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01:31
Anybody know about using GroupLayouts with JPanels within a JFrame using a GroupLayout? I've been having much trouble with it even though I'm nearly mimicing online code.
01:52
Nvm! Stupid typo.
02:17
HI
 
1 hour later…
03:43
Guess no chat room exists specifically for tomcat :/ I'll go sit in one.
Hello ItachiUchiha
has anyone worked on JAI ?
Not me, sorry.
hmm..seems no 1 is intersted in JAVA nemre :P
03:50
It may seem that way. What's JAI
?
JAVA ADVANCED IMAGING
OK, don't need to yell.
m not yelling :P
Shhh
@Kylar sssssssssshhhhhhhh
 
2 hours later…
06:05
hello
any one there?
 
1 hour later…
07:07
0
Q: What am I doing wrong with this 3x3 Mean filter?

User1204501I am trying to implement a Mean Filter on a coloured image for an Android application. When I apply the filter on a chosen image, this is what happens when I run the following code on the image. Does anyone have any suggestions on what I have done wrong? protected Bitmap filterImage(Bitmap image...

07:44
@Kylar Hey! there?
 
5 hours later…
12:37
0
Q: Transparency in TIF using JAI

ItachiUchihaI am trying to overlay a TIF image over a JPEG image, the TIF image has a transparent background, which is visible as white color, when opened through general picture viewer and can be viewed as transparent when opened through photoshop. Now, when I am trying to overlay this TIF image on a JPEG i...

 
4 hours later…
16:15
hi
hi @draconis
 
1 hour later…
17:22
Hey everyone!
@Michael sup!
hi @appu :D
@Michael How are you? It's been long time again ;)
@Appu good thanks, how are you
I am good too, thanks. what else?
17:46
0
Q: Applying a Transparent Frame TIFF image over a JPEG image

ItachiUchihaI have a frame which has only lower edge, the rest of the image is a transparent frame which is exactly of the size of the image on which i want to overlay it. Any idea how I can achieve this in java. The overlaying image is in TIFF format.

18:32
@Kumar I'm here now....
and Hi all
hi @kylar
Hey @Michael. How's life
@Kylar Good thanks, how are you?
I am almost ready to release the next version of my iCalendar library: sourceforge.net/projects/biweekly
I made a lot of changes since the last release.
Yesterday, I modified the validation functionality to return a single object containing the list of validation warnings, instead of a list of objects.
Great!
I've recently moved off of doing CardDAV and CalDAV and moved to a new group
So trying all kinds of neat-o stuff
By doing this, I can add helper functions that allows the user to perform searches over the validation data.
Nice
I haven't been making a lot of changes to my vCard library lately.
I want to release a new version once the jCard draft is finialized.
However, I have a lot of ideas on how to refactor the code-base that I got from creating the iCalendar library
18:47
oi vey, just spent three days trying to fix this stubborn bug, of course I spelt "layout" wrong..
(iCalendar and vCard files share similar syntax)
One change that I want to make is moving all the marshalling/unmarshalling code into separate classes. Currently, they exist inside of the data-model classes, which isn't very good design.
I also want to add functionality that allows you to validate the data model. Currently, the data model is validated during the marshalling process, which doesn't make much sense.
And I want to do some class renaming and re-arranging of the package structure.
I've also been toying around with Node.js, which is server-side Javascript that runs on the V8 engine.
The language's most distinguishing feature is its use of callbacks. The idea is that all I/O related tasks are handled asynchronously, so the function calls are not blocking.
This allows the application to handle other requests while, for example, it's waiting on a file to be read.
I also think it's interesting that it's single-threaded. The idea is that, if you need to scale your app, all you have to do is run multiple instances of your Node.js application.
So, for example, if your computer has 4 cores, you could create 4 instances of the same application to fully-utilize your computer's resources.
Since it's single threaded, you also don't have to worry about thread-safety issues, which Java is plagued by.

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