@Pigman168 An annotation is kind of a marker. This can be a marker for the IDE (IntelliJ uses them for instant feedback if you violate contracts you defined using an annotation (method my not return null for example), the compiler to ignore certain warnings, for yourself (like @Override) and some for the runtime (like @FXML for javaFX) that mark
fields or methods or classes so that additional things can be applied. In case of JavaFX this means that they can be found by Reflection. If the annotation is missing this will not work anymore
however, since it doesn't have a gender, it became used as such. (if you ever played DotA for example, a killing spree line is 'Someone stop them!' although you are a single person)
I would like to treat a user as a non-gender noun and refer to it with the gender-neutral pronoun, it. E.g.,
The user defines two variables, x and y. It then multiplies each variable by a prime number.
However, on Wikipedia I found this:
The word "it", however, has an extremely impers...
> Both forms are probably acceptable to most people. Some find using they confusing/ugly because it is plural. Sometimes people use she as a compromise; but this is still rare. The choice is yours.
@Pigman168 @Override does nothing directly. It will show a warning though if the method after it does not override a method from the super-class (if you change the signature). I have no clue about event-handling though, sorry
@geisterfurz007 for this kind of long length array eg {1,2,5,6,9,8,5,0,0,0,5,6,8,2,3,4,4}, i think its length will be always in number 2 digits, so i dont need to cast int in it yea ?
@SusHill The issue is not with the length of the array. a.length will always be an int. int divided by int will return int as well in java. So you do not need to cast
Never!
Difference: a.length/2.0 int divided by double will return double. This would need a cast to fit into int
you will probably have to read out the stream, then convert it to a string, then do the replace, then convert it back to bytes, and then output it in a new stream
Noone can post answers anyways. It is a duplicate of the question linked. You cannot deny it... It is the same thing Note: it actually is not because the regex is not able to be cast to strings in the way it should be