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18:03
yes
Can you run a loop within the Runnable run method?
public void run() {
		try {
			for(int i=0; i<str.length()-1; i++) {
				System.out.print(str.substring(i, i+1));
				Thread.sleep(pause);
			}
		} catch(Exception e) {
			e.printStackTrace();
		}
yes just use while(true) {}
18:19
It still gets mad when I try to print substring
How do you do
hi @user
@Crowz crowz it can't get mad it's a computer...
is it because str is beyond the new threads scope, or that you didn't declare str volatile?
@Michael hi! :)
@Adude11 str is in the constructor
18:21
@user1690130 oops i meant @user1518451
@Michael sadness :(
Maybe someone help me ...
@Michael i thought someone actually want to speak with me :)
@user1690130 nooooo dont be sad
I have stupid problem with GUI
I have GUI app - "testUI" and server - communication is ok. I added "LoginForm" which open - "testUI" - (after click the button "Log in" - code above) - testUI doesn't communication with server.
18:22
@Michael i can't find people to speak with me about perl
ummm cause this is the java chat...
@Michael or scraping from webite
@Michael i thought maybe java could scrape?
@user1690130 it can, use jsoup: jsoup.org
@Michael i don't know wht that means though since i've never programmed in java
do you have a few moments?
@user1690130 -_- it's a library..
18:24
@Michael still, i don't know what that mean because i've never programmed in java
@Crowz Unless str is declared final or is a global variable it can't be accessed by other threads
user you have to learn Java first before you can scrape in Java
@Crowz Whats the error
@Michael i've scraped in perl
@Adude11 is there a way around that?
@user1690130 user perl isn't java...
18:29
@Crowz Can you not just declare it global?
@Adude11 No because I want someone to do Thread t = new Thread(new HelloWorld("hello world", 2000));, you know?
@Crowz As long as the str is a member of the thread class, then you will be fine.
lol you have the assignments backwards
should be this.str = str
lol... I'm an idiot
Yeah it works now
18:35
nice
@Michael i know that! i just want to scape. don't care how it is done.
@user1690130 you have to learn the Java Basics first.
@Michael do you know how to scrape in perl?
@Michael do you know how to scrape well in java?
How do you compare chars in java? I want to say if(str.charAt(index)!=" ")
@Michael could you implement the following in java?
18:39
no, yes, implement what
@Crowz if(str.charAt(index)!=' ')
Use single quotes for defining hard-coded characters.
oooo
2
A: using Perl to scrape a website

user1126070You could use WWW::Mechanize::Firefox to process any site that could be loaded by Firefox. http://search.cpan.org/~corion/WWW-Mechanize-Firefox-0.70/lib/WWW/Mechanize/Firefox/Examples.pm You have to install the Mozrepl plugin and you will be able to process the web page contant via this module....

@Michael sorry i forgot the link earlier
@user1690130 user i don't know perl
@Michael but you see the inquiry up top?
I am interested in writing a perl script that goes to the following link and extracts the number 1975: https://familysearch.org/search/collection/results#count=20&query=%2Bevent_place_level_1%3ACalifornia%20%2Bevent_place_level_2%3A%22San%20Diego%22%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1923-1923~%20%2Bgender%3AM%20%2Brace%3AWhite&collection_id=2000219

