I am making a wedding planning system. I have an array of objects using invitation class. I want to let the user enter the name and the number of people in their family for each invitation. Each invitation is supposed to get its own unique ID..and I don't know how to do that
You need to have a field ID in the invitation class and when you create an instance of invitation, populate this ID with a unique number i.e. keep a counter and increment it.
for example, for another method I wanted to show the list of all invited families and have the id next to their name so they can enter the ID and remove the family from the list
@greenhorn the progress bar needs to be somewhere, ie it needs some frame. That can be the main window (including a layer atop other components), a dialog, or an undecorated frame for the bar alone. I'm not sure what effect you want
after loading and disposing the progressbar i am displaying a jpanel in the right side of the frame but the problem is that jpanel is displaying only when shaking the jframe or adjusting the scrollbar in my frame @kiheru
@greenhorn Then make sure that you revalidate and repaint the container where you added new stuff after adding them. If the container is a top level component it may need pack to resize the window to the new desired size
@kiheru for progress bar i used another frame after getting 100% progress that frame is disposed so now which one i have to repaint / revalidate progressbar frame or my parent frame?
@greenhorn for disposing a frame, nothing. You said the problem is some panel, not the progress bar. If that panel is added dynamically (after showing the progress bar?), then it's the container where the panel is added that needs revalidation
@greenhorn use modal dialog as the container of the progress bar. Actually, at that point I'd personally consider using a translucent glass pane above the main window for drawing the progress bar instead of a separate frame.
OK, then modality is the way to go. You can still probably use setEnabled(false) for the window contents during the progress to inform the user; that should be a fairly easy thing to do
Hi all -- I've got a bit of an architectural question. I'd like to make it so that all of my TestNG @Test annotated methods will basically be executed with their method body being run while iterating over a collection of objects. I could write a for loop inside each and every @Test annotated method, but the first thing I tried was to have a base class with an @Test method that called an abstract method. But that method is broken because >>
TestNG won't execute it because there isn't an @Test method defined in the child class, only the parent, abstract class. My next approach is to have a method in the parent class that does the iteration on a Consumer<T> and just expect the child class's @Test methods to basically do super.blah(some lambda). But that's again duplicating some code.
I think the fundamental problem is that TestNG is looking only in the immediate class under test for any @Test annotated methods, and when it doesn't find any except those within the base class, it just gives up. So how can I avoid duplicating this iteration in each @Test method?
If I were to write it naively without any inheritance (the "just copy-pasta" approach), it'd be something like this for each and every @Test method in the test suite:
class SomeTest {
private Object[] stuff;
@Test
public void testSomething() {
for(Object o : stuff) {
the actual test body;
}
}
@fge So, your confusion over my attempt and the suggestion of using @DataProvider is basically exactly what I needed. TL;DR: Yes, I do want to use a @DataProvider, but I didn't know that that was what I needed to do.
Hai guys, I am kind of got stuck here. I am working on web crawler project, which should allow extensibility and should be ~modular. What I mean by that is: While running, a main component decides which "job" to run, If it is done, runs the next one. A job could be something like: GoogleCrawler/RedditCrawler... etc, could be run continuously or just ones. The jobs could be different jar's or just packages inside the main component.
I have no idea where to start looking, which library/framework I need. Do I need JavaEE? EJB?
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2016/02/25/you-cant-write-code-without-knowing-how-to-log/ CommitStrip You can’t write code without knowing how to log CommitStrip 1456425408
@fge I don't think that matters really. All I want is loading modules in runtime. Like: I make a scheduler (cron4j) that loads different jobs/modules, when I want to schedule a new job I just made I should be able to tell the scheduler to load something (jar?) that will add the functionality to the software, without restarting/stopping the scheduler.
@ItachiUchiha I can't post a question without getting closed as "too broad" so... I don't know what I need... How do I load stuff runtime...
There will be a Java program running somewhere, I can log into it from the terminal, it will start an interactive shell like interface. There I would like to load new "jar's" or something that will contain the code I wrote for different jobs
This scheduler will be using database to store the current workflow, and run the jobs
There's lot of situations where you might want to use an interface
It's not as if there's a specific time
but
as an example: consider the "ActionListener" interface
Since it's an interface it has a set of methods that need to be created
ActionListener actually only has one method that needs to be defined: "actionPerformed"
but you can create multiple event handlers that are trigger by actions using the ActionListener interface
so for example, you might have a button click action
and if button A is clicked, one message is displayed
so you might start with "ButtonAListener implements ActionListener{...}"
and then in that class you have to define what happens when the action is performed
you can create button B that changes the color of the screen when clicked
So that would be another class that implements the same interface, but does something different in the actionPerformed method
There are a few more things you have to do (e.g. add the listeners to the buttons)
but what the ActionListener interface does for you is allows you to detect the click of the button
without that interface, you would have no way of knowing when the button was clicked, and therefore no way to have the appropriate code run when the button was clicked
@hamidkavianathar an interface is dead useful; it only establishes a contract which you know implementations shoudl abide to, and you can use any implementation of that interface, regardless of the internal implementation
It is a fundamental concept in abstraction
Java's interface keyword does just that, to the letter