I have two div's: menuContainer and top that are wrapped in another div called 'topContainer'. I want menuContainer and top to be under one another vertically, not on the X angle (and I thought it was standard for divs to appear under one another) but they appear both on top of each other and "i...
Will I look like a real dick if I answer my own question with the information the others combined have given me, to get a well-written answer? I think the answers are messy and don't make sense to anyone new to HTML and CSS (I'm not new, I've just never gotten down to the behind the scenes of the code)
...and this too, plus, its also a self answer, but I never accepted it. As you can see, its my top voted answer ever. So, its really ok to answer your own question
I want the text to look like this:
Headline 1
text text text text text text text text text text text text
text text text text text text text text text text text text
text text text text text text text text text text text text
Headline 2
text text text text text text text text text text text text
text text text text text text text text text text text text
text text text text text text text text text text text text
@Gemtastic please ban and blacklist W3Schools from your bookmarks and favorites (I really mean that). W3schools is a terrible resource, it's not a community driven website, has nothing related to W3C and during the years they've done just harm to the programming community. They also sell fake diplomas :D — Roko C. Buljan10 mins ago
text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text
(^That extra space is what I want) Headline 2
text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text
If you press enter, the text editor will ignore an extra enter
In HTML code what I want to do looks like this:
<h1>Headline 1</h1>
<p>Text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text </p>
<br /> // This extra space is what I want
<h1>Headline 2</h1>
<h1>Headline 1</h1>
<p>Text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text text </p>
@Jefffrey Yes, in very many cases. When T as a type parameter does not extend anything, it extends Object. When Type inference has no highest common type, it suppresses into Object.
When constructors are not fed or inferred generic types, it is considered Object.
For example: new ArrayList() => new ArrayList<Object>()
Looking a bit backwards the discussion, one typical use of Object that's still in use is for more fine grained than instance or class level synchronization.
Now, just for the sake of writing the answer I wanted to read (and hopefully can help other people learn what just happened here)
The quick fix
Removing the margin from menuContainer and adding it to topContainer will "solve" the problem visually and "look" as you want it to, but it's still bad...
Took me forever to write, but now I fully understand the code and what happened. :)
To me it feels a bit like "why don't you just write a new one where you plan the content ans tructure straight away". Must look terrible if it's 25 updates XD
Below is the class that is being used in every servlet class of an enterprise web server application.
/**
* This interface provide the functions neccessary to have 6 different list
* were all lists live a different life span. The lines between these may blur
* from one context to another. The two main contexts that provide this
* mechanism are:
*
* {@link ApplicationContxt ApplicationContxt} - The
* servlet context that provides a wrapper for the 4 main storage lists
* provided by the servlet architecture and 2 add ons, global and
* sub-application.
this is the one which implements it and being used in every servlet
/**
* This class provides the application context for any running in a servlet
* environment. This class uses the four main storage mechanisms provided by
* the servlet architecture. These storage scopes are:
*
* {@link ApplicationContxt#APPLICATION_SCOPE APPLICATION_SCOPE} -
* This scope uses the {@link javax.servlet.ServletContext ServletContext}
* object to store both objects and parameters. This scope lives
* for the length that the servlet container, in our case tomcat, is
Being new to servlet programming, I had been through the initial orientation on [JavaServlets](http://www.ntu.edu.sg/home/ehchua/programming/java/JavaServlets.html) but I would require a good understanding with example code(as a beginner) that specifies the significance and usage about Context and Scope.
Can you please help me provide some reference on a java practice application that can give a good insight over the usage about context and scope, as used in above code?
Here is the code with an interface ApplicationContxt and class ServletAppContext that implements it in this link. This class talks about context & scope that is used in every servlet class of an enterprise web server application.
Being new to servlet programming, I had been through the initial o...
Hi, I am creating a ArrayList of objects in my method and returning it. I am curious to know if the arrayList goes out of scope then the objects stored in arrayList become eligible for garbage collection or not?
Eh, you still need a ;, but syntax aside "text" is in the literal pool, it is created without dumping to the heap, and when strList dies and no one kept a reference to strList.get(0), text will be lost from the heap for garbage collection.
(the list being in the stack counts as being referenced; it's still reachable if the calling site takes a reference to the returned list)
the constant string pool messes things a bit of course, but that's an implementation detail
the reachability is what matters. technical details and implementation make difference on how early something can be determined to be certainly unreachable, but in general the question is: "is this object still reachable?"
in the case of that method, it's reachable via the list, which is reachable as the return value of the method. if that reference is dropped, then the object in the list is no longer reachable
(Technical issues are what make caches with no expiration policy memory leaks: the object may never be accessed again, but there's no reasonable way the GC can determine that. They look reachable to it, so they can't be freed. The GC won't free things that won't be used, but things that it can prove that can't be used, and it does not have any global understanding of the code)