So I caught the exception, printed a short statement, then throw that exception so the program would terminate, and the compiler yelled at me about an unreported exception
When I'm pressed up against a deadline I either right genius code, or shitty code. Right now I'm writing shitty code.
I did the same catch then throw set up for another exception in the same method and the compiler was totally fine with it. Java just hates me.
I like C better, mainly because my professor is really good at teaching us how it works, and actually knows the language, unlike my Java instructor last semester
i'm frustrated, I have been doing programming as a C++ programmer for more than 5 years. but found that recently, Java programmer can get higher salary than C++
it's unfair, C++ is harder to learn than Java. why is that?
Go (often referred to as golang) is a free and open source programming language created at Google in 2007 by Robert Griesemer, Rob Pike, and Ken Thompson. It is a compiled, statically typed language in the tradition of Algol and C, with garbage collection, limited structural typing, memory safety features and CSP-style concurrent programming features added.
== History ==
The language was announced in November 2009. It is used in some of Google's production systems, as well as by other firms.
Two major implementations exist:
Google's Go compiler, "gc", is developed as open source software ...
"The lowest 10 percent earned less than $57,340 ... the highest 10 percent earned more than $159,850." - Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
is there a more elegant way on changing the background color of a JTable cell based on an external value which is not part of the modal? In my case the specific cell is green when my server is online and red if it's not. When I am shutting it down I want it to be gray until the server is down.
currently I am setting a shutdownflag in the db and my renderer accesses my internal servermap (a simple hashmap that periodically updates from DB inside my controler)
..Mh during writing this I think I really have to access the data in my controller from the guiclass :)
If you really must keep them open, I would wrap your whole file-access-thingy in a separate class/API, something which knows how to clean everything up, and then--if you really must keep them open--you can use a shutdown hook as described here: itsiastic.wordpress.com/2013/01/19/…
@RaduStefanPopescu If you want the behaviour where the lambdas survive the shutdown, you need to make some kind of state saving operation on shutdown and save required state for restoration later. Note that lambdas can be made e.g. serializable by casting into intersection type
@ColdFire Because I'm using RandomAccessFile and I want to have access to that file until I actually close the thing that I'm vieweing. When I open the file i create a tab with it. I want in this open file to register a hook in an ArrayList something that can be called like arrayElem.apply()
it's convenient to keep the RandomAccessFile open while the user does visual IO on it and when he closes the application i'd just call all the functions from that list with hooks which would include closing this file
idk if this is the right way, do you get what i'm trying to do?
and also, if i have different parts of the program that require some shutdown stuff, i'd love to add a hook in an arraylist that can be called with void apply()
Yes, that works, but then my main application would own the responsibility of knowing what has been opened and what hasn't
otherwise I can just pass this ArrayList shutdownCommands in every separate part of my application and delegate the responsibility of shutdown to each module thingy
Any BEST | WORST | AVOID or more in-depth comments about performing Java CI @ GitHub (for an open-source project) from the plethora of integration options available?
the shutdown hook exists, I just want a list of no arg functions to call so i can do the shutdown as simply as shutdownHooks.forEach(WhateverThisIsCalled::shutdown)
For example, I want to display an icon on JButton, setBtnNext(new JButton(new ImageIcon("C:... IMG/button_next.png"))); ~Thiss works on my pc only, but with runnable JAR file in other pc it's not working
Read the link. Use classpath You paste a code where you load an image from a freakin' C drive. Other environment might not even have C drive, not to mention the particular image there.