« first day (1302 days earlier)      last day (3866 days later) » 

11:12
Hi there
Pls help me with my question
1
Q: How to update session attribute

MonanshI have some session attributes being saved. I have a jsp page on which a call to a servlet is made through. This servlet updates one of the session variable but I am not able to see the reflection of these changes in my jsp.Pls help. In My servlet List<DriverList> abc = dao.getABC(); re...

Hello all
11:39
@Anonymous Can u pls help
 
2 hours later…
13:58
Good morning, Java!
fge
fge
14:10
Good morning milord
@Michael progressing, slowly
I know it is far from being perfect ;)
I am thinking about the API as I progress
Also, a quoted-printable property value will only end in a "=" if it contains multiple lines.
fge
fge
Grr
@Michael want to try and modify the grammar? :p
The last line doesn't end in a "=".
Would I edit QuotedPrintableValueParser?
fge
fge
@Michael I guess at this point what needs modifying is VcardValueParser, since right now it supposes a "joining" rule and a "joined" rule but apparently this is not the case... So that would mean modifying RegularValueParser as well
14:28
Would end() need to be modified?
Because the "end" condition for quoted-printable values is: ends in just "\r\n"
fge
fge
@Michael or even removed from the abstract class
At this point, you know better than me ;)
All that matters is that accumulator()accumulates the correct content and that its value is pushed before returning
Should an abstract method be added?
fge
fge
And I also know that at the moment I don't even take into account in-value escapes :p
@Michael if necessary... You are the one who knows here ;)
I don't know what to change. >.<
fge
fge
14:46
Well, you know what to match, so start from here ;)
This parser is means to parse "property values" or whatever the name is for vCard, that is, the part after the ':'
Right now it will only swallow the whole value as a string, without worrying about escapes etc -- I'll modify for that later
Oh ok.
Well, if the value is not quoted-printable, then I want to keep parsing each line until I encounter an unfolded line.
If the value is quoted-printable, then I want to keep parsing each line until I reach a line that does not end in "=".
In the former, I want to ignore the whitespace at the beginning of each line.
In the latter, I do not want to ignore any characters at the beginning of each line.
fge
fge
Yes, which is why I had this fold() rule
Note that all rules are in fact character based
But in quoted printable, isn't the line separator =0D0A\r\n?
No, it's =\r\n.
fge
fge
You lost me somewhat... From your example I understood that in quoted printable, continuation was the above and the end is signaled by a sole = followed by crlf
So, what is =0D0A\r\n for then?
No, the end is signaled by just "\r\n".
@fge I don't know where you got that. xD
fge
fge
15:01
Well, it's in your javadoc :p
Where? o.O
fge
fge
In FoldedLineReader to be precise
Starting line 128
(note: I use 0.9.3)
Are you referring to this example?
fge
fge
Well, yes
BEGIN:VCARD
NOTE;QUOTED-PRINTABLE: This is an=0D=0A=
annoyingly formatted=0D=0A=
note=

END:VCARD
fge
fge
15:03
Yes, exactly
You'll notice that there's an empty line after the "note=" line.
fge
fge
Uh, I admit I didn't pay attention to that
Because "note=" ends in an "=", the empty line is considered part of the value.
This is an edge case.
It happens occasionally, but not often.
A typical value might look like:
BEGIN:VCARD
NOTE;QUOTED-PRINTABLE: This is an=0D=0A=
annoyingly formatted=0D=0A=
note
END:VCARD
fge
fge
OK, well, then it is a case for optional()
Rule annoyingEnd() { return optional("=\r\n", "\r\n", accumulator.append(match())); }
Hmmno, not quite
Rather, `Rule annoyingEnd() { return optional("=\r\n", accumulator.append("\r\n")); }
And then the end rule can be a simple crlf()
Right?
Right.
fge
fge
15:10
phew
@Michael I definitely appreciate talking with you on that, it makes me highlight some deficiencies in the API etc
The event based parsing was already a huge leap forward
But nothing replaces real life use cases :p
Indeed.
fge
fge
I have a new interface in mind to help events
A ValueBuiler<T>
I just encountered the Geo example
And this is what made me think of it
No need to name your events anymore
You just have a buildEvent() method which takes a ValueBuilder<T> as an argument and an instance of T will be posted on the bus by calling this builder's .build() method
So, for instance, a ValueBuilder<Geo>
And in the listener, you have a @Subscribe public void setGeo(@Nonnull final Geo geo)
Ideally I wish EventBus had a "mixin API" like Jackson
That would allow me to do stuff like that:
final EventBusMixin<VCard> vcardMixin = EventBusMixin.forClass(VCard.class);
vCardMixin.methodByName("setFormatttedName").isSubscriber();
etc etc
Or something like that
But it means I wouldn't have to write listener classes in the first place!
