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08:34
Hey guys, I am trying to load assets from a Jar file but I am having issues figuring out the path. I am using this so question stackoverflow.com/questions/11012819/…
 
1 hour later…
09:46
morning
hello
10:18
morning
 
1 hour later…
11:31
could you know why liquibase maven plugin don't append automatically the header of the output change log file ?
If I gave an empty file that plugin starts to append from changeSet xml element
:o
the question is already posted
1
Q: liquibase doesn't insert <databaseChangeLog>

IuriiI have next pom.xml: <groupId>org.liquibase</groupId> <artifactId>liquibase-maven-plugin</artifactId> <version>3.4.1</version> <executions> <execution> <phase>process-resources</phase> <id>test-databse-backup</id> <configuration> <driver>org.postgresql...

and unfortunately no one respond to it
:/
I think this is a bug
11:54
o/
12:23
12:43
could you know how to delete file before executing a maven plugin ?
<plugin>
                <artifactId>maven-clean-plugin</artifactId>
                <version>3.0.0</version>
                <configuration>
                    <filesets>
                        <fileset>
                            <directory>${basedir}/src/main/resources/xml-liquibase</directory>
                            <includes>
                                <include>/master.xml</include>
                            </includes>
                            <followSymlinks>false</followSymlinks>
when I run mvn clean:clean it will not delete the file master.xml :/
lol I missed **/master.xml fail :(
Morning, Java!
@Michael morning
how could delete messages here ?
Morning, @Sayros.
are you okay ?
on the left top of your message is an arrow
there you can delete your message
12:56
okay but how about the eldest ?
o/ @Hans
you cant
only recent messages
I could found only flag to moderator
o/@Michael
ah okay thanks
12:57
yep
you can only delete your latest message
no problem
You can't delete a message after a certain amount of time.
exactly
13:12
Can anyone direct me to a good noob-friendly resource on understanding abstract vs static vs final?
final => constant you cannot change it after you initialise it
static ==> field,block,method will be related to Classes not to instances, example use satic field to count the number of instances, also it will be shared among all instances
abstract==> only class or method, So, class means cannot be instanciated and born to be subclassed, then method means must be override it when you extends it
many peoples have the same mistake when understanding the term static vs final
they thought that static is something cannot be changed
If this is true, then I still don't quite understand why a variable must be final if it is used in an inner class
inner classes cannot change any variables from the outside?
because when you instanciate the inner class So object come to heap
(I promise I've looked all this up already but I just don't understand it)
and still alive there if the GC will not run
and your variable that you passed it to inner class may will died before the object in the heap will be died
So compiler force you to make it final
13:22
I'm still not sure I understand what that means
I know I dont have a clear response :/
but I rexplain
What object? What's a "So object"? The garbage collector for which part?
lets assume you have an inner class contains a method
in that method you use a variable that is declared in the method of the outer class
So the scope of that variable is the scope of the method
till now is clear ?
@KaliMa
For example an onclicklistener / onclick method
yeah
So, when you make an instance of your inner class, that instance will be in the heap memory
thats called the object
your object in the heap memory attempt to refer to your variable declared in the outer method class
however, what about if my method where I declared my variable is terminated ?
your object in the heap method will complain because it will not find the variable declared in the outer method
@KaliMa I hope that help :/
13:30
thanks
may you found someone here explain good than me
@Michael is my explanation not clear ? :/
How can the outer class terminate before the inner class?
because object stay the heap memory
and can be emptied by the garbage collector "GC"
and you cannot predict when the GC will run
may your object stay in the heap memory during your application and the GC will never run
277
A: Why are only final variables accessible in anonymous class?

Jon SkeetAs noted in comments, some of this becomes irrelevant in Java 8, where final can be implicit. Only an effectively final variable can be used in an anonymous inner class or lambda expression though. It's basically due to the way Java manages closures. When you create an instance of an anonymou...

