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00:00 - 16:0016:00 - 00:00

16:01
It's acceptable. I've never seen academic lecturers make any sense in their speeches. Just take everything they say with several bottles of salt.
It's a fact. Your agreement is suppressed.
lolz
don't be so rude on the new guy ;)
@ItachiUchiha Hey, it's the truth. I don't need acceptance on my vision.
ok... i'll take into consider
obtaining UGC approved degree is important to get a job in europe or not ?
16:07
Ask people from Europe.
I believe someone can answer this question, though you can't
@Unihedro i don't wanna argue with people, ok you won!.... I was tried hard to get some reputation to open for chat.... i'm not thinking the way you think about me
@JudeNiroshan Just relax and ignore him when he acts weird
There are times when @uni is high :P
@ItachiUchiha Or you know, you can answer the questions before I get to.
<- playing the epiano
fge
fge
16:13
@Unihedro go hack on HTTP/2
@ItachiUchiha thanx bro.... i believe u are correct.... sometimes me too
Otherwise he is just like your friendly neighborhood (if they are friendly :P)
@fge ... "back" or actually hacking?
fge
fge
<-- has no diploma but has a job, meh
16:14
<- has nothing
fge
fge
@Unihedro hack
roger
fge
fge
How far have you gotten so far?
Partly
@fge You got to be kidding me
16:15
@Unihedro honestly, i tried alot to learn about hacking... searched alot, couldn't find useful working tutorials, any suggestions ?
@JudeNiroshan um
@JudeNiroshan learn to code first
First, excel in reading what people say online.
crl
crl
@Unihedro you're being a bit pedantic sometimes
@Unihedro dude.... meanwhile i'm a Java developer... but have to learn alot.... I'm not totally a newbie
16:17
@crl Thanks!
Wait, is 13 the "recommendation" off-topic CV id, or is it 16?
16:37
bought a template for $18
now integrating it with servlets and JSP
i'm using Tomcat for the moment. plan to go for jBoss
problem what i have is, sometimes it takes too much time to load pages
sometimes even more than 10sec
any idea about this?
fge
fge
@ItachiUchiha I'm not
I graduated from the French equivalent of high school but that's about it
@JudeNiroshan if your pages are light and you run Linux, and SSL, then maybe
@fge lol. that is obvious
fge
fge
What is obvious?
@JudeNiroshan there may be multiple reasons for it
for starters check for if there is any service call while the page uploads
@ItachiUchiha yeah. i tried without internet. normally jquery and other javascript can be called from outside source. but there were none
@fge normally linux doesn't take much time and if pages are light
fge
fge
16:45
That's not the problem; the problem can be with SSL
And the way SecureRandom works
This problem has hit many people
when do we use SecureRandom ? i have no idea about this
Now to work!
Oh wait, I have pending chess games.
@fge i see. this is in Java. but i haven't had any situation to use random numbers so far which i have already integrated
fge
fge
17:01
That's not the problem of using random numbers
That's a problem having to do with cryptography
ohh..really.. how can i see whether they have implemented it?
fge
fge
17:13
Try and pass the option -Djava.security.egd=/dev/./urandom to the JVM and see if the slowness persists
And not that this IS NOT A TYPO
You need to write /dev/./urandom because /dev/urandom won't work
This is a longstanding bug which Sun/Oracle persistently refuses to fix
phew At last I'm starting to make sense of what is needed for writing a plugin for a new language
17:28
@fge better if you point me to a good blog post
fge
fge
17:39
Better for what?
more explanation
fge
fge
Don't you think you are a little too demanding, maybe?
The thing is simple: /dev/random relies on the OS entropy, whereas /dev/urandom uses a PRNG; and the OS entropy can deplete
If you read a lot from /dev/random, you may very well read at a faster rate than the OS can generate entropy
And this is particularly true of virtualized environments
(unless you use some modern version of qemu which can actually give VMs access to the hardware rng
17:58
@fge sir... honestly the subject which you address here is little bit advance for me. that's why i asked for a reference.
fge
fge
Well, cryptography relies a lot on (pseudo-)random generation of numbers
So you need to read those random numbers from somewhere
And Tomcat uses a lot of that
Sometimes for no good reason, but...
hm.. ok.. so?
fge
fge
18:12
Well reread what I said
If you don't understand what I said, no amount of blog post will help you
i'll try my best. thanx for your valuable time
how can I inceease the title bar size (height) in java
working on swing app
I know very li'l about swing
why dont you try javafx
not now :D
18:25
isit possible to increase height??
fge
fge
Grr, maven SUCKS
getComponent
@fge why is that?
Maven really does suck.
@Unihedro any idea??
18:31
One of the conversations I were in on my visit to the Java chat was about how Maven sucks
(go look it up :p)
well I haven't really used gradle so I don't know
I prefer Ivy
But!
I'm lazy, so I use Maven anyway.
:(
I want to incresse height of title pane @Unihedro @fge
fge
fge
@ItachiUchiha I cannot manage to disable a plugin whose configuration is defined in a parent pom
In spite of all my efforts
Aah, at last
Success
@fge plss
fge
fge
18:37
@SuroorAhmmad I don't do swing
@SuroorAhmmad pinging random people in the room with questions is impolite.
And before you ask, no, I don't know swing either.
rofl
@SuroorAhmmad try thishttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/2781987/how-can-i-customize-the-title-bar‌​-on-jframe
default JInternalPane hard to customize as for the read so far
@SuroorAhmmad are u using any third party lib for look and feel?
I get an error when I try to implement a static method having a generic array... https://code.hackerearth.com/671f38a

