Since Java has a poor use of memory and runs in a virtual machine of its own per program.
Yes stuff you do, but in Java you can't really take control of the memory in any way.
Although I think its a fantastic place to begin programming and game development but if you want to make a more complex program or game a language elsewhere is going to be much better.
I honestly couldn't really say because in my programming experiences I have only had the experience of using auto release pools instead of having to do anything manually so i have a poor understand of when memory should even be released.
Eg. Objective-C with the fantastic autoreleasepool{}
as oppose to its older versions of when you literally had to take an object and flush out the unneeded memory as specific times.
I have to say this: Unless you're writing something that's specific to the guts of a piece of hardware, you are very ignorant if you think that Java can't be as performant as C/C++. In addition, unless you have many multiple years of writing memory management code, in any language, you'd be foolish to try.
And that's speaking from 20+ years as both a C and Java programmer, writing super-high performant applications
And in all honesty I only know from what I have read and heard so I am not a valid source of this information. I have heard Java has a poor use of memory although these articles and people could be wrong or possibly I have a mis understanding of what they are trying to say.
it does have somewhat of performance issues when your not running it on a very good computer although I suppose that would be the same for most any language
[Netbeans] Help. I get this error, despite having javax.persistence.EntityManager under libraries in netbeans: error: package javax.persistence does not exist import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
@Rok Is that package on the classpath when the program is executed?
All classes that are used within a Java program must be on the classpath during compilation in order to compile successfully.
However, classes can also be used via reflection. Classes used in this way do not need to be on the classpath in order for the compilation succeed.
However, if those classes are referenced during runtime, and they are not on the classpath, an error will occur, despite he compilation having been successful.
One common example of reflection being used in this way is the instantiation of an application's database connection.
The database's JDBC driver is initialized via reflection using the Class.forName() method, and then the connection is established with a JDBC connection URL.
The database driver does not need to be on the classpath for the compilation to succeed. However, an error will undoubtedly appear as soon as the application is run if the driver is not on the classpath.