@JennaSloan Yes that is correct but I cannot understand the meaning of the line "<T extends AbstractAction.Builder<Cat, ? extends Builder> & CatBuilder>"?
"An aspirational diet will have you dreaming of success; but it's the attachment of expectations and tangible goals that feeds the desire, persistence, and fortitude required to make the win." -Lorii Myers (source)
You pay for expertise, not a certain stack or language
The reason those less known languages pay more is because the devs that learn and use them generally have a much greater expertise than your average Java dev developing Java
Or the average frontend dev being an expert on JavaScript
I'm trying to compile C source file through Java and if I use gcc directly (compileWithGccNoCmd()) there is no output files (in this case .exe and .gcno). However if I use cmd (compileWithGcc()) the output files are there.
I'm using ProcessBuilder for both and set the working directory to make sure the output files aren't lost somewhere.
@MadaraUchiha So you're implying if one learns Kotlin, they couldn't necessarily get a job for programming Kotlin that pays more because correlation is not causation?
Assuming you could get a job as a Kotlin programmer, I think you would be paid more (granted, maybe not necessarily at the average of a programmer of Kotlin)
And people who use niche languages are generally the more experienced lot that have formed their own opinions about languages and tools and found something they truly prefer to work with
Thus, they are already talented devs to begin with, and now they're doing something they chose to do that has nothing to do with the workplace they're currently on.
And people who use niche languages are generally the more experienced lot that have formed their own opinions about languages and why they suck and made or are making their own which they truly prefer to work with
fixed it
@Neil i have never seen a language that makes semicolons optional work properly
Ugh, is there no way in outlook to make an e-mail "read" by deleting it?
You know the types of e-mails. Notifications from your boss and coworkers that you've seen hundreds of times that don't pertain to you but you can't even put your boss in the e-mail spam list
@MadaraUchiha two more comments btw. Mod-flagged one of them (I'd use the room from yesterday, but it looks like it's deleted. Or I'm just looking in the wrong place :D)
you can get impacted by stuff like this whether you're a RO or not though. If you talk or in any other way do anything, there's a chance someone, somewhere will hate you for doing so
Which one do you mean? (type the number) 1. javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest#getSession(boolean) 2. javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest#getSession()
@MinNaingOo I mean, say, instantiating an instance of HttpServletRequest forcively then calling its getSession method passing true
I'm pretty sure you could make it regurgitate any bad behavior you want if you don't use it properly, in that sense
That's probably not your case, just saying
If you're trying to determine if the mistake is caused by a null value being returned from getSession, my advice is to never assume anything. Check it :P
Well, I could null-check every non-primitive variable that ever comes out of second- or third-party code. At some point you'll just have to trust the implementation of the JVM/library
For HttpServletRequest with a battle tested implementation, when it says it doesn't return null, I'd trust that
Which one do you mean? (type the number) 1. java.awt.List#remove(String) 2. java.awt.List#remove(int) 3. java.awt.List#remove(MenuComponent) 4. java.util.List#remove(Object) 5. java.util.List#remove(int)
it's kind of the same old discussion.. offer more functionality which is less performant or only offer the most performant options and leave something to be desired
A software architect is a software expert who makes high-level design choices and dictates technical standards, including software coding standards, tools, and platforms. The leading expert is referred to as the chief architect.
== History ==
The software architect concept began to take hold when object-oriented programming or OOP, was coming into more widespread use (in the late 1990s and early years of the 21st century). OOP allowed ever-larger and more complex applications to be built, which in turn required increased high-level application and system oversight.
== Duties ==
The role...
Naturally, everything in biology and astronomy points towards that
The earth is round, and one rotation takes ~24 hours. So that means it can technically only ever be 12 hours of daylight, give or take a bit at the edges.
So you can use the dark time where your cheap-ass eyes don't work that well anyway to rest and sleep. Voila, you got a 24-hour-cycle
Add a bit of buffer at each side for getting started and winding down at the start and end of each day and you got the 8/8/8 cycle we're all so big fans of. And you can't turn millenia of evolution off because you went into a cave for a few days
In eighteenth-century opera seria (serious opera), the main singers would stand in ballet's third position, with bent, bowlegged knees and heels together, with one ankle in front of the other. They remained in that position the entire song. (source)
When you write code, it will become a system of interacting components. No matter what design pattern you use. But it's clean and understandable, and works
hi all! I have a method from a class which returns a new object. For debugging propose, I want to find what class is that object returned... what method should I use? I have something like object.return(arg); is more like a factory