That website is the amount of white men born in the year 1923 who live in San Diego County, California in 1940. I am trying to do this in a loop structure to generalize over multiple counties and birth years.
@Michael i'm not married to perl
@user1690130 It's a little tricky parsing HTML with regular expressions.
A more reliable approach would be to parse the HTML, and then extract the information you need from the DOM tree.
The Java jsoup library lets you do just that.
It parses the HTML into a DOM, and then lets you query it using CSS selector syntax. It's basically JQuery for Java.
For example, to get all tags that have the "foo" class, you would do something like:
Document doc = Jsoup.parse(html);
Elements elements = doc.select(".foo");
I don't know if Perl has a similar library or not
It's a super cool library, I've used it myself
18:56
@Michael is this easy code to write and implement?
@user1690130 very
You can pass a URL object into the Jsoup.parse() method
could i run it though windows on a command prompt window?
and get the output in .txt file?
You need to read up on the Java basics first
well yes
but do i nee to have some java software?
or can i execute it though a command prompt window?
Yeah go to "java.sun.com" and download the JDK
18:58
so i can do this effectively "open source"
The "JDK" is for developers and the "JRE" is for "normal" people
i'm not a developer . . .
user you have to be if you want to program this
sounds intmidating
You need the JDK to compile programs.
19:00
i know basics of C++
you've scraped before?
just a few times, you know, at parties with friends
Wow you guys.
The JDK is the rough equivalent of the compiler toolchain for Java.
Java works by being "compiled" into intermediary bytecode, which is then run via the JRE (Java Runtime Environment), by the component referred to as the JVM (Java Virtual Machine).
The JDK includes the contents of the JRE, as well as the Java Compiler, which transforms Java source code into intermediary Java bytecode, in the form of .CLASS files.
@Michael for real!
@user1690130 yea don't tell anyone though
@Michael if i resumbit the posting as a java question, would you answer it?
19:06
Essentially, to get started, you'd need the JDK installed (which is free from java.sun.com), then you'd (likely) need an IDE.
@ShotgunNinja to scrape?
@user1690130 I don't think he would. If I were you, I'd stick with Python for this one.
There are layers upon layers of knowledge you'd need to learn to get any sort of scraping mechanism working in Java.
@ShotgunNinja i don't know python. 've been using perl. but i can't get perl to work and cna't find people to help me with perl
Welp, Perl is rather uniquely qualified to do web scraping...
i will pay someone to do this for me.
19:08
@user1690130 Get out. That is an insult to our integrity.
@ShotgunNinja Not when you use an HTML parsing library, like jsoup.
@ShotgunNinja well i've offered a bounty
We don't want your money; we're meant to help for free, out of the goodness of our heart.
@ShotgunNinja i don't know what else i can offer.
@user1690130 Software developers don't respond well to bribes. We don't give two shits about cash.
We want to help people, and make a difference.
19:09
@ShotgunNinja i hope i did not offend you
@user1690130 Well, I've got a strong backbone. I'm just letting you know, though, we are creators, not builders.
@ShotgunNinja i offered a bounty to my inquiry. i'm not gettning much feedback
@user1690130 Then you've come to the right place.
@ShotgunNinja would you please kindly help me?
I would love to.
19:10
2
A: using Perl to scrape a website

user1126070You could use WWW::Mechanize::Firefox to process any site that could be loaded by Firefox. http://search.cpan.org/~corion/WWW-Mechanize-Firefox-0.70/lib/WWW/Mechanize/Firefox/Examples.pm You have to install the Mozrepl plugin and you will be able to process the web page contant via this module....

@ShotgunNinja should we set up a separate room? i don't want to hijack this one . . .
if it will not be in java, no les
@ShotgunNinja thank you by the way.
Okay, I've read a bit further into this.l
There is an answer that brings up a rather good point:
4
A: using Perl to scrape a website

Joel BergerIt would appear that your data is generated by Javascript and thus LWP cannot help you. That said, it seems that the site you are interested in has a developer API: https://familysearch.org/developers/ I recommend using Mojo::URL to construct your query and either Mojo::DOM or Mojo::JSON to pars...

