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03:48
Hey everyone!
 
4 hours later…
07:36
morning
 
6 hours later…
13:21
Good morning, Java!
@softarn Your project will consume more disk space.
Hi
Hi @Karl.
@softarn It also adds more complexity to your project, which just makes things more difficult overall.
13:59
@aliteralmind What changes are you making?
Hello Michael. Can you help me with a regular expression problem? Nothing urgent
Of course.
So I'm looking to strip a trailing whitespace and comma from each line in a plaintext file
that is ", "
how would I go about doing this?
I tried java.lang.String#replaceAll(" ,$", "")
Actually, nvm. I changed the code to be more complex - avoiding the need to use reg ex
What do you mean by "trailing whitespace"?
this was the code: "%.2f, %.2f, %d, %d, " printed to a line 6 times
the format string that is
14:08
So, what you mean is, "a trailing space and comma".
so I've just removed the comma and placed it in manually
yeah precisely
The term "whitespace" also includes tab and newline characters.
Ideally, I'd use a visitor pattern to visit the plaintext after writing to it, removing all trailing space and comma
Oh I see, not what I meant to say then.
As the new line is important for when I go to graph the data.
It would be more efficient to write code that does not print the final space and comma at all.
@Michael: Good morning.
14:11
Hi @aliteralmind
Yes, quite.
I had to rewrite something you'd only use when you get into "custom customizers" (aliteralmind.com/docs/computer/programming/codelet/…)
I believe Apache Commons Lang has a "join" method, which allows you to do this.
@Michael: Otherwise no changes at all.
If your project does not use that library, it might be worth it to write your own, as printing delimited strings is a common operation.
@aliteralmind I thought you said you had to rewrite something?
14:14
I found the apache commons API perfect for what I'm doing. Thank you @Michael
You're welcome.
@aliteralmind That is, you needed a day or two to work on it.
@Michael: The re-write is done. I'm integrating it back into Codelet, and fixing related documentation and build issues.
Ah ok.
Should be done in a day or two, as I mentioned.
What do these changes do?
14:21
@Michael: Sure. Give me minute..
@Michael: Okay.
This is something you'd only encounter when using a "custom customizer", as in this example
It's the final, and most-advanced-by-far example, so it's long.
@aliteralmind What is a custom customizer?
Click on the "one", "two", and "three" to see the actual code.
Normally, when printing an example code with Codelet, you just use a built-in customizer, like in this example
A customizer (a) eliminates unwanted lines, which is whatever you define that to be: the license block, all Java multi-line comments, the package declaration line, whatever.
(b) alters the remaining "kept" lines.
and (c) provides a template to put it all in.
So it "scrubs" the source code to make it more presentable.
The original (a) part, the line-filter, was clunky and inflexible.
@Michael: Yes.
Now it's awesome.
It's a complete re-write, which I'd never do when people start using it, but no one's using it yet, so I'm taking the liberty.
Here's a basic example use of the new line-filter. Just look at the "example proper" section. aliteralmind.com/docs/computer/programming/xbnjava/…
That page is actually a full tutorial on what the line filter--called 'FilteredLineIterator`--is capable of.
@Michael: Anything else I can explain?
14:38
I always thought an Adder was an 2 xor gates + 2 and gates
I should say: Normally you'll use a built-in customizer as in this example and this example
A custom customizer is what is required when the built-ins are not sufficient.
why don't you use an interface as in

```IAdd { int sum(); }```
for the Adder class
@Michael: As a comparison, here's the same example with no customizer: aliteralmind.com/docs/computer/programming/codelet/…
then whenever you want to add things toegether you can implement the interface, and override the method depending on whether you add objects, ints, doubles etc.
oh lol it's to test codlet
i see
@ericGnuLuver: Oops :) Sorry if I confused you. I'm talking to @Michael
14:43
I really like how eclipse and javabeans autocomplete javadoc comments
for @param and @return and stuff
Err, docstring rather
@ali
Yes, very handy.
2
@aliteralmind no worries
it's too early in the morning for work :/
I need my lunch break already :DD
Mhm
How do you find -classpath and -sourcepath assist in building larger projects?
Just curious, I've seen them used before but never understood why.
@ericGnuLuver: If you think Codelet may help you, I need a select few beta testers to pound away at it, before I release it any wider.
I expect many criticisms will be necessary at this point, and I want to deal with them before releasing it any wider.
Of course of course. I am under a deadline to submit `interesting' findings to my supervisor around 3:00 this Friday. But I'll look at your docs some more when I have the time.
@Michael: Anything else I can explain?
