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04:00
"Positive anything is better than negative thinking." -Elbert Hubbard (source)
 
2 hours later…
06:27
@Ungeheuer I would not. Only for developing that might be fine but other installation are looking for the JRE because one cannot always be sure that everyone develops Java ;) This is no 100% answer, but I would better leave it than be sorry afterwards
 
3 hours later…
09:35
Anyone here
 
2 hours later…
11:15
@mtbrands you
:/
Do you happen to know stuff about javafx?
 
2 hours later…
12:55
@geisterfurz007 geisssssssssssssssssss
13:39
Morning, Java!
@Ungeheuer no
14:03
I am working on a inventory system to store product details. I would like to use a bar code scanner for this...assume that the products comes with their bar codes. Now I am using JTextField to accept product information like product name, etc. I was thinking to use a JTextField to accept the bar code.. However, from what I read on the net it seems that this is not the way it is done. How have you done it?
@Giovanrich Welcome to the Java Chat, the room for Java enthusiasts! Please use a code snippet tool when posting code snippets. If you have an Android question, you're in the wrong place! And remember: this is not tech support! Thanks for visiting and have fun! :D
 
3 hours later…
17:14
:D
I'm trying to solve a problem: Given 2 strings, I need to check if they're k-equal, meaning every sub string of length k in str1 appears in str2 and vice versa. The number of occurnces of the sub-strings does not have to be equal though. we can assume that the string are zero equal by default. Lastly, the k has to be the highest number we can find. thus if there are sub-strings of length 1 and length 2 that appear on both strings, we should return just the strings with elngth 2.
@IlanAizelmanWS Welcome to the Java Chat, the room for Java enthusiasts! Please use a code snippet tool when posting code snippets. If you have an Android question, you're in the wrong place! And remember: this is not tech support! Thanks for visiting and have fun! :D
This task was given when we learned Collections. Should I approach it with HashMap?
 
2 hours later…
18:54
Hi ,
Hope all are doing well. I have made app for learning english .This is the first app from me ,Show i need solid support and review for my work.
Hopefully you all try and give valuable feedback. Please go to below link
for the same.

i made app for English pronunciation just try and give feedback

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.anbu.loud_it
@anbuselvan Welcome to the Java Chat, the room for Java enthusiasts! Please use a code snippet tool when posting code snippets. If you have an Android question, you're in the wrong place! And remember: this is not tech support! Thanks for visiting and have fun! :D
 
3 hours later…
Box
Box
21:31
People still there ? I have a stupid question
for(int k = 0; k < arrays.length; k++) {
if(hash.containsKey(arrays[k])){
int match = arrays[k];

// How to add match values to new array ?
}
21:45
@Box are you asking how to add values to an array?
Box
Box
No create new array from match values
So that I can access in object form
@JennaSloan Yes your right add values to array
create array if it contains key
You could use a List
@Box this should work, but is probably not the best solution: paste.ofcode.org/reNYWRMyhdRnW7GDmSkJUj
Box
Box
22:04
@JennaSloan Thanks a lot I tried system.arraycopy was getting array index out of bound exception. List was ok . Thanks very much again.

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