I don't know if I can manage before this course is over, but the idea is to make a little UI for the site owner to add things herself so that I won't really have to be involved for more than maybe a little maintenance.
@Gemtastic Well, here's an idea: Define custom types like "articles", "description", "items", and have a database which links up each item with the articles or descriptions that's related
@ItachiUchiha Well, I'm trying to figure how most people who do backend programming solves having databases and images related to those entries. Let's say I'm making a database for an online-store. Each entry is a product and on the website each entry will be displayed with an image. Now, do you put a blop in the database of do you store the images on the server and tie the database entry to a reference?
The client will retrieve from the server (also running Java) thru JMS and your defined protocol (you can go with a make-do one), you can simply use JOoQ
@Unihedro I would prefer coding a backend in Java, then spending few months to learn PHP and then code in it. Well, I won't be able to take full advantage of the language, but it will do a decent job for me!
@ItachiUchiha the glass bottle and old shoe problem
@ItachiUchiha Of course you can get away with writing Java - that's the straightforward yet terrible approach for a non-PHP coder, where Java would had never been the right tool anyway.
@ItachiUchiha ... I don't get what you're trying to convey here. :P That's your experience, it has nothing to do with whether Java is the right tool on the first place.
When I dislike stuff in Java I back up everything I say, there are tons of stuff I dislike and some stuff I like. There is a lot of things I dislike and like in many technologies.
There is a big difference, I think Java is a bad programming language that has a longer way to go to be good than most.
That is completely irrelevant to the business concern of choosing a language to write a website in.
When a friend asked me a year ago (before Java 8 even) what language to code his website in and I asked him what he knew and he said "Well, I only know Java" wanna guess what I told him to do?
I told him "If you only know Java - go get a GAE account or something and build your thing in Java - it's crufty and heavy but websites are simple and it's mostly irrelevant"
@ItachiUchiha I don't hate Java, I think it's a shitty programming language - I think lots of languages are shitty...
@ItachiUchiha It doesn't run on Java, it runs on (shocking!) PHP and HTML and static CSS and JS. The backend server runs on Ruby, but that's temporary for prototyping.
@fge I think Java has some of the weakest abstractions because of old version baggage. Generics are compile time, the super and extends bits are undecidable, the type system is borked (everything is an object except functions and primitives), you need a lot of conversions, a lot of things in the language are "Do not use!" like serialization, you have static things which is a shame and so on.
It's not their fault, they have 20 years of baggage, but I'd expect them to write a new JVM language by now.
@fge I'm not a good language designer - that skill takes tens of years to master and get right - I'm saying I'm disappointed they didn't do it. Especially since back at the OOPSLA days it sounded like they were going to.
Well, in my case, I have to use Java for the back end. It's kinda the whole point of the course; how to do this with java. Front-end however is HTML, CSS and JavaScript. The DB we're working with is mySQL but any database that supports Java should be fine.
Instead, they stole stuff from experimental languages and made it worse by compatibility things. That again does not change the facts there are scenarios where I'd pick Java over other languages.
@fge in my opinion you should find the fact it's not bothering you any more is extremely disturbing and pick up new languages until it bothers you again.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Exactly. I'm not against learning other things (I love to learn) but it's an intense course and I intend to make a webshop good enough to go live.
@ItachiUchiha Yes. I see no advantage running a Java server and have the website exclusively hook into it, where if- Eh, let it go, I'll just lie about doing it in java and actually use what I was going to use.
Python sucks at multithreading and has no builtin mechanism of encapsulation -- monkey patching and whatnot? Spacing matters? All of this in 2014? You've got to be kidding me
I feel a bit out of place; when I talk to web developers I get answers about not re-inventing the wheel and to use done frameworks that ARE what I'm supposed to build, and here you people don't even want me to use Java at all XD
@fge it has a built in mechanism for encapsulation and spacing matters takes about 2 days to get used to. It also has really powerful numeric manipulation libraries.
@PDKnight I'm just venting. Practically, stop whatever conversation with if I'm in it when I complain that something sucks, because you'll never really gain anything by listening.
@Unihedro the people in the php room are some of the brightest most level-headed people, the fact kids can pick up PHP in a week and feel like rockstars is an extremely strong feature of the language, not a bad one.
And what I've done so far with programming servlets actually seem fun. If Java is the least optimal tool for that, then I will probably have a lot of fun learning that later, but I just don't have the time now. The schedule is tight and I have to follow the course plan.
these two statements look contradictory(not clear) to me: 1) -- if two objects are equal according to the equals(Object) method, then calling the hashCode() method on each of the two objects must produce the same integer result. 2) --- It is not required that if two objects are unequal according to the equals(java.lang.Object) method, then calling the hashCode() method on each of the two objects must produce distinct integer results.
doc says: As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode() method defined by "class Object" does return distinct integers for distinct objects. (This is typically implemented by converting the internal address of the object into an integer..) on same lines equals() method also compare these internal addresses this == obj so that means if two objects are equal acco ... equals(Object) method, then calling the hashCode() me...two objects must produce the same integer result. holds good
but this atatemant does not hold good: It is not required that if two objects are unequal according to the equals(java.lang.Object) method, then calling the hashCode() method on each of the two objects must produce distinct integer results.
Well then what don't you understand in this statement? "As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode() method defined by "class Object" does return distinct integers for distinct objects"
@fge I just thought of something - can't you do that wrapping thing with AOP? I'm pretty sure AspectJ can do it - although that's not a part of the language
In computing, aspect-oriented programming (AOP) is a programming paradigm that aims to increase modularity by allowing the separation of cross-cutting concerns. AOP forms a basis for aspect-oriented software development.
AOP includes programming methods and tools that support the modularization of concerns at the level of the source code, while "aspect-oriented software development" refers to a whole engineering discipline.
Aspect-oriented programming entails breaking down program logic into distinct parts (so-called concerns, cohesive areas of functionality). Nearly all programming paradigms support...
Programming on the other hand @ShaU, that's serious bsns. Of course you may have an opinion, as long as it's based on facts. Programming is facts. It's logic. It's not "I think this sucks/is the best because I think so".
I like to get down and dirty with the code so I know how it works. I don't just wanna drive the programming car, I wanna get under the hood, see the parts and know how they work.
@Unihedro Well, you see little one; there are some other languages called someting with a C. These languages can make awesome things called games. Now, these games are played by people whom are gamers. These wonderful mythical creatures come in all shapes and forms and they are quite lovely.