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00:41
Anyone alive?
Dead chat
01:01
Hey @Joe.
 
2 hours later…
03:23
Made some improvements to JavaBot's Javadoc code. Committed to master branch.
in Sandbox, 1 hour ago, by JavaBot
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.
03:36
morning
 
2 hours later…
05:52
Greetings can some one advise me ,
i have webservice ; on glassfish works will on weblogic not so well
means , one to many collection are retrieved in glassfish
but on web logic one to many does not work ! the collection return empty
i mean in json or xml syntax
 
2 hours later…
07:47
@shareef hmm. I don't understand what you are trying to do..
if you hadn't set the last sentence I would've suspected an inconsistent database state..
08:06
@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
@Vogel612 the reason was the library i used the error case i used eclipse link
hmmm...
@Vogel612 the solution just i used toplink and it work on glassfish and weblogic i took the idea from here stackoverflow.com/questions/23679513/…
@shareef I don't work with glassfish..
and bluntly speaking I don't really care how you solved it..
especially since someone seems to have killed the git-repo history...
08:53
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?
what is the monthly challenge??
09:08
@Vogel612 ?
"Upcoming event: Monthly Challenge Start"
Which site?
already dismissed..
sec
Can't you browse cached pages?
eehh?? you do know that was a "feeds" rss notification??
but it's just the web"developers" again ;)
09:10
Javascript -_-
I still got that notification slapped into my face..
anyways, back to writing docs..
10:03
@Vog I commented on #17.
 
3 hours later…
I already read about those :)
:(
Should had told me so I didn't need to write a new thread...
But other might not know?
Greetings
greets
13:07
HELLO GUYS!
HEY!!!
How are you today?
I emailed my game's .apk to myself, and tried to install it, parse error.
I'm fine thank you. Tried not stay late last night and had some morning dance exercise as suggested by the good folks here
Sounds good :)
13:13
Greets!
gritz
Yay 5.5k!
Please upvote this comment, it would suck to see it vanish stackoverflow.com/questions/26972688/…
@Unihedron You could also edit it into the answer...
@Vogel612 Hmm, ok!
ei guys?
'allo
13:22
does MouseListener always detect single click event?
tried testing it, it always fall inside the 1 click clause of my if
@Override
public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e) {

// double click means cancel
if (e.getClickCount() == 2) {
System.out.println("Rejected");

