU9xT4/3
fge
fge
@Unihedron yes, then what?
11:08
@fge I do't know.
fge
fge
I mean if you try to recognize the ()[] construct where the part in [] has to be a URI, just match all there is in it and try to URI.create()
This will immediately tell whether this is a valid URI or not
Done!
No need to match it via a regex
But then we need to extract it with a capturing group and write code.
fge
fge
Yes, then what?
Have you ever considered using pegdown for markdown parsing by the way?
point being, we don't even need to check whether it's a valid url
in RegEx - Regular Expressions, Nov 17 at 13:46, by Unihedron
to parse or to use regex... that is the question
fge
fge
11:11
@Unihedron well, I'm a seasoned regex user as well, and imho, a seasoned regex user knows when to not use regexes ;)
@Vogel612 Why \w? Shouldn't it be [^\w]?
improved a bit: regex101.com/r/gU9xT4/4
fge
fge
Hmm, warning about \w
In Java this will only match ASCII
yes...
Considering SO's markdown parser only cares about word boundaries of ascii chars, that's kind of what we should go for.
@Unihedron it still should match the strikethrough tag
11:12
I think you can change that behaviour with (?u).
fge
fge
@Unihedron good to know, however this should be commented in the source
@Vogel612 Ah.
@Unihedron \W ?
pokes @Vog to read fge's message
@SecondRikudo \W doesn't match newlines.
Wait
You want this to be a valid command?
11:14
Wait, it does.
Bah, can't insert the newline at the beginning of the line
Chat strips is anyway.
fge
fge
Huuh
Too many completely unrelated comments to the problem
fge
fge
11:14
Might I suggest grappa if you have difficulties parsing? ;)
You know what happens when you poke someone to help with your regex...
fge
fge
Or pegdown
I probably misread the context though XD
@Unihedron I know, but I don't want advice on URL-Parsing or comments on making stuff commands or not
fge
fge
/me will probably join the regex chatroom, meh
11:15
@fge I own it, so you'll be welcomed for sure :P
inb4 commitstrip
too late
@SecondRikudo you missed by the diameter of the meteor you threw on the sages....
Comments are not the problem at hand
@Vogel612 That's pretty big
it's about the return messages from the bot
and those are... like ... on the other end of the application
What do you want to do with them?
you know chat-markdowns cool stuff, right?
we use some of it..
11:17
=javadoc TimeUnit
@Unihedron java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit: A TimeUnit represents time durations at a given unit of granularity and provides utility methods to convert across units, and to perform timing and delay operations in these units. A TimeUnit does not maintain time information, but only helps organize and use time representations that may be maintained separately across various...
unfortunately I decided to just split the message in half ..
contexts. A nanosecond is defined as one thousandth of a microsecond, a microsecond as one thousandth of a millisecond, a millisecond as one thousandth of a second, a minute as sixty seconds, an hour as sixty minutes, and a day as twenty four hours.
and thereby broke: Links, Tags, sentences. .....
11:17
I see
and that is, well suboptimal
fge
fge
@Unihedron I'm in :p
TBH, chat's own stripping mechanism does this as well
@Vogel612 Shall we let it be and laugh at you for occasional failures when that happens instead?
Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long. Star me, I'm so long.
11:18
@Unihedron eh??
Try to star that ^
And look to the right
Huh, it was fixed
...
@fge The regex wizards are offline. :P
@Unihedron ermph.. I don't like that...
fge
fge
@Unihedron speaking of regexes, I have a project in the back of my mind, a very complex one but which will be fun
Try starring it now?
11:19
anyways, food
@fge :D
@SecondRikudo they fixed it
Yeah, they totally fixed it.
The user who built regexdoc lives in the RegEx room :P
fge
fge
@Unihedron using grappa, build an engine which recognizes several regex engines and acts like the regex engine in question, building a grammar for that regex with grappa itself
That can be a lot of fun
11:21
lol :D
fge
fge
Now that I have event based parsing it becomes easy to collect warning messages etc, recognize tokens, explain what they do etc
java PCRE lib pls
fge
fge
(but I need to get cracked on indy)
Yay indy!
fge
fge
Parser theory is fun, but in addition to that this project also involves bytecode generation
Even more fun; you have to learn about stack-based engines
(which the JVM is, basically)
With no transition, this still hasn't got an answer: stackoverflow.com/q/27238404/1093528
fge
fge
11:51
3
A: Does java take time to call a method?

fgeYou will not obtain any meaningful benchmark this way. You don't account for the JIT. The compiler will not perform any optimization in this regard, apart from very obvious ones; when it sees a method call in the source code, even if this method call always returns the same value, it will gener...

You want to watch the linked video!
Ooo, a long talk. But the subject is interesting so I'll definitely watch it some time
@fge fixed that horizontal bar.
fge
fge
@Unihedron what horizontal bar?
The horizontal bar. The one I'm replying to.
fge
fge
Sorry but you completely lost me here
hi everybody
@Unihedron ERR::TOO_MANY_REDIRECTS
fge
fge
@Unihedron aah... Well, I'm a "pure text writer" ;)
@Vogel612 The great firewall again?
12:08
I have no idea TBH...
Thanks for the comment, it was very useful! I can't watch the video now but I will watch it as soon as I get home. — Alvaro Lemos 31 secs ago
Greetings.
That comment deserves to be flagged three times, each with the three reasons in the middle used.
hi
12:30
@Unihedron I'll go with this for tokenizing for now ;) regex101.com/r/gU9xT4/5
\o/
May I suggest?
Change the second ([-*_]{1,3})?+ into a backreference: \2
@Unihedron can i take sometime ?
@AniketDeshmukh User.getByName("Aniket").give(Objects.TIME);
fge
fge
@Vogel612 really you don't want to use regexes for that
12:34
@fge suggest a better alternative...
fge
fge
@Vogel612: grappa -- PEG grammars entirely in Java
Fork of parboiled, and one package using parboiled is pegdown -- a PEG MarkDown parser
1 hour ago, by Unihedron
in RegEx - Regular Expressions, Nov 17 at 13:46, by Unihedron
to parse or to use regex... that is the question
Dun dun dun
(the mystery continues as Vog tries to consume that one markdown message)
fge
fge
I really wish I have had the opportunity to have real CS courses... I'm too old for that now :/
@Unihedron meh.
fge
fge
If someone knows of some good books on parser theory...
12:39
@fge You're in luck!
Stack Exchange has ALL the answers!
But does the free candy truck actually had free candy?
Though I'm sure all those parsers uses regex somewhere within. They have to use something.
fge
fge
eyes @Unihedron warily -- what was that question about?
@Unihedron grappa uses no regexes at all
It can emulate a regex engine, albeit with some difficulty since PEG is not LALR, so the context has to do some work for you
~JavaBot, at your service
**javadoc:FunctionalInterface
@Vogel612 Sorry, I never heard of that class. :(
darnit
=javadoc java.lang.String
@SecondRikudo java.lang.String: The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc", are implemented as instances of this class.
fge
fge
=javadoc java.lang.String#codePoints()
12:54
Gotta love the users who ask questions, and then abandon them. As if not responding to the clarification requests would make getting answers easier.
@fge That method doesn't exist.
fge
fge
Uh?
It does
String implements CharSequence and CharSequence defines .codePoints()
Bug? :p
@kiheru Every single time I answer something.

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