What do you think?
Actually, there is a method called "addProperty()", which probably would be better. This is what all the setters call
It works with all property classes.
fge
fge
Hmm, looking that up
It would be better to use that because a "setter" method will overwrite any existing properties.
And I don't want any properties to be lost during parsing.
fge
fge
15:24
Uh
Again getting too complicated for me at the moment :/
How so? You would only need to subscribe one method? vCardMixin.methodByName("addProperty").isSubscriber();
Instead of having to subscribe the setter method for each property.
fge
fge
I didn't mean it that way
I was having a look at that class and it has a s*load of methods
Also, does it deal with VCardVersion?
Are you referring to the VCard class?
fge
fge
Well, this is the class I use to "inject" values
What class are you referring to, then?
fge
fge
15:32
OK, the question is really: is VCardVersion a property as well?
ie, can I set it using a VCardProperty instance?
No, ez-vcard does not parse the VERSION property as a normal property.
You have to use the setVersion() method.
fge
fge
So I still need the dedicated event for that, OK ;)
Same thing with the BEGIN and END properties. ez-vcard treats these properties as part of the syntax, and not actual properties.
fge
fge
15:49
OK, so, what about the grammar ;)
You should only parse the text in between "BEGIN:VCARD" and "END:VCARD" properties, so I guess you'd need events for those.
fge
fge
16:05
Well, if you see the main grammar, you see that I accounted for those ;)
Ah ok.
fge
fge
I take it you are not up to modifying VcardValueParser? ;)
I am currently doing some refactoring work on ez-vcard.
Reducing some code duplication. :)
fge
fge
And adding Guava? :p
16:36
@fge It would be nice to have, but I want ez-vcard to have as few dependencies as possible.
17:22
Does anyone here know about reducing memory usage with data structures like a radix tree?
Right now, the code I am working with has a huge number of maps, where the keys and values are both doubles
fge
fge
@user6851 that doesn't mean a radix tree is the solution for you
Haha, actually I don't know that much about them
The values aren't necessarily distinct in each map
So my idea is that instead of duplicating them, I could put them in a big tree and store a reference to the tree node
Using the radix tree, you can store a double value using less than 8 bytes, maybe even just 1 byte depending on how different it is from other values in the tree, correct?
But the problem is that as the program executes, the values may have to be replaced. So the problem is I don't know when a value can actually be removed from the tree
fge
fge
@user6851 you don't want to store 1 byte
It's a waste of space
Alignment will expand this byte to 4 in the JVM
And the native architecture maybe even more than that
Basically, a trie would be enough
But anyway, what is it you do with these maps? Why do you have that many?
It is the weights of outcomes in importance sampling
In statistics, importance sampling is a general technique for estimating properties of a particular distribution, while only having samples generated from a different distribution rather than the distribution of interest. It is related to umbrella sampling in computational physics. Depending on the application, the term may refer to the process of sampling from this alternative distribution, the process of inference, or both. Basic theory Let X:\Omega\to \mathbb{R} be a random variable in some probability space (\Omega,\mathcal{F},P). We wish to estimate the expected value of X under P....
There are a huge number of continuous random variables
And I need to take a lot of samples, like a million
So each time they will most likely result in a distict floating point value and be assigned a floating point weight
fge
fge
17:39
OK, sorry, I don't understand much of the article, but what is it that you inject as values and what do you need to retrieve as information?
The idea is that in each sample or iteration, a value is generated from each variable and assigned a weight
Scratch that
To be less confusing I'll say 'outcomes', not values
So each variable has a map of outcome -> weight
fge
fge
Hmm, and you need to retrieve a weight for a given outcome?
At the end of the algorithm, you can get somethin glike the average or expected value by summing all of the outcomes times their weights
Yeah, that as well
You can query the algorithm for the weight of a specific outcome
fge
fge
And you have several map for what? One per sampling?
One outcome and one weight per sample
But maybe hundreds of thousands of variables, and each one has a map
And we need to do something like 1000000 samples
fge
fge
17:43
You lost me
What is a "variable" here?