Error says: `non-static type variable T cannot be referenced from a static context`
I've tried the so called ugly casting too...that didn't work either...
...having Object[] arr as the array...and having cast inside the method... T[] a = (T[]) arr;
18:56
I'm pretty sure you can't have generics in a static method
!!tell deostroll google static generics java
fge
fge
@SecondRikudo yes you can
However you need to declare the generics before the return type
For instance, public static <T> ArgumentCaptor<T> forClass(final Class<T> c) { ... }
And how is it used?
fge
fge
Well, that was the prototype for a method of mockito
ClassName<Foo>.forClass(Foo.class);?
fge
fge
18:58
With the above you can do final ArgumentCaptor<String> captor = ArgumentCaptor.forClass(String.class);
 
3 hours later…
21:55
@SecondRikudo I know it is not polite. but I am in such a condition. I am currently working on my final year project and my last submission date is nearby, so I couldnt wait and search over google for long
@ JudeNiroshan thanks. and yeah I am working using one of LaF theme and now I am able to resize it
22:23
Hi.

I have an arraylist of dates. I want to sort them by month how do I do that?
I think I have a really ugly way of doing it, but the book I'm following says that I should be able to do this with less than 10 lines of code.
Are the dates in a date object or a string?
I've parsed it as a date object.
To put things in context, I'm following the Competitive Programming book and it says that I should have a good enough grasp to do some tasks within 10 lines. The implication being that there are library routines or methods that can be better used.

The "java" way of doing things, I suppose.

I would use a custom comparator when sorting, but that would require making a separate comparator when I need to sort by month, by day and by the entire date itself.
@Gemtastic It's a date object.
The JavaDocs is the first thing you always should refer to. make sure you have the right library too by looking at the imports. Also, I believe the java date is being deprecated in favor of LocalDate (Java 8)
@WasifHyder Uhhh Collections.sort()...
@Gemtastic - I've looked at the library. And hmmm, I'll look into LocalDate
@Michae
@Michael - I am using Collections.sort(), but is there any way other than creating a new comparator for sorting dates by month, and by date (only) as the key..
22:32
You don't need to define a new comparator. The dates will be sorted by timestamp, which will sort them by month.
@WasifHyder You can always use a comparator if you want to
=javadoc Collections$sort
@ItachiUchiha Sorry, I never heard of that class. :(
=javadoc Collections#sort
=javadoc Collections#sort
Which one do you mean? (type the number)
1. java.util.Collections#sort(List)
2. java.util.Collections#sort(List, Comparator)
Which one do you mean? (type the number)
1. java.util.Collections#sort(List)
2. java.util.Collections#sort(List, Comparator)
22:34
2
@ItachiUchiha void sort(List list, Comparator c): Sorts the specified list according to the order induced by the specified comparator. All elements in the list must be mutually comparable using the specified comparator (that is, c.compare(e1, e2) must not throw a ClassCastException for any elements e1 and e2 in the list). (1/3)
@WasifHyder This one ^^^^
@Michael - Yes, but in this case the timestamp isn't important. February 2015 and February 2012 is treated as the same, in this regard.

@ItachiUchiha - I know :) I've mentioned this earlier. But that would take a lot of lines for each individual sorting key. The book implies that there's a quicker solution, or atleast one that takes 10 lines in total.
@WasifHyder Oh, I see.
@Michael - I'm sorry if I wasn't clear enough. My bad.
22:36
@WasifHyder I can do it within 10 lines using the same method.
anyways passing List<LocalDate> into Collections.sort() should also work
@ItachiUchiha - For the entire date, then using the month(only), and then using the day(only)?
Have you tried it?
@ItachiUchiha - I have. At the moment, my solution uses sorts it using sort(List list). For the month and date, I use a custom comparator.
I dont get your problem. Are you aware that date objects can be compared to each other?
@ItachiUchiha That's where I was going with the whole JavaDoc thing :P
22:44
@ItachiUchiha - Yes. But for this case, I need to consider individual part of the dates only when sorting. For example, if I'm sorting by month then February 2015 and February 2012 are the same.
Then just get the months out the the dates create new dates and compare them
@ItachiUchiha - Here is my comparator currently.