I don't understand why every answer to the question is only in words
are there any that show actual code examples of why it's necessary
I have seen that answer but I just don't understand
13:36
@KaliMa Because it has to do with the way the virtual machine handles such variables.
John Skeet seems to be saying that such variables are final in order to avoid developer confusion.
"As the value has been copied into the instance of the anonymous inner class, it would look odd if the variable could be modified by the rest of the method"
which method?
maybe this will help you
answers like this drive me crazy
@KaliMa The method that the anonymous class is defined in.
13:41
So like if I have an inner class that modifies some variable and the outer class modifies the same variable?
but the inner class is somewhat "asynchronous" to the outer class?
so final ensures the value is not effectively volatile?
public class Foo {
	public void bar(){
		int count = 1;
		Runnable runnable = new Runnable(){
			public void run(){
				count++; //compile error: "count" must be final
			}
		}
		count++;
		runnable.run();
		System.out.println(count);
	}
}
Hey guys, I am trying to load assets from a Jar file but I am having issues figuring out the path. I am using this SO question stackoverflow.com/questions/11012819/… to do my implementation this is my attempt, this is what the structure of my project looks like i.imgur.com/AZHBJWj.png I get the following error: some path, Access Denied aand that JarFile cannot be cast to TextureData
@Michael To me, if you ran that code, the output seems like it should be 3
so basically in my Player I want to be able to say

Imagification ig = new Imagification();
Entity p1 = new Entity(ig.imagification(url));
regardless of final or not
13:46
@KaliMa Thread safety has nothing to do with it. The inner class simply contains additional code that can be run, synchronously or asychronously.
But if you declare it final then how would you be able to change it by doing count++?
if final means not changeable
@KaliMa Well, Java won't compile it. Because I am referencing a non-final variable inside the anonymous class.
@KaliMa Bingo.
I seriously feel like a moron right now
I absolutely cannot wrap my head around this, I don't understand the point of this at all
This is the full error list: gist.github.com/Spiderixius/d4405229c7c621f0c41a7e76319fbf69 Some of it is in danish, please ask for translation if needed Adgang Nægtet = Access Denied
@KaliMa It's simply a rule to the Java language that you have to follow.
13:49
It's just not clear to me why it's necessary to declare it final, because apparently in other languages it isn't required because they handle something called "closures", which I also don't understand
But either way I don't see what Java is protecting against
shrugs
Hey, I am going to move my question into one question
Can anyone point me to a clear/noob-friendly resource that goes into this topic in more detail?
no
but maybe google can ;)
hello all.
13:54
hey
I've already been Googling this for the past 3 hours, since i woke up, and last night for probably 4 hours already
Hey guys, I am trying to load assets from a Jar file but I am having issues figuring out the path. I am using this SO question http://stackoverflow.com/questions/11012819/how-can-i-get-a-resource-folder-from-inside-my-jar-file to do my implementation this is my attempt, this is what the structure of my project looks like i.imgur.com/AZHBJWj.png.

so basically in my Player I want to be able to say

Imagification ig = new Imagification();
Entity p1 = new Entity(ig.imagification(url));


This is the full error list: https://gist.github.com/Spiderixius/d4405229c7c621f0c41a7e76319fbf69 Some of i
and in the past for several hours
I absolutely cannot find a good resource that actually explains this
13:54
How can I delete previous messages?
@Spiderix Point to your message and click the arrow in the upper-left corner.
KaliMa, sorry but what is it you are trying to find resources on, I only got the end of what you were asking, something about Final and anonymous.
I did @Michael it just says flag for moderator?
I am writing a client for a restful webservice, and wondering about making unit tests. there is a class APIClient, and a method that does authentication, like retrieving a token etc, and I am testing this method. I am wondering if I should also test all possible error conditions? gist.github.com/210acd85e6f0947a24b43f354cb6e4d2
@Hans1984 I know, that's what I said.
@Spiderix You need to know the path to the resource inside the jar file. Just look inside the jar file.
13:56
i know
@Spiderix Then that means too much time has passed and you can't delete it anymore.
@Hans1984 xD
Ah I see
@Hans1984 Ty for the correction.
This is how I load an image from a Jar file