Ah, a random variable like in statistics
fge
fge
I'm no stats guy, my math knownledge is limited :p
In the code, it just comes down to an identifier really
fge
fge
OK, so what is the relationship between one "variable" and a sample? How do you know where to inject the sample?
In each iteration (sample) an outcome is generated for each "variable" and stored in the corresponding map
So the algorithm has a list of pairs of ("variable", map[outcome -> weight])
fge
fge
17:49
OK, I see
(I think)
And that list of pairs is the problematic section
The memory usage becomes really big
So my original thought was instead of storing all the weights inside the maps, they could be stored in some memory efficient tree structure and just referenced from the map
But I really don't know anything about memory efficient trees/tries/whatever
fge
fge
You don't want to play with maps like that
You need something else
Guava has Table which could help you here
I've heard of Guava, but not table
fge
fge
You'd do a Table<Double, Double, Set<Variable>> for instance
But of course it means poor performance if you need to lookup by variable
Another solution would indeed be a trie
It depends on what lookups you need to perform
Your data structure should reflect that
The algorithm never has to read a value, but it does have to update them
fge
fge
17:56
Eh?
It has to revise the weights assigned to an outcome
But it never has to use lookup the weights as part of the computation
The actual lookups are done later on, and usually not very many so it is ok if that part is slow
fge
fge
But you need to at some point, don't you?
Also, what of variables?
And what do you lookup?
The number of variables will be fixed, and known up front when the algorithm begins
fge
fge
OK, no idea if this is relevant (I still don't understand much) but maybe you can have a "two level trie"
The first level would be samples, the second outcomes
And in the second level you store a set of variables for which this sample/outcome exists
But value update is a problem
That sounds like the right approach
fge
fge
18:02
Well, how about updates?
When you update you update a sample for a given variable IIUC?
Right - In each iteration (sample), an outcome is created for a variable. If that outcome already exists in the map, the weight has to be updated.
Here is one thought
In the scenarios where the memory usage becomes a problem, there is very little chance of repeating an outcome anyway
In fact, that's part of the reason why the memory usage is so bad
Ah, wait
The update that is performed is just the sum of the old weight plus the new weight
So I think your idea might work fine
Ah, hmm, I don't know. I need to read more about tries in general
fge
fge
The trie may need to change
First level: sample, second level: variable
Ideally your variables should implement Comparable as well
That won't work out of the box for you and you'd have two levels only
Also, I go through a builder since once the trie is built I don't need to update it
Ah, cool
fge
fge
Your scenario is different
But you may also give a go at a Table<Double, Variable, Double>, although the boxing of doubles is not a good thing
Yeah, that is another problem of the current implementation, since all the values are boxed
fge
fge
18:17
Well, something along those lines anyway; but you don't really need a trie, really
It is made for fast lookups but your lookups are rather simple
Your problem is space, so you need a special structure... Maybe inspired by a trie, yes
fge
fge
19:04
@Michael I can't figure out the API :(
@fge Of?
fge
fge
@Michael of building a VCardParameter instance
I first parse the name, then the value -- how do I operate from there and how do I add that to the vCard afterwards?
@fge It's a multimap, basically.
Call the "put" method.
fge
fge
Of which class?
VCardParameter*s*
Call "VCardParameters.put(String, String)"
fge
fge
19:09
OK, and after that?
Ignore the VCardParameter class.
Then, assign the VCardParameters instance to the property object by calling the setParameters() method.
fge
fge
But VCardProperty cannot be instantiated
And VCardParameters does not have a method which can return a property either :/
Right, you have to assign the "VCardParameters" object to the property object after the property object is created.
fge
fge
And how do I do that? :p
You have to instantiate the appropriate property class based on the property you are parsing.
For example an FN property uses the FormattedName class.
So you would do:
VCardParameters parameters = ...
FormattedName fn = new FormattedName(value);
fn.setParameters(parameters);
fge
fge
19:16
Uh
Isn't there a class which does that for me?
Oh, yes.
FormattedNameScribe.
fge
fge
No, I mean, given a name (for instance FN), creates the appropriate instance
Something like vCardProperty.forName(theName).newInstance(value)
ScribeIndex index = new ScribeIndex();
VCardPropertyScribe<? extends VCardProperty> scribe = index.getPropertyScribe("FN");
VCardVersion version = //the VERSION property
VCardParameters parameters = //the parsed parameters
String valueParam = parameters.getValue();
if (valueParam != null){
  VCardDataType dataType = VCardDataType.get(valueParam);
  parameters.removeValue();
}
Result<? extends VCardProperty> result = scribe.parseText(value, dataType, version, parameters);
VCardProperty property = result.getProperty();
fge
fge
Weee
OK
And if valueParam is null however dataType is also null
Well, undefined even
Wait.