} else { // single click is accept
System.out.println("Accepted");
}
}
yep.. there, and tested it, doing double click would output:
accepted
rejected
@Vogel612 what do you is an interface anyway?
um... you probably need to count the clicks...
since you're listening to the Click event and not to something "dblclick"-like (in js terms)
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
@kiheru there is no doubleClick(MouseEvent e) in MouseListener
@LeeJeong you will have to build your own double-click listener...
public class DoubleClickListener implements MouseListener {
    private boolean clicked = false;
    @Override
    public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e) {
        if(!clicked) {
            clicked = true;
            // scedule a reset
        } else {
           // do stuff
        }
   }
@Vogel612 But there's the click counter. See the above code snippet
oh shits... doesnt someone had already mind creating this?
doesnt the Java designers thought of this as something handy? xD
@Vogel612 thanks for that man!
13:29
@LeeJeong most applications don't need a double-click functionality...
@kiheru I think that can only be... 0 or 1...
does it???
@Vogel612 It can do at least double clicks. I have not used it to detect triple clicks so I'm not sure about those
@kiheru hmm interesting...
@Vogel612 what does "schedule a reset" mean?
@LeeJeong well you know that a double click only counts as such if you do both clicks within a certain interval?
You need to reset the clicked to false when the time's up for things to be counted as double click..
13:33
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
@kiheru I got a parse error when I tried to install it.
@kiheru well you could do that in the above snippet...
this is getting more complicated than i thought. very different with my vb6 dev back in college. xD
Hello @DineshVenkata!
13:34
@LeeJeong visual basic?
eurgh..
I just ate, you know??
Sorry to burst your bubble, but... You realize VB is a scripting language, not a programming language?... xD
anybody works on android herE?
yap @Unihedron and from what i heard from you yesterday on the "silicon valley" movie topic, you said YUCK
@Vogel612 sorry, forgot to censor it :(
@DineshVenkata Android ftw!
13:35
ahaha...
@Unihedron there's some people on CR doing crazy things with vb...
@Vogel612 s,vb,excel,
@Unihedron sorry, i was not aware that VB was a scripting language.. ahaha.. my professor cant even distinguish between VB and java. dafuq
@Vogel612 CR?
@Unihedron nope... vb...
CodeReview
13:36
@LeeJeong My teacher once named HTML as "an advanced representation of programming". I almost murdered them died.
@LeeJeong Variant all the way..
ahahahahahahahahaha!
WTF!
@Unihedron interestingly it actually is
it's a level 2 syntax...
@Vogel612 reality sucks
which is... more advanced than level 1...
13:37
@LeeJeong Code Review. The two major factions of code sites on SE are PPCG (Programming Puzzles & Code Golf) and CR (Code Review).
what???
level 4 is object oriented right?
ermph is it??
i thought there was just 3 levels..
And level 5 is cognitive programming, which is as stupid as Prolog, right?
13:38
@Unihedron what i clearly know is, VB is very procedural thats why i stayed away from it, and JAVA, fell in love with it. xD so much simpler
Hmm...
dafuq man.. coding levels, this is the first time im hearing this.
*reading
I like it!
13:39
Coding levels?
GL 1-5
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...
Yes, so there ARE five levels...
Java is level 4. And level 5 is so premature that stuff which runs on that level are actually slow.
ahhh... generations!
13:41
You virtually won't have to care about GLs unless you actually study and acquire research-level expertise, though.
what level was assembly language?
2
(Don't mind me, I just like reading research-level articles for no real reason, I spend my time very well, for sure)
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...
you studied it?
ahaha
I study pretty much everything. I was a decent chemist before I focused on programming.
Any JAVAFX pros here ? :P
13:43
And I have an e-piano lying in the back of the room rusting...
and you are young..
@miniHessel Nope. Ita' disappeared for a while, so you're out of luck.
really awesome
Level 1: machine code
Level 2: assembly
Level 3: Comiled / Interpreted Languages
Level 4: ... declarative languages
Level 5: Constraint-based programming
> 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.
crying
13:43
JavaFX is same category with Swing right? IDK. im just guessing
just wanted a listener :P
@LeeJeong well ... yes and no.
if you want to rant, just go ahead :)
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
13:45
@Vogel612 still didnt got to digest how am i going to detect double clicks with your code. xD T.T
@LeeJeong well you need some separate thread, that's able to access that boolean
Back when I learned Forth, the language I was most experience with was limited to 2 chars
and you give it a timout to set that boolean back to false
it's basically a countdown
13:46
Numbers and Strings, 2 chars each type name, CH was a number CH$ would be a string.
can i use Timer class instead? xD *noob\
there is no escape from proper threading, you must use volatile fields
@LeeJeong A date is probably... too unexact...
after all you may want doubleclicks to happen in less than a second's worth of time.
That and the timer class isn't automagically perfect.
and a Date simply.. fails at that..
13:49
When the user clicks it I fire a separate thread that sets my boolean back to false when time is up?
@Unihedron what do you think is a sound approach to this?
4 mins ago, by Vogel612
@LeeJeong well you need some separate thread, that's able to access that boolean
You can use a lock for the boolean access, make it volatile, keep it in a wrapper, use an atomicboolean... whatever works
that would probably work...
I ♥ atomic operations
13:51
im dumbed with volatile... T.T i read it, but never got to understood it by heart
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)
what the hell man, all this for catching a double click event
and very often simply wrong..
@LeeJeong Hey...
13:51
because it's so hard..
@Unihedron yes?
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.
ahaha
Volatile is hard, correctly threading is hard, but it all goes to making this seemingly trivial feature possible.
it just punches me that back then this was not being a problem on VB. wahahah! < there goes VB again
13:53
sigh
can i use @kiheru 's suggestion?
@LeeJeong you can try...
if it works, why not?
Why not?
can you tell me simply what is volatile? *might pop on next job jump interview
no..
13:55
Sure. How much time do you have? You might have to pull an all-nighter.
because volatile and simply are mutually exclusive
Unless you want a response like "it's a reserved keyword", which you know I don't give. :)
ok.. next option. /fvck this.
ahahaha
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
just cant believe this... ok
13:56
^ Pretty much the best way to go.
why should i avoid timers? consuming much?
lol. @Unihedron where you pointin that arrow to me? xD
Mainly it's an unnecessary complication
btw.. declaring volatile is unneeded for boolean variables..
> Reads and writes are atomic for reference variables and for most primitive variables (all types except long and double).
@LeeJeong no they're just not precise enough..
how would you execute something after half a second with a Timer?
@Vogel612 Aha, I keep getting messed up with which exceptions for primitive types are.
Uh, a vanilla boolean and a volatile boolean have a difference. And then there's AtomicBoolean in case you need the compareAndSet() stuff
oh... @Vogel612 thanks!
for a noob like me it feels like my nose is bleeding now..
@kiheru visibility assurance for multiple threads, yes, but read/writes are atomic by default
Boolean writes and reads are atomic, but they're not guaranteed to be visible to other threads
Beat you to it :)
:-(
13:59
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
@LeeJeong Eh... There's an entire paper written on why The Java Compiler needs Volatile.
Am I weird for liking volatile?
So even if I give you the concentrated lesson, you'd still take over 20 hours.

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