"Own 100 percent of your focus. The most challenging of endurance drills will bring you to a level of optimal mental and physical performance." -Lorii Myers (source)
Richard Plantagenet Campbell Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, (10 September 1823 β 26 March 1889), styled Earl Temple until 1839 and Marquess of Chandos from 1839 to 1861, was a British soldier, politician and administrator of the 19th century. He was a close friend and subordinate of Benjamin Disraeli and served as the Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1867 to 1868 and Governor of Madras from 1875 to 1880.
Buckingham was the only son of Richard Temple-Grenville, 2nd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, and was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford...
management report: finished projects (sorta summary + stakeholders) / current project schedules (same) / tasks flow (internal flow to my QA team) / budget information (prepared by an accountant here, I just use those data) / summary of future projects
my manager then reads it and uses it during the 3-monthly board meeting with all "big chiefs"
sometimes I have to do a presentation to explain some projects in details and its progress
Well no idea for the JSPs, never had to use such... But have a lot of exp with XML alike scripting(which looks like so) and the only way around there is recursion
what does it mean a "clean" recursion?
Take a look at this example as well. It doesn't operate over any JDO's nor DOM(or whatever abstraction of an object for the presentation layer) but still It should give you the clue you need I guess... http://www.java2s.com/Code/Java/JSP/UsingRecursion.htm
Pretty sure you can do this... Let me check. I hate doing static code analysis over random net resources :shaking:
@KarelG can you give me a practical example of what you try to achieve... I couldn't find anything against using "clean/any" recursion in a JSP according to the docs
basically you have all the loops structures, you can define your recursive functions and call them later with an input bean and so on, so I don't see any restriction for using it
well All the sources I found that has a similar issue suggest the use of "Either build it to string or add an abstraction bean that serves the purpose" so I guess it's not recommended to use recursion :/
Put Iterable into the model:
model.addAttribute("mediaFiles", repository.findAll());
Then loop in the JSP, using JSTL:
<%@ taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core" prefix="c" %>
<html>
<body>
<ul>
<c:forEach var="mediaFile" items="${mediaFiles}">
<li><c:out value="${mediaFile.name}"/
Me and a buddy here just were on the road for 15 minutes to get there and 15 minutes back because "computer total failure; doesn't boot at all" (which was what it said in the support ticket). We ended up screwing in the monitor cable all in, asked the lady to login, checked everything was there, and wished a nice day.
No I am a college student (Duales Studium if you know that) and usually program stuff here, but we know each other quite well (we started here together) and he asked if I wanted to join as my office is a lot worse than a car ride.
I once got a ticket that outlook was broken, connected to their computer, they mentioned that they'd reboot it real quick and lo' and behold, it worked after that.
archive - contact - sexy exciting merchandise - search - about ← previousJanuary 18th, 2019nextJanuary 18th, 2019: This comic is brought to you by my brain.– Ryan
English appears to be quite an easy language to learn, there are just many special cases you'll come across. But even if you fail at those, people will still understand you most of the time.
@JennaSloan Here's the javadoc for the hail method: /** the hail method reads the passed String and determines which real-world object it references. It then either causes icy precipitation in the shape of the object, or worships it. This outcome is decided pseudorandomly. A potential bug, or perhaps positive externality: if hail worships the real-world object, it may also summon it. */