I've spent two days trying to get this to work.
When I first started up Tomcat 7, it ran on port 8080 which is the Tomcat default. And so it could be accessed but typing: http://localhost:8080/ or mydomain.com:8080.
But I wish to move from port 8080 to port 80 so I can type mydomain.com and be ...
@fge I haven't looked at the JDK or your library, but have you considered creating a stream that just catches exceptions in lambdas (probably by implementing stream and using a thin layer over a delegate)?
@Bohemian meh, I don't know whether it would be worth it -- and note that you will be able to do rethrow(something).as(MyException.class) for each and every lambda, therefore you will be able to catch your own exceptions
And the exceptions gets dumped into the Sink instead of getting rethrown, so you can harvest the sink for exceptions to show to the user at once
@fge Sometimes you don't really want the stream to stop. For example, say you're validating the user input, you would want to show the exception after it's all inputted.
There could be something like, say, .filterMap(someLambda) which would return a stream of only the transformed elements for which the lambda didn't throw
They're super useful given the alternative, having a clear pipeline just for algorithmics and then another one just for odd edge cases you can't say interesting stuff about is actually very useful IMO.
In languages that don't have it I end up simulating it
@BenjaminGruenbaum I'm not interested in CS masturbation -- I only want to know more about CS so that I can study better algorithms, but when practical stuff outshines the theory in practice --> I use the practical stuff
@fge I'm not saying that you should return an Optional<Function< - I'm saying you should take a Function<A, B> that might throw stuff and return a Function<A, Optional<B>>
If the returned function throws it is converted into an unfulfilled optional instead, although maybe either is a better idea here, then again Java doesn't have union types.
@Unihedro That's false - In C# you have value types which cannot be null. However, I don't like nulls in C# and Java and I consider them a mistake. Also not sure how that's relevant.
Try to understand why Optionals have .map this is the key here.
@Unihedro why do you think it is both Optional and Stream have a .map function?
@BenjaminGruenbaum and that's a waste of resources if you can pinpoint a value which tells "meh, failure" -- and that value may be null for all we care
You do realize that you can stream optionals transparently through a stream or create an optional stream that ignores optionals since you can .map them...
I'm not asking you to add it, I'm asking you to understand it. I'm sure you're a competent developer and I'm sure you're reluctant to admit you don't know stuff - I'm also going to guess you you understand DI pretty well now. What flow control really means in programming is super crucial to building the abstractions you're building in my personal opinion and I think it could really help you. So I'm being annoying and trying to get you to read about it :D
@Jefffrey I found turning type intersections into type unions using De Morgan's law and the Curry–Howard isomorphism quite practical in at least one case.