InputStream input = MyClassFile.class.getResourceAsStream("/assets/template_border.png");
13:57
nevermind
@Spiderix I am trying to understand this rule about the need to declare variables as final if they are used in inner classes
@kaderud this image represents i.imgur.com/AZHBJWj.png the structure, so say in my Player module I would need to type out String url = "/Assets/target/Assets-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar/assets/images/p1.png"; ?
kaderud, each of my modules are their own Netbeans module (their own project)
Or if I wanted to read a property file:
InputStream input = MyClassFile.class.getResourceAsStream("/assets/log4j.properties");
@Spiderix I would've think the path would be /assets.images/BulletLeft.png
@KaliMa well. you do not know where your anonymous class object will be used, could be used in few places, passed to methods etc. so the variables in the outside method should be final, probably for the compiler to capture their values.
14:00
But from what I can tell the inner class makes copies of the variables and doesn't actually point to the variable in the outer class
So why can't the inner class change that copy local to itself and not give a hoot what the variable is doing on the outside
@kaderud that's what I am using right now:

String url = "assets/images/p1.png";
Imagification ig = new Imagification();
Entity p1 = new Entity(ig.imagification(url));
@KaliMa That is not correct. The inner class does not make a copy of the variable.
However it gives this error: java.io.FileNotFoundException: C:\Users\spider\Documents\GitHub\4SemesterProject\Dario2D\Dario2D\application\ta‌​rget\dario2d\..\..\..\Common\target\classes (Access denied)
From Jon Skeet's answer (the one you linked to me): "When you create an instance of an anonymous inner class, any variables which are used within that class have their values copied in via the autogenerated constructor."
sure, probably does not. but as the object may outlive the method... you know
14:02
no, you forgot the / as in "/assets.images/BulletLeft.png"
String url = "/assets/images/p1.png";
like that for example?
if that's how the path looks like in the jar, sure @Spiderix
@KaliMa "Value" doesn't mean what you think it means.
If the variable is an object, then yes, the variable's value will be copied to the inner class.
@kaderud yea it does i.imgur.com/AZHBJWj.png but what I can't wrap my head around is, my Assets is its own Module (its own project) and Player is its own module and so on
But the variable's value is the pointer to the object in the heap.
14:04
so I don't understand how is Java able to figure out where to find assets/images folders
So the variable is still referencing the same object.
He explicitly italicizes the word "value" though which makes me feel like he's making a distinction between the variable and its value, meaning the values are taken into new variables localized to the inner class, no?
Adgang Nægtet means = Access Denied
He's saying that, because of the way Java copies the variable's value into the inner class, it eliminates a lot of complexity that would otherwise have to be added to the virtual machine.
But any time you are talking about "copying" something, it implies making something else, something separate from the thing you passed in, so why can't they change independent of each other?
14:09
@Spiderix I can read danish ;-) Also, that's a bit more complex than I've done, as I've only read assets from the same project/JAR-file.

But I didn't see you using the class-loader, or reading the asset with getResourceAsStream().