String valueParam = parameters.getValue();
VCardDataType dataType;
if (valueParam == null){
  dataType = scribe.defaultDataType(version);
} else {
  dataType = VCardDataType.get(valueParam);
  parameters.removeValue();
}
fge
fge
19:31
OK, and then how do I add that property to a vCard since VCard has no .addProperty()?
@fge The VCard class does have a "addProperty()" method.
fge
fge
Oh, sorry
Was looking at the wrong thing
What is a VCardParameters? Is that the part after the semicolon in, for instance, FOO;BAR=BAZ?
Yep.
The parameters are between the first semi-colon and the colon.
fge
fge
OK, I'll handle that later then
So, "value" is the part after the semicolon, and "parameters" are the parameters, if any; it can be an empty thing
Right?
The property value comes after the colon. A property can have no parameters.
There's also the group name.
It comes before the property name and is separated from the property name by a dot.
For example: group1.FN:John Doe
Groups are optional.
fge
fge
19:43
I'll do this little by little if you don't mind :p
You don't need to convert the property name to uppercase before passing it into getPropertyScribe(). It's case-insensitive.
fge
fge
OK, done
If a scribe isn't found, you could instead create a new RawPropertyScribe.
This scribe stores the property name and the raw property value, without doing any parsing on it.
fge
fge
19:49
It is legal in vCard?
Yes, it's legal to use what are called "extended properties". These are user-defined properties whose names begin with "X-".
fge
fge
OK, so there is a constraint to these names
Yeah.
fge
fge
OK, I know how I'll handle that
Hmmwait
How do I set the name of an extended property?
Idiot question, forget it :p
It's in the constructor: new RawPropertyScribe("X-FOO");
So you'd be creating a new scribe for every extended property.
fge
fge
20:13
Yess, seems to work fine
Nice.
fge
fge
Next, escapes
So, what escapes are available in what version?
The "VCARD" in "(BEGIN|END):VCARD" is case-insensitive.
Also, in version 2.1, the VERSION property can be located anywhere within the vCard.
fge
fge
Yes, I know about the "version anywhere" ;)
fge
fge
20:27
OK, so vcard is case insensitive
But not BEGIN and END?
Oh, those are case-insensitive too.
Property names are case-insensitive, though, in practice, they are always in upper-case.
So, for escapes, vCard uses the standard backslash-escaping mechanism.
\n or \N is an escaped newline.
Commas and semi-colons are also escaped, since they are treated as special characters in some properties.
And, of course, backslashes are escaped.
fge
fge
Hmmwait
Your scribes don't handle these escapes, right?
They do.
I forget if there was a reason.
I guess I thought it was safer to do the escaping in the scribe, incase a property had special rules.
fge
fge
But if I append an already escaped string, what happens?
Ah, ok. You don't need to handle escaping, since the scribes handle it.
fge
fge
20:33
Uhwell, OK, but that is where the parser can help ;)
I can't remember if there was a reason why I moved the escaping into the scribes.
fge
fge
So, if I want to feed escaped strings I basically have to build properties "by hand"?
Well, the vCard spec doesn't really solidly define these escaping rules .
4.0 was better at solidifying it, but 3.0 wasn't as specific.
Oh, I remember why now.
Say you have a "N" property with an escaped semi-colon: N:Doe;John;foo\;bar;;
If you unescape the value before it's fed to the scribe, the scribe will think there's an extra component when there shouldn't be.
Instead of parsing the property value as [Doe, John, foo;bar], it will parse it as [Doe, John, foo, bar]
fge
fge
OK, I know how I'm going to do it... Replace scribe instantiations with specific property buildings as I go on ;)
What about caret escapes?
Those are for parameter values.
Parameter values have different rules.
If you want to include a special character, like a semi-colon or colon, in version 3.0 and 4.0, you surround the value with double quotes.
Version 2.1 doesn't support the double quoting mechanism
However, it does allow semi-colons to be escaped with backslashes.
Caret escapes allow you to include double quotes and newlines in a parameter value, which the vCard spec doesn't allow.
fge
fge
20:45
OK, so those are not for property values then
Correct.

« first day (1302 days earlier)      last day (3866 days later) »