I have a question, this is a example:
code A:
files.forEach(f -> {
//TODO
});
and another code B may use on this way:
files.**stream**().forEach(f -> { });
so, the question is:
what is diff has stram() or not?
thanks.
Both approaches uses the terminal operation Iterable.forEach, but the version with .stream() also unnecessarily creates a Stream object representing the List. While there is no difference, it is suboptimal.
Anyone here use spring framework I have start learning Spring framework for need good tutorial link I have googled and found links but I am confused which one I followed
The idea is that when you select an entry in the tableview you'll be able to switch the TableView for another FXML which displays the information of the selected entry
When you open a connection to the database, the database is computing power to that connection. Having one or two open and unused connections won't really be noticeable, but when your app makes hundreds or thousands of connections that never close, you're gonna take the power off of the database.
read the link, try catch with resources looks like this: try(*Autocloseable code here*){ }catch(SQLException e){}
it should work to "just" put stmt.close() but the thing is; if your try fails, it never closes. However, if you but the connection in the try() then it will autoclose if it fails
The button customerSearch has one action searchCustomer() which is linked in the ApplicationController. For every Tab you want the action to be different. How do you think you are going to manage it?
I'm not sure you fully understand what's going on in there. But yes, it is a little messy, which is probably why you don't understand what's going on in there :P
Right now I just wanna manage to get ANYTHING passed into the TV :/
@Sword I'm going to have to ask you to stop engaging with the trolls. 1. No one even know who the clown is. 2. No one really cares about disruptive conversations, and they belong nowhere. So does yours.
In the application we're writing, it is required that we use the with(NOLOCK) in our queries. Just so that the queries don't take so long to process.
I haven't found anything on how to accomplish this. What I did find is how to enable optimistic or pessimistic locking, but as far as I know, that...
@technocrat Im not that expert in gradle, but in maven you have the option to set a dependency on "provided", that way your project knows about that jar file, but doesn't compile it.
@kiheru OK I can use JRadioButton, JButton etc. How to create the space where I select a tile from a list and on clicking it fixes to a predefined grid and then adds a line to a text file?
uh, I suspect there are no tutorials that directly talk about level editors. It's just a gui program (that probably needs some custom drawing). As such the proper place would be the swing tutorial
@ADG It's simple to use but quite capable. Your maps sound like simple things consisting of tiles, and for that tiled is more than capable enough. The native map format is xml based and easy to write a reader for, but if you want your own format it's possible to write a pugin for that.
but writing your own editor can be fun :-P but in case you want to develop a game then you may like more spending your time writing the game than the level editor
Since when is swing officially EOL'd btw? I don't expect that to happen at least until there's a replacement in the standard library (frigging AWT is not officially deprecated. It has not seen changes in eons, but it's still supported)