You should check out http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/ClassLoader.html#getResourceAsStream(java.lang.String)
Actually, that's what I used previously, it is the commented stuff.
Well kind of.
I was using getResource()
@KaliMa Because, looking at the code, the assumption is that if you, say, increment an integer variable in an inner class, that variable should be the same variable that is defined in the outer class.
You should start with something simpler until you get a grasp on in and then you can move on to more complex usages @Spiderix
Assumption by who/what? The developer? The compiler?
For instance, try to reference assets in the same jar as your java class @Spiderix
14:11
@kaderud that's what I started with but now I am moving on to the next level :D
@Spiderix what are you trying to do? not sure :)
@KaliMa The developer. But in order to actually make this assumption work, it requires a lot of complexity on the compiler's end.
@MichałZegan I am trying to read assets from a jar file which is located in a different Project. Everything is handled with maven.
why can't they force people to change that assumption then
14:13
@MichałZegan He's trying to read image/graphic assets from a Jar, but from a different Jar, not the same as his Class.
"anything passed into an inner class method will be passed in by value and not by reference"
@MichałZegan you can scroll up to my question, it might make sense (it is not too far up) chat.stackoverflow.com/transcript/message/29854060#29854060
It might make things clearer to mention that you can modify mutable objects without issue. For example:
public class Foo {
	public void bar(){
		List<String> list = new ArrayList<>();
		list.add("one");
		Runnable runnable = new Runnable(){
			public void run(){
				list.add("two")
			}
		}
		list.add("three");
		runnable.run();
		System.out.println(list); ///prints ("one", "three", "two")
	}
}
@Spiderix I believe you can do it normally, unless this other jar is not in the same class loader. well
14:14
This is because I am not reassigning the variable itself.
right
so are those mutable objects "effectively final"?
I've seen that term in my Googling on this
@MichałZegan I must admit, classloader and all that is not my strongest side.
@KaliMa Yes. Java 8 supports "effectively final" variables. But in earlier versions, I would have had to explicitly mark that variable as "final".
if it is in the class path, like both jars, then it should be loadable
This is my structure i.imgur.com/AZHBJWj.png @MichałZegan
14:17
I guess my confusion is that I don't understand a scenario where the variable is a simple integer like your count example earlier, why that would be a problem
seems perfectly clear to me that the output would be 3
I am not sure how I can tell whether it is in the same classloader or not, I assume it is.
fail fail fail. I am blind. rofl
@MichałZegan my previous implementation was to use //ClassLoader cl = Lookup.getDefault().lookup(ClassLoader.class); and then FileHandle fileHandle = new FileHandle(cl.getResource(path).getPath());
this worked like a charm, but now I want to access Jar files
what api is that Lookup thing? didn't see that ever
it is from org.openide.util.Lookup;
14:20
@KaliMa Yes well, Java likes to troll its users.
so what do you want? load assets file knowing it/s location in the jar, and also having a jar file path directly?
is passing-by-value not a thing in Java?
(like in C++)
basically when I go to my player I want to be able to say: String url = "/assets/images/p1.png";
Imagification ig = new Imagification();
Entity p1 = new Entity(ig.imagification(url)); so when the player is created the image from the Assets Jar file is attached to the player.
Did you try it with InputStream input = MyClass.class.getResourceAsStream("/myimgassets/myfile.jpg"); and use the path to the other jar-file? @Spiderix
@KaliMa let's just say it's complicated
14:22
@KaliMa sure it is, although c++ can do by reference, java cannot, like references in java are more like pointers
@kaderud I must admit, I am not sure how to even start trying it :D
but to clarifie, Player, Enemy, Assets are all their own Jars
like if I declare int x = 5; and pass it into a function without any special modifier, a copy is made into a new variable, but if I add &, then it doesn't make a new copy and so calls to x refer to the same area in memory
Are you saying in Java, it's totally different?
yeap
@KaliMa Java is pass by value. But it's not what you might think.
primitives are pass-by-value
objects are pass-by-value
14:25
See the JarURLConnection class and such kind of urls. if you do not have those jars in your class path, then you cannot use getResource() family, unless you create URLClassLoader instance. if, however, you want to load resources but not classes, then the jar: urls may be better. it requires providing both a path of jar and path of resource in jar in the url
@Vogel612 No. Everything is pass-by-value.
but the value of an object is a pointer
Even objects are pass-by-value.
@MichałZegan I am certain it is in the classpath since getResource() worked fine, but it just didn't work fine for access Jar files
@Michael never said something different
14:26
However, in the case of an object, the "value" is the pointer.
@KaliMa java passes everything by value. but there are two kinds of values: reference to object, and primitive value
So it copies the pointer into the method.
So everything in Java is basically like adding the & in C++, but it's not called by reference in Java, it's called by value even though in C++ it'd be called "by reference"?
I do not understand. are those jars inside of a main jar or outside? i outside, then you just load resources without specifying a jar file, using getResourceAsStream, unless it is not in classpath.
seems like a difference in the definition of reference and value
14:28
@KaliMa no, no. compare java references to c++ pointers. java references can be null, can be modified, etc
Hmm, is there a way to check that @MichałZegan ?
Take this for example. What does this code output?
if getResource("/path/to/resource") works, and that resource is in a different jar, then it is in classpath. if it does not, then it is not
public class Test{
	public void foo(){
		List<String> list = new ArrayList<>();
		bar(list);
		list.add("two");
		System.out.println(list);
	}

