@Adz: The simple way is to use a finite state machine which terminates as soon as it finds an answer, with a variable assigned with the first value; From there, return the stored value if the next number is your seeking one or any larger. Otherwise, store it. Rinse and repeat.
Though, that's linear. You'll get better code by modifying the binary search algorithm a little, and use that.
Verb
bathe (third-person singular simple present bathes, present participle bathing, simple past and past participle bathed)
(intransitive) To clean oneself by immersion in water or using water; to take a bath, have a bath.
Why should I take Java as the next language I learn?
@SecondRikudo: Because Java is the future of software development in non-functional fields.
Bold statement, but it's definitely true, with a mature ecosystem, a well-built documentation generator with plugins concerning (javadocs), and definite support in expanded fields, such as class loaders which lets you bind interfaces onto plugins instead of running new temporary programs, stuff like that.
I'm not used to yoda other than for strings. null == foo does not seem to gain anything in java. if (null = foo) is a compile time error anyway
umm, meant to say that if (foo = null) is a compile time error too, so it does not work similarly as a guard as in C (Though wtf would be a valid reason to have warnings off in C anyway? Writing code for the 80's compilers is rather pointless)
@JavaTechnical have an instance of it in the grammar; when the student if fully built, its .build() will be posted on the event bus and your listener will take care of it
The grammar contains code to use it already, I believe
Sorry but I've lost track a little, we celebrated France's victory quite a lot :p
The error is due to the presence of dcevm.jar present in my jre\lib\ext folder. The jdk which I have used for the project contains the dcevm.jar file and that this jar contains the package org.objectweb.asm.tree which containsClassNodewith no constructor like ClassNode(int).
The jvm is using thi...
@BenjaminGruenbaum Well, I hinted a better alternative since considering how much better C# is, anyone who devotes time into Java well enough to participate in this room probably doesn't do C#.
@JavaTechnical well, the principle is simple, you set your values in the StudentBuilder when the parsing of the value is done (the value is available using match()); then when the value is fully built (ie, you have parsed a whole student) you post() the builder
@BenjaminGruenbaum Though, I welcome demands to kick people from JS for being off topic, considering that I really only join on JS when I have a Javascript question, so you won't get merh :D
This is my first job as a dev, prior to that I was a systems engineer, but I guess all the Java projects I developed and can testify for helped a lot :p
@JavaTechnical don't worry about this; in fact I shoud outright delete this method, the thing is that the runner has a method for a CharSequence, and String implements CharSequence
@BenjaminGruenbaum I have no doubt about this; and I am (pain)fully aware of my poor knowledge. Brian Goetz said something interesting in one of his talks: "once you give something a name it makes them real". I do have intuitive understanding of a lot of things but no way to name them, and probably a misunderstanding of them as well
Well, I do have a practical grammar project which works very well, but now I need to study the core behind it more: parser theory and bytecode analysis/generation
@fge if you want a fun short project that'll help you with compilers and with how Java is run you can always do nand2tetris. It's just a fun thing to do.
You start with a nand gate, and hten implement a CPU on top of that, build assembly on top of that, a VM language on top of that and then a mini version of Java. It's all guided. Final project is tetris like.
Not a lot of theory but a lot of fun and insights :D
I have added a new method to BackgroundTaskRunner: public <T> void run(final Supplier<T> supplier, final Consumer<T> consumer) { executor.submit(() -> { final T t = supplier.get(); frontExecutor.execute(() -> consumer.accept(t)); } }
As a result I can now do taskRunner.run(this::getGlobalStatsPresenter, view::loadGlobalStats);
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2015/01/29/too-much-of-a-good-thing-can-make-you-sick/ CommitStrip - Blog relating the daily life of web agencies developers Too much of a good thing can make you sick CommitStrip 1422554031