Collections.sort(birthdates, new Comparator<Date>() {
@Override
public int compare(Date d1, Date d2) {
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTime(d1);
int m1 = cal.get(Calendar.MONTH);
cal.setTime(d2);
int m2 = cal.get(Calendar.MONTH);
return m1 - m2;
}
});

My question is whether there's a better way that makes use of the library because my search so far hasn't been very successful. But that could be because of my lack of familiarity with the Java Library.
Calendar and Date? Seriously???
@WasifHyder Advice1 switch to LocalDate
Advice 2 you can do that it in a single line using it
@ItachiUchiha - Its not for practical reasons, its for a programming competition. The judge is valid for Java 7.

As an aside, however, I've looked into the LocalDate after your advice. Thanks for pointing it out. I've learnt something new today :)
   (LocalDate d1, LocalDate d2) -> {
        d1.getMonthValue() - d2.getMonthValue();
    });
This is it
better
   (d1, d2) -> {
        d1.getMonthValue() - d2.getMonthValue();
    });
23:00
@ItachiUchiha - Thanks a lot! :)
@WasifHyder Ahh... Java7
Hard luck, mate
fge
fge
@ItachiUchiha although this does not really matter for months, it's better to use Integer.compare() in the generic case
@ItachiUchiha - Lol, thanks anyway. I'm going to keep localdate in mind.
fge
fge
Also, you forgot a return :p
@fge Roger That!!
fge
fge
23:05
And finally, since this is a single line, you could just use the expression and drop the brackets
Yes and no need of return
I added braces for clarity :P
fge
fge
Yes, I did say the expression :p
return xxxx is a statement, not an expression :p
The code is for suggestion, I don't guarantee its compilation ;)
I am a human after all. I need IDE's and compiler to poke me when I am wrong :p
fge
fge
<--- walking IDE :p
@ItachiUchiha You can't possibly do worse than I did
23:20
What did you do?
wait
Mar 17 at 10:56, by Gemtastic
public int sum(int[] i){
int total = 0;
for(int j : i){
total + i;
}
}
*facepalms*
23:44
Do note that the assignment was to make a function that takes an ArrayList of integers as an arument ant returns the sum of them.
The more I look at it, the funnier it gets.
were you high?
fge
fge
assertj 2.0.0 is out! Now with JSR 203 assertions!
gZ!!!!!
fge
fge
An ArrayList, huh? If all you have to do is the sum of them having an Iterable as an argument is enough
(ok, I stop)
Stream :P
fge
fge
23:48
If you use Java 8, yes
Arrays.stream(theArray).sum()
Meh
@ItachiUchiha I blame being awake for 20h :P
Also, interview
I am almost awake for 20h now.
Now I get why I missed the return statements :P
@fge I know exactly how bad it is. I would completely understand if they didn't want to hire me based off of that :')
@fge Blame the sleep, not me :P
But the second part of the "code test" was telling about the difference between a reference type and a reference of an object
23:51
are you applying somewhere else?
fge
fge
Hmm, that's indeed not good
(Pretty much why you need to use .equals() )
I nailed that one
fge
fge
(I didn't even have an interview for my job)
@ItachiUchiha Hopefully I will, but we'll see.
@fge does it work with Strings ?
fge
fge
23:52
@ItachiUchiha and what would you sum?
I have always used IntStream.sum
fge
fge
And no, unfortunately there is no CharStream :( That's a pity because it could be darn useful
so only Numeric arrays can be converted to streams
=javadoc Arrays#stream
Which one do you mean? (type the number)
1. java.util.Arrays#stream(Object[])
2. java.util.Arrays#stream(Object[], int, int)
3. java.util.Arrays#stream(int[])
4. java.util.Arrays#stream(int[], int, int)
5. java.util.Arrays#stream(long[])
6. java.util.Arrays#stream(long[], int, int)
7. java.util.Arrays#stream(double[])
8. java.util.Arrays#stream(double[], int, int)
23:54
@ItachiUchiha Stream stream(Object[] array): Returns a sequential Stream with the specified array as its source.
fge
fge
Not only numeric arrays
Why would you think that?
Ahh, the return type is IntStream
fge
fge
Well yes it is
Now it makes sense
^_^
fge
fge
Stream.of() wouldn't work :p
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