java.lang.String: The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc", are implemented as instances of this class.
@Vogel612 thank god i solved it i will post a question for it as self reference. the problem was i tested my webservice on glassfish and its okay . but on weblogic it did not get the one to many relation ship
If you don't mind @Mic, I assume you have no need for the other JavaBot account you created? If so, would you mind sharing me the access so I can experiment websockets with him as well?
Double click needs to trigger both things. That's simply unavoidable as the computer can not read the mind of the user to detect that there is going to be a second click too
All toolkits have the same issue. A double click is also a single click. The only way to avoid that would be introducing a delay after a single click actions
Programming languages have been classified into several programming language generations. Historically, this classification was used to indicate increasing power of programming styles. Later writers have somewhat redefined the meanings as distinctions previously seen as important became less significant to current practice.
== Historical view of first three generations ==
=== First and second generation ===
The terms "first generation" and "second generation" programming language were not used prior to the coining of the term "third-generation"; neither of these three terms are mentioned in early...
Second-generation programming language (2GL) is a generational way to categorize assembly languages. The term was coined to provide a distinction from higher level third-generation programming languages (3GL) such as COBOL and earlier machine code languages. Second-generation programming languages have the following properties:
The code can be read and written by a programmer. To run on a computer it must be converted into a machine readable form, a process called assembly.
The language is specific to a particular processor family and environment.
Second-generation languages are sometimes used...
> A fifth generation programming language (abbreviated as 5GL) is a programming language based on solving problems using constraints given to the program, rather than using an algorithm written by a programmer.
Well, Forth was supposed to be 4th gen, and it's fast. The name got shortened as the system where it was developed could not handle longer than 5 character file names... I guess the language generations have got redefined since
Well, you could store a time stamp instead, and compare to that at the second click. Avoids any timer stuff. (That is, if you really need to roll your own double click handling at all)
Programming is about making impossible things possible. And I reassure you, we're telling you how to make catching double click events possible. Spoiler alert: They aren't.
My first suggestion is to not make your own double click handling and use the click counter from the event instead. In case that does not for some reason work (need to differ from default time frames, or different threshold for location, etc), I'd store a time stamp (and location). Avoids the timer and threading stuff
shocked as well with volatile... it was just 2 sentence something on a HeadFirst book about singletons, then i hear here that i would need to pull an all ighter