	public void bar(List<String> list){
		list = new ArrayList<String>();
		list.add("one");
	}
}
Yea that worked in my previous implementation, now the issue became when I moved the jars out to a netbeans_site folder
14:30
also if getResource works and the thing is in another jar, then it means all jars in classpath are treated almost like one big distributed directory tree
Whole goal is to be able to dynamically load and unload jars under runtime.
If Java were truly pass-by-reference, then this code would output "one", "two".
one, two, I would think
@KaliMa Nope. It outputs "one".
wat
14:31
I can tell I have to read up on classpaths and classloaders
But it adds two to the list and then outputs it
Because when "list" is passed into the "bar" method, Java copies the pointer.
where does the two go?
Inside of the "bar" method, I am assigning the "list" variable (which is a copy of the "list" variable in the "foo" method) to a new list.
to a new list.
@Spiderix use jar urls, not class loaders in this case
14:33
Yea, that's what I am using and yet it fails me :/
probably a bad url.
jar:whatever, read about JarURLConnection
The "list" variable inside of the "bar" method is not the same variable as the "list" variable in the "foo" method. It is a copy of that variable.
But you're doing list.add("two") and then outputting list
so what is "two" being added to exactly?
I think your code needs to be rewritten, getResourceAsStream() returns an InputStream, what does new Entity(ig.imagification(url)); actually needs passed to it?
A completely separate ArrayList instance.
14:34
@Spiderix
but then you output the same object, list
Which gets lost when the method returns.
@kaderud
why wouldn't that refer to the very same thing you're adding "two" to
@KaliMa could you please think about java references as c++ pointers? you should then understand immediately
14:35
both use "list"
It just so happens that their variable names are the same.
So we've got two completely different things in the same function both referred to via "list"?
Fine. I will change the variable names so they are different:
public class Test{
	public void foo(){
		List<String> list1 = new ArrayList<>();
		bar(list1);
		list1.add("two");
		System.out.println(list1);
	}

	public void bar(List<String> list2){
		list2 = new ArrayList<String>();
		list2.add("one");
	}
}
Does that make things more clear?
not the same function. one function has one reference, the other function gets the same reference but then reassigns it, like you would do with c++ pointers.
everything is pass-by-value in java
:p
14:37
no that isn't where my confusion lies
list1.add("two");
System.out.println(list1);
You're saying that even though I am adding "two" to this thing
and then outputting that same thing
for whatever reason, "two" is not present
@KaliMa why you don't want read some tutorials of java ?
I have been
No, the program outputs "two".
the one is not present
That's different from what we were saying earlier
you said it only outputted "one"
14:39
Oh, lol, I did, didn't I. xD
[@KaliMa Nope. It outputs "one".]
mistakes, mistakes
aggggghhhhhhh!
But you said it outputted "one, two"
Which is what made me go into a lecture.
yeah, I would still expect that
because if bar() is passing in a reference/pointer to the list
14:41
Let me correct you.
well. bar gets a pointer to the list. pointers as in c++ are passed by copy, but java calls them references and restricts them. and your assumption would be correct if bar didn't reassign the reference to a different, newly created object
"because if bar() is passing in a copy of the reference/pointer to the list"
a copy of a pointer? Wouldn't that still point to the same place though?
Yes.
If I have a sign that says "Eat at Joe's Crab Shack" and you have a sign that says "Eat at Joe's Crab Shack," we're still talking about the same crab shack
14:43
Well, no, because we have two signs.
Now I decide, eh, maybe the shack will start serving... cabbage
We're still talking about the same shack
That would be like having two instances of two objects, which have the same internal values.
@KaliMa do not forget about this assignment in bar
if there would be no assignment, then the original list would be modified
oh shit, I think I see it now
if we're passing in a copy of the pointer, it doesn't matter must because we're giving it a new pointer anyway via new list
sort of like saying "my sign is this!" "nope your sign is this now"
it's decoupled from the original
is this right?
exactly the same as c++, the only exception is that in c++ you also have to delete.
14:45
@KaliMa Yep
@KaliMa So tell me: what line would you need to remove in order for the output to be "one, two"?
Okay, so if I pass in a list to an inner class, would it prevent me from doing new list?
@Michael the new list line
@MichałZegan I have been reading this one here: http://download.java.net/jdk7/archive/b123/docs/api/java/net/JarURLConnection.html

