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?
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)
@Unihedron annotationjava.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.
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.
@ItachiUchiha By having the JIT compiler interpret "if_acmpeq param1 param2" into machine code for "are the two references in the topmost stack equal".
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.
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
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.
@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 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)
@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
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
@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
@Vogel612 annotationjava.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.
@ItachiUchiha finalclassjava.lang.String: The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc", are implemented as instances of this class.
@Unihedron enumjava.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...
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.
@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
You 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...
@SecondRikudo finalclassjava.lang.String: The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc", are implemented as instances of this class.