@Vogel612 I doubt that explicit warning you mention is valid and/or fair. @Gemtastic was completely off topic and when she decided she didn't want to play anymore she decided, in capitals (which is always a poor choice), to warn other users for being off-topic. I don't see you reprimanding her for any of that. Also, it's not the first time we discuss her being unfair (I do remember you telling me off for, and I quote, "beating a dead horse)
@Vogel612 fair point. I'll explain myself better and longer. @Gemtastic can be off-topic as much as she wants. I personally have never seen her reprimanded for that (not saying it hasn't happened. I haven't seen it. If it has happened, it hasn't happened as often as with other people). She has reprimanded other people for being off-topic more than once
I'd like an example of how it is unfair that everyone partaking in the politics discussion had the entries removed because the discussion isn't appropriate for this chat. Judging what topics are ok and which aren't is the job of anRO.
And I'll be both more clear about when I'm speaking as RO and as a user, as well ans not getting pulled along with bad topics and end them as an RO immediately instead.
I'll admit I shouldn't have further participated in the conversation after I was told not to. That is probably something I should work on. I however, don't think kick-muting is an appropriate response
Hi. In long-running programs with the Hotspot parallel collector, is it expected that the heap size will grow to Xmx even if live object size never gets close to that? I have a long-running script which steadily grows to 1024M, but doing a jmap -dump:live,format=b showed only 66MB of that was live objects.
docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/stream/… "The classification function maps elements to some key type K. The collector produces a Map<K, List<T>> whose keys are the values resulting from applying the classification function to the input elements, and whose corresponding values are Lists containing the input elements which map to the associated key under the classification function."
I'm used to doing android apps and I do all my own declaration of variables... netbeans does that for you and doesn't allow you to change them unless there is a way to do it that i'm missing.... I'd rather just declare the variable public from the get go rather than have to worry about it later
the only time I can imagine that happening is when you try to change the inner workings of an external dependency, where accessing that field is probably either stupid or dangerous or both
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2016/01/05/the-childhood-of-a-coder-a-certain-sense-of-satisfaction/ CommitStrip The Childhood of a Coder – a certain sense of satisfaction CommitStrip 1452016876