and I gotta admit, I don't see how to implement it for my case :/
@KaliMa Which new list line? There are two.
oh sorry, "list2 = new ArrayList<String>();"
remove this one I would say
nice. let''s make a programming school :))
14:48
@KaliMa Yep, good
haha :D no need for school
I do not remember syntax of those jar urls
jar:<url>!/{entry}
my attempt was URL url = new URL("jar:file:/Assets.jar!/"); but looks like a frankenstein creation
jar:file:///my/jarfile.jar!/my/resource/name.png (no do not load folders this way, load specific files, like with getResource)
also urls like file:/// need an absolute path. I would not expect this thing to support relatives
Hmm, I will take a look at this later, tired of looking at it lol. Thanks for the help @MichałZegan & @kaderud
14:56
haha no problem. in any case: you can also URLClassLoader u = new URLClassLoader(new URL[] {new URL("bbb") }); and use getResource, where the url is your jar file
hmm yea ok, I was trying to just load the folder inside my jar file and then in player I can give rest of the URL
no. you can only load files, but you can always append to urls or such.
or to resource paths, depends on the method you use
hmm
Thanks I will check out this later, really tiered of looking at the same issue for too long.
ok. i will now ask a very on topic java question. :D:D honestly: how does room ownership works, or, what are moderators? are they site wide, or room wide?
who is the owner of SO :p
15:11
I am
lol
okay
SO significant other, right?
lol no SO => StackOverflow :p
StackUnderflowException
15:12
It can happen
I am serious about my question I would to know who is
Contex.getContext()
I think Joel Spolski is CEO.
Jeff Atwood is involved somewhere too, I think.
15:13
context.context.contexgt.context.Context.getContextContextContext();
@Michael used to be
Mmm yeah.
listed as Co-Founder (Emeritus) on that page
good
I remember listening to Podcasts with Joel and Jeff back in the early days of SO. :)
15:15
bye o/
\o/
@Hans!
Don't leave me!
You got me @Michael I will keep you warm with my questions
But, but, it's not the same :(
15:20
@Michael Why is multiple inheritance not supported in Java ?
Trust me, I can make it good!
because of it's ambiguity, like see c++.
although default methods in interfaces seem to be similar. at least you do not have inheriting of state
Ah I see.
15:47
@Spiderix I might have a demo for you. I've done two different libraries with assets and I can read asset2 from asset1 library.
@kaderud oh, that's interesting!
just packaging it now
@Spiderix

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/11754796/AssetsSampleBinary.zip
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/11754796/AssetsSampleSource.zip

AssetsSampleBinary.zip contains just the jars for running the sample, it reads one asset file from each library. Library 2 references Library1.

AssetsSampleSource.zip is just the source, did it in NB but didn't package the whole NB structure.
Thanks! I will check it out after dinner.
15:56
crap time's flying! thanks! :)
I think I made a little boo-boo in my sample while copy pasting :) In Test2.java it should be:

InputStream input1 = Test2.class.getResourceAsStream("/assets1/test1.properties");
InputStream input2 = Test1.class.getResourceAsStream("/assets2/test2.properties");

instead of what's in the dropbox-zip. This shows you can read the assets independently of eachother as long as the jars are loaded. Wouldn't even need to reference Test1.class to load resources from Library1. Could've used Test2.
16:41
Off to lunch. Bye Java!
bye @Michael and good lunch
16:57
thanks for the links @kaderud I am exhausted for today, so I will take a look at them tomorrow.
17:24
can we think of static as "sealed abstract"?
or "class-only" / "stateless"?
soo... static isn't necessarily sealed
why not
Making slow progress
17:49
oh cool, static methods automatically prevent me from trying to drag non-static variables into it
18:19
you would have NO logical way of using nonstatics there, as there is no instance. it is not just done to be easier, it is just necessary
18:54
Simply put, you can't because you can't
19:24
:)
does anyone use eclipse mars with m2e? it does not download index updates, like the download fails, always. what is that?
08:00 - 20:0020:00 - 23:00

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