This is an assignment and I am trying to write a C program that measures the data throughput (MBytes/sec) of the L2 cache of my system. To perform the measurement I have to write a program that copies an array A to an array B, repeated multiple times, and measure the throughput.
Consider at leas...
@Spiritios It seems like a value cause the reference is copied into a new variable, you can call mutating functions on it but when you actually change the reference of the variable it wont change other variables with the same reference
@LewsTherin yeah so let me get this straight - if I pass a Jframe into the constuctor of another class as a @param and use it to reference the JFrame I have inside the class it will work exactly as a reference in practice right?
@LewsTherin and by the way now that we are discussing this what is better (or is it the same) pass the reference of the JFrame or use the item I define in another class everywhere in the aplication? In terms of memory and stability...
yeah and incorporate some extra functionality, like some math commands that do not exist and I usually end up needing, also I will have some more JDialogs that will be calc and text editor with syntax highlighting and generally things that a programmer needs
nothing too fancy as a project but as I said it is not intended to go big or commercial or anything, mostly for personal use and to learn Java in more depth
that is something I did not think of too much honestly
and I always though I will also make a public class that will allow someone to write an external package so makes sense to protect all the rest methods
The facade pattern (or façade pattern) is a software design pattern commonly used with object-oriented programming. The name is by analogy to an architectural facade.
A facade is an object that provides a simplified interface to a larger body of code, such as a class library. A facade can:
* make a software library easier to use, understand and test, since the facade has convenient methods for common tasks;
* make the library more readable, for the same reason;
* reduce dependencies of outside code on the inner workings of a library, since most code uses the facade, thus allowing more f...
hide away a few classes like that and then you can do whatever you please to your System, the facaded class can just stay the same
definitely but take my advice - no uni or college or anything can learn you to code like your experience... so depends on the time u spend coding, not where u study in ;)
if the class is at a bad level the lec cant help a lot, but if the class is at a sufficient level the lec may go crazy and spend time teaching stuff they wouldnt otherwise
we managed to get some people in our labs to teach us more about files in Java which we never did in lectures and boy was that a good thing
but still not whole class a bunch of people who actually spent time coding during the semester
the professor we had was a good PERSON and FRIEND as it turns out, we still talk and he usually does the mentor-thing as I am following CS in uni but he was no good as a teacher
yeah he occasionally will have a look at my code and tell me heh this is no good, change it but apart from this when I was in high school he was just not productive as a teacher
like I cannot teach cs at all even if I could get to be the best programmer
programming is not a thing to be taught, it is a skill to develop
Teachers need some good material to work with and by "material" I mean students that actually aim to be programmers or computer scientists generally
If the studs spend no time to code or tinker with a pc then how is the teacher supposed to teach them?
its like math but worse
if i solve no problems and they keep on teaching I will never learn how to do that
And apart from that having (like in my uni) one person teach C++, Java and C# makes things worse and harder. I mean these 3 are related and quite easy but still all by the same man? In 3 consecutive lextures to 3 different classes? Oh man will he have a bad headache when he come back home...
I mean scala has all tha java lacks and I could wish for and c# is mostly windows-dependent so even if nobody will teach me scala I will code in it one day
yeah why not, generally I am interested in learning languages and seeing the differences and things, but investing in a language is a whole diferent thing for me
and by investing I mean doing anything over the boundary of simple cmd-line apps and some very few easy to work with GUI apps
It is good to know where to stop when doing so. I mean java is too bad for functional programming (if this term is right, i mean it is not a functional language like Haskell)
and that is where scala will kick in if I ever feel the need to do so
instead of learning python I will just migrate to scala
Yeah but sometimes this phase comes inside a general 24hr wtf phase :P So yeah I though I havent even learnt C++ at that time so how could I possibly learn another language as well? :P