@MahenderReddyYasa Simulating devices is massively wide subject, and the people here have no context at all about what you're doing. And yeah, googling is about the first thing to do before asking questions (and when it is the time to ask questions, they should provide enough context that it is at least possible to answer them)
> Once you wade through the depths of the developer bog and escape alive you come upon the warm sandy beaches of Developer Island. [...] Congratulations Server Owner you have now arrived and now all your development dreams can come true! You slowly open your eyes feeling groggy and you have a severe pain in your head. Looking around you realize that you just tripped in the bog and are really only at the outskirts. None the less there are really developers all around you. They look disheveled and have a weird sly smirk on their face while they wipe the sweat from their face with $20 bills.
This month's story (coming a little late): I asked a colleague of mine to show me their github, so they did, and their account has only one repository called "code"
@MahenderReddyYasa You don't need to do that. That's automatically generated code, and the GUI builder would overwrite any changes you make there. Instead, do any necessary changes outside the generated code (Or don't use a GUI builder at all. That's what I do, and it also seems to be the preferred method of all the other regulars of the swing tag)
It's uneditable for a reason. I suppose you can make it editable by removing the GUI builder's markers, but you won't be able to use the GUI editor to it afterwards
Well, you can always make it abstract and provide a static factory method which is, for instance, called .minimal() which does provide a minimal implementation
It's the com.unihedro.factory portion of JCE. I'm trying to add dependency injection so the API isn't bound to an implementation of using Apache HTTP lib.
I want to replicate Git's behavior where you input a command, it will open your editor with a premade template, and when you save the message it will go back to the app and you'll have your message in it.
1. create a temporary file with your template, 2. pass is as an argument to the editor, 3. launch the process, wait for it to end and 4. read the temporary file for the contents
@SecondRikudo it will be faster if we do a hangout for it (gosh, I am starting to get addicted to this thing)
@fge I don't hate C (not nearly as much as I do Java, anyway), I just think that C has its uses, and as long as we stick to its uses, all living creatures in the world can live together in harmony.
@SecondRikudo I am looking to provide a web interface of my debugger since the architecture allows for it; now, for this I would need a library providing a series of widgets such as lists, trees and tabs, and of course in which I can "plug events" (XMLHttpRequest or WebSocket messages). I have found jqWidgets but do you know of anything else?
@fge I tend to not trust these libraries (for no good reason). I have a private repository of all those little components I use throughout my frontend apps
If it's not production critical, you can check out Polymer (which has a large range of built in components)
(I'm saying it shouldn't be production critical because Polymer is still declared a dev version)
A Java virtual machine (JVM) is an abstract computing machine. There are three notions of the JVM: specification, implementation, and instance. The specification is a book that formally describes what is required of a JVM implementation. Having a single specification ensures all implementations are interoperable. A JVM implementation is a computer program that implements requirements of the JVM specification in a compliant and preferably performant manner. An instance of the JVM is a process that executes a computer program compiled into Java bytecode.
Java Virtual Machine implementation, together...
The problem is method.invoke accepts a variadic, and I want to pass the literal array that gets returned from Arrays.copyOfRange, and not the strings in it
I get a type mismatch error, even though the invoked method accepts a String[] args argument.