its specifically for javadoc, our professor said to use it to document our code, but half the classes he told us to create were abstract, and the others were not public and javadoc only works with public classes
You can configure it to output private classes, etc.
The Javadoc tool can include the modifiers public, protected, private, abstract, final, static, transient, and volatile, but not synchronized or native.
You know what's annoying? Not being able to access a local variable of a method. I'm sure I'm just designing something wrong, but I which I would stop running into that....
thats easy, you can't access a variable you create in methods from outside the method because its out of scope, when the method is popped off the stack all of its stuff is lost with it
@Steve I can't create the object without the variable given as an arg for the method so it can't be declared in the class since I still can't get the variables from the method.
I guess I could have the local method variable be assigned to a class variable to be used in the creation of the object, but I feel like that would throw an exception, lol.
I know I have major design flaws, so I suppose I'll just try to work those out and see if it doesn't just solve itself via proper design.
So I have a class that has a constructor which requires arguments. When I try to create an object from that class NetBeans expects no arguments. Do you guys know what might be wrong off the top of your heads?
I have a nearly identical class that expects arguments just fine...
So I'm looking to make it so that only one node(java object) can be selected on my game field at one time. The node is created from the class UnitAnt which has a field for whether or not it is selected. I would like the object (UnitAnt) to request "selection" from the game engine (class Game) and then have the engine dictate that the previously selected UnitAnt should be deselected to make "room" for the new selection.
My question is...
How would you approach unique identification for each AntUnit? Is it practical to create a unique string or int for that?
Actually, maybe I just figured it out... Maybe I should be directly handing objects around...