There are actually several approaches to do this. Some require more overhead than others, and some are considered better than others.
In no particular order:
Use AJAX to get the data you need from the server.
Echo the data into the page somewhere, and use JavaScript to get the information from...
For example ^
Notice how it also has 123 votes
So that's 1230 rep plus the 500 I promise to give you
It's a good deal :)
But you have to work hard for it, the question and answer both need to be really good.
user4202350
How to pass variables and data from Javascript to PHP? Is this ok
And this is why serialization protocols such as JSON, protobuf and others exist (even though JSON was not meant to be used for that in the first place, it can be used for that)
> If it is the third or more time the user has been kicked within 24 hours, the ban will last for 30 minutes. In addition, the user is automatically banned from creating new rooms and from sending invites. This automatic ban does not expire and can only be removed by a moderator.
Anyway, since I have dropped the subject for now...
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't care about other languages here (and note that Scala runs on a JVM), it is really only just a story of "the compiler can do it, but in user code you cannot" -- at least not without eerie hacks
And it has all to do with call sites and call site inference
@fge the fact you don't care about other languages is again - worrying :D Also - I'm well aware that Scala runs on the JVM - I've been using it quite a bit since it gained stability.
Attention Hat Hunters We are aware that the hat exists, and you need to post a message that gets starred. However, do not beg for stars, you can head for the sandbox where you won't upset anyone.
@BenjaminGruenbaum as to "not caring about other languages", well, the fact is, I intend to work on Java so I study it to its fullest -- including dark corners
Well.. with params in C# this is actually solvable because they're not "special" like varargs in Java (they're even more a shorthand for an array) but given how varargs works in Java I'm not sure what you would expect to be able to do
(though this is an "out of nowhere" demand; there may be problems with it that I'm not aware of just yet)
@BenjaminGruenbaum simply to acknowledge that "oh yeah, varargs so it means the array can have 0 parameters; let's just transform the call site for that"
Of course, there is an actual expressive way to write varargs like in your example (with variadic templates) - but neither C# or Java can do it. Scala can emulate it but that's about it. In C++ templates it's trivial.
@fge yeah - that's what C# does in this case but that's not really how people view varargs in Java so I get why it might seem confusing.
If I run the following program, which parses two date strings referencing times one second apart and compares them:
public static void main(String[] args) throws ParseException {
SimpleDateFormat sf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
String str3 = "1927-12-31 23:54:07";
...
More high level than this, I have this project of mine which is my only website of mine and which sucks horribly; I want to switch technologies and, again, never found the time
But in this project all low-level socket handling is done for you by definition
Anyone know anything about scaling bitmap images? I'm following a tutorial to load images from gallery in Android but when I load image of large size it won't show in imageview..
Anyone know how I might crash Java/Jetspeed? I'm planning to do a presentation on why Linux+Docker is so much better than the AS400, and as part of it I want to do something particularly nasty requiring me to rollback the deploy
@WayneWerner aren't the economics arguments enough to make your case? This is not a room for cracking techniques, you know
@BrianJ from the body of your method it does not look like it -- why check whether the code is 200 for instance? Why check whether you have data at all?
@fge I managed to solve this problem in another class by setting the bitmap size, but not sure how to apply this to the new method, please see my new hastebin post: hastebin.com/ahocedumej.coffee
@BrianJ same problem; what happens on failure here? It is very unclear
Why check whether the data is null at all? Why check whether the result code is OK? If it isn't, would you ever reach that method? Why check whether the request code is load? WWhy do you reach that code is the request code is any different?
Too many checks which, imho, have nothing to do in there; if they are meant to be done here then you should think about dispatching
@fge I can add in an exception check for that later, at the moment images taken at a lower resolution will load into the image view but anything of a higher resolution will not. The problem is that the image needs to be scaled before its loaded in. Do you know how I can scale the image prgramatically?
@BrianJ OK, so, here is a programming syndrome you are falling victim of: if (condition) { /* some very long code here / } else { / some very short code here */ }
@BrianJ replace with: if (!condition) { /* some very short code here /; return; } / some very long code here */
Namely, data is null; if it is, get out immediately
Don't make the reader of the code go through tens of lines of code to see that "oh, so if data is null he exits immediately"