On each site we have to deploy to, we manually rename the backup copy of the file, copy the live one into its place, and copy the new file out to production.
Say we have 10 sites to deploy to, that's 10 manual renames, and 20 copy operations.
Then we have to wait for both webfarms to bounce manually.
I was tasked with creating an Annotation for Custom Validation. This was due to some problems with handling database constraint violations nicely. What I did in response to this was relatively simple. I created a class-level CustomConstraint specifically for the one domain-class that required it....
@Michael Not really. I'm doing more integration tests; those are where we lack coverage. My code self-tests when possible, and I ensure path coverage through my underlying manager and DAO classes.
We have a bunch of people working on mostly behavioral changes throughout a few shared libraries, and there are a lot of exception cases on each site that need to be tested.
The Big One, the system that drives most of my company's earnings, which provides purchasing access for retailers of our flagship products, is pre-Struts.
@Vogel612 And I'll say it one more time, because my point still hasn't come across. With ES6 all libraries that are written with an older standard, are upwards compatible.
Instead, Java 8 would include a new API (and deprecate the older one with a compiler notice, and nothing more) with the optimizations that were included.
Yer done.
No breaking changes.
Future libraries use the new API, old ones use the old one and don't break.
And there were times I technically was at the same company for longer, but due to group moves, acquisitions, etc, I was essentially doing a brand new job every 12-18 months
Then when I got here.. it changed. this week is 9 years.
I'm raging about how easily Java claims to be perfectly painless backwards compatible, where the pains grow exponentially with the number of libraries you have in your application.
Quick question, why does this chat room explicitly state that, in no uncertain terms, it is not for Android. Yet when a new Android question is posted, the java tag is recommended...
@EdGeorge That's a fairly complicated question. Android was built on the JDK's APIs, but people who know Java don't automatically know Android - it's quite a beast of it's own
@EdGeorge I would say that the practice of tagging all android Q's with the "java" tag is outdated, and should probably be stopped, unless the question is applicable to both.
@MadaraUchiha Because 1. they're unchecked, and 2. usually that indicates a runtime exception, not an implementation flaw such as when NPEs or Errors are thrown.
I inherited code once (that a guy wrote his PhD off of) that had beautiful variable names such as: xxxxxyz. xxxxxxxyz, xxxxxyyz, xyzzzzzzzz, xxyzzzzzz ... There was a fundamental error in an algorithm because he mixed up "xxxxxyz" with "xxxxxxxyz"
Guess how long it took me to find that bug.. face palm
So what about wrapping the exceptions thrown from that method with my own WhateverException extends Throwable and have the interface throws WhateverException?