@Eggy Good question gets upvoted and bad questions gets downvoted. Some users downvote for that they do not understand it (tactical downvoting), but you are free to butter-up your question while in the chat room to put together a clear and clean question. Also see this:
My earlier blog post on how to write a good question is pretty long, and I suspect that even when I refer people to it, often they don't bother reading it. So here's a short list of questions to check after you've written a question (and to think about before you write the question):
Have you d...
but that's not the problem. the problem is when you try to run it, you can enter the values but the final line return: The building name is: nullnull Building
nullnull is the problem. I'm sure I'm not getting something here
Yeah. You meant to write to the fields personName and departmentName. What you did instead was that you created a new field and wrote to it, then did nothing to Building.personName.
Use this.personName = ... (or no this at all) instead.
Which IDE are you using? (Or TextPad?)
... @Sabಠ_ಠ?
If you're in Eclipse. go to Window > Preferences > Java > Compiler > Errors/Warnings and turn most of it to Warning. One of them should enable an option which lets your IDE yell at you for unused fields, so you could spot this easier next time.
But the point is, call a JS method within your JApp using JSObject.call() wrapped in try-catch. You can wrap your methods within your applet to send the exception message to JS method. Object[] should have correct number of args to call updateServer()