Oh, I just said that :)
14:48
Yuk yuk
Are you busy building Codelet as a sideproject? or is it a full time occupation
@aliteralmind Can't think of any more questions at the moment. Thanks for your explanations. :)
@ericGnuLuver Are you researching Stackoverflow or something? xD
@ericGnuLuver: Full time project as a tool to getting in the door for an interview.
Been unemployed for a loooong time, as a stay-at-home dad.
Nah @M
@Michael
I mean
No I am not researching stackoverflow, haha.
Oh ok.
@aliteralmind good luck with your job hunt
14:52
Thanks.
I'm profiling Set implementations (HashSet, LinkedHashSet, and TreeSet) for add / query ops
trying to see if I can explain any thing extraordinary or expected
@Michael: I hope it's okay, I'm going to post/announce for beta testers in a few different places. I hope you and @fge get a chance to try it out more than anyone, but I really just some bodies...
@aliteralmind as a tip, your S/O profile would be better without "but it's been a while"
don't downplay your strengths :)
Gone :)
If you have five years experience that's a huge boon.
Right on!
14:57
Just added codelet, too.
@Michael how did you go about writing Sleek?
As in where did you start, how long did it take, etc.
@ericGnuLuver You mean Sleet?
Yes quite.
I was curious about learning how email worked, so I started reading the RFC document on SMTP.
15:05
I thought it would be fun to create my own SMTP server.
Yeah way cool
I like the code-base
Thanks!
No problem
SMTP is easier than you might think.
yeah RFC 5321 right?
15:07
Some of the commands are complex to implement, but the communication protocol is relatively simple.
Very true
@ericGnuLuver Yep.
UA == user agent? cool never knew that..
You just listen for plain-text messages on a specific port.
15:09
Hey everyone!
@Appu morning
@Appu!
How are you?
make a wish
(EST)
Got to go. Bye all.
15:18
@Michael: See you later.
15:52
@ericGnuLuver Morning! How are you?
@Michael I am good ya. How are you?
Seems you left ;/
16:19
back from lunch!
good good
17:16
Hello. Dead in here?
17:29
Zzzzz
17:44
yup
17:58
I have a love/hate relationship with Java today.
Leaning more towards hate lately.
Meh
Insightful
It could be worse
18:23
shit runs everywhere
JAVA IS AWESOME BITCHES
1 message moved from C#
really? Trolling again?
;)
Java > C#
sorry..
Eh you wish :P
18:27
Depends on what you're trying to do. If you're trying to write an enterprise app for windows, Java is clearly the wrong choice
All programming languages and tools go in your toolbox. Choose the right tool for the job.
Just because you're only good with a hammer - don't say that it's the right job for plumbing.
So it is said, so let it be done. Go in peace, my children.
 
1 hour later…
19:53
I'm having troubles with my tomcat configuration I'm getting a nullpointer exception on java/util/regex/Matcher.java Line number 1,234
You're passing in null
probably for the text portion of your matcher
let me double check this. I do not think I'm passing null.
no I am not passing null. Also, I want to mention that my coworker is able to run this part of the code on his machine, but I am not able to.
this is why I think its my tomcat configuration
Dude. Whatever you're passing into the Matcher as your CharSequence is null
the line 1234 of Matcher.java is:
    return text.length();
the only way you're throwing NPE on that line is if text is null
IE: you're passing null. Wherever you're getting the value that you're passing into the matcher, check there.
either in the constructor or in the reset() method
Dig into your stack trace and find out where you're constructing it. Then put a breakpoint. I'm not saying your tomcat config isn't horked, there's a good chance that's where your issue is. I'm just telling you what your actual problem is.
20:08
okay, it just doesn't make sense that my coworker is able to run the same code with the same parameters pass into it the same thing and still get a valid result.
when I cannot.
Obviously there is something different. Locations. Property files. I can't hold your hand here. you're going to have to do some forensics on your own.
right. thanks for the help
Anyone had the pleasure of working with GWT webapps?
Trying to figure out why Jetty DevMode server starts with error locating org.slf4j.LoggerFactory when clearly that jar is in my pom.xml.
Yet Tomcat launch works great.
Dependencies are probably wrong
20:26
Found a thread saying there's some issue where WEB-INF/lib must have all dependencies.
Jetty is finding maven dependencies on system classpath, not in WEB-INF/lib.
Probably how Tomcat is working, too.
Not sure why Jetty breaks where Tomcat doesn't
Seems to be a Jetty issue with classpath. :/
Only found this issue because I finally converted this project to maven.
Oh well. Just another complication of Java.
21:27
Sunspots, probably

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