@ShotgunNinja i hardly understood a lick of what he said
The guy above points out two important facts: (1) The site content is generated by Javascript, and (2) The site has a developer API exposed.
. . . so what is that good point?
Essentially, when you do a scrape, you just get the static HTML content.
19:14
@ShotgunNinja in plain english?
Calm down.
Read what I'm saying, and let me finish.
@ShotgunNinja i'm sorry
When you request a webpage, the server sends you HTML, CSS, Javascript, and other content files (mostly images & text), which are rebuilt by your web browser into a displayed form.
Javascript serves as a means of embedding custom behavior into the "static" HTML structure of the page.
Without a web browser, though, that Javascript is not executed, and therefore does not modify the page appropriately.
This is the limitations of such a system.
@ShotgunNinja ok . . .
If the site has Javascript, then you can't scrape it.
19:17
On this page, the Javascript uses what is referred to as AJAX to send a request from your Web browser back to the server, which then sends back more content to populate the page.
@ShotgunNinja so without a browser, the page is unreadable?
Essentially.
Rather, if the page content is generated using Javascript, then you can't scrape it.
@Michael i thought i've scraped another pgae that had a javascript. but i could b wrong....
What you'd end up scraping is basically an empty box, with instructions on how to populate it, that are read in by the browser.
19:18
If the site has a developer API exposed, then you should be able to retrieve the information you need that way.
^ This is the other important fact.
@ShotgunNinja i don't know what that entails
The site itself exposes a public-facing API (Application Programmer's Interface), which will allow you to send requests in the same way that it does, and get programmatic results.
@ShotgunNinja i do vaguely because another user explained API key a little bt
If you can get the info you need from the API, then using the API is much preferable to scraping.
19:20
@Michael why? is it faster to run? easier to code?
So, rather than getting static page content, reading through it with Perl, and pulling out what you need... you can ask the server directly, and it will give you data objects that you can simply use, instead of needing to generate them.
@user1690130 Far easier to code.
Yea, APIs give you the data in its raw form.
Of course, it'll be a bit more highly-structured, assuming the developers know how to write a "good" API.
For example, to get sugar, would you rather extract it from an apple or get it raw from sugarcane?
^ Good analogy.
19:21
thx
Also, as a fan of hard cider, I must say there's a benefit to both, but sugar is far more flexible than apple mash.
haha ;)
@user1690130 If you want a good set of examples to look at, try looking at this: familysearch.org/developers/docs/sample-app
@Michael still struggling with thta analogy
They have a number of examples that you could look at to see how they go through the steps to get the needed information.
It looks like they just have a jQuery Javascript interface using jQuery's AJAX functionality.
19:26
@user1690130 What I meant was, it's much harder from scrape information from a webpage than it is to get it raw from an API.
@Michael i know but since i've only scraped from webpges and it has worked fine, i'm ok with the status quo
@Michael i know it's anti-tech to think that way
but i'm more like if it ain't broke, i don't want to touch it at all
To scrape information from a webpage, you have to filter out all the HTML rendering code (like font colors, font sizes, images, tables, etc), which can be difficult.
computers scare me to death
@user1690130 Well, in this case, you want something that works, regardless of whatever "status quo" there is. Simply put, your old way doesn't work.
i'd rather baby sit crying babies than deal with a computer
19:28
Forget that it's a computer. It's just a procedure.
Any idea?
0
Q: JList get Lead Selection Index returning too big values

Adude11I have a JList in which I have, for simplicities sake, Strings (its actually something else, but that fits the question). I wanted to add a filter, but when I first attempted it, the JPanels I was using would just disappear, but the ones below it wouldn't move up. So I implemented my own ListMode...

You're writing down instructions for someone to follow, and there's a specific means of writing them down. That's programming.
If you let some irrational fear of computers take over, keep in mind the fact that they are just instruction-following boxes of wires and chips. They only do what they're told.
@ShotgunNinja yes, i've programmed. i don't mind wrting code
Okay, then don't be afraid of change.
If something doesn't work, you ask a question, get an answer, and follow it.
@ShotgunNinja my computer is always breaking
@ShotgunNinja over heating
19:30
@user1690130 And that makes you afraid to learn new things about programming... how?
then get a fan for it...
@ShotgunNinja the 2 are not connected
@user1690130 Exactly.
@Adude11 what type of fan. i hve the fan that you put underneath the compt, and that doe not do much
@Adude11 because the fan is on the side of the computer
@ShotgunNinja technical jargon goes in one ear and out the othe
Software development takes a lot from engineering, in that there is a problem you are facing which you must solve.
@user1690130 Do you play video games at all?
19:32
@ShotgunNinja nope
@user1690130 Do you play sports?
@ShotgunNinja but i used to
@ShotgunNinja yes!
@user1690130 Which sports?
@ShotgunNinja individual sports
@user1690130 Like...?
19:33
like running, tennis
@user1690130 Then you know what a half-minute mile means, or what "love" means.
Those are no different from programming jargon, with the exception that there's less terms to remember, and they change less frequently.
@ShotgunNinja i'm ok with jargon, but i don't like manuals
@ShotgunNinja i didn't learn tenni by reading the rule book
@user1690130 Neither do I. Manuals suck. Examples are better.
@ShotgunNinja it's like people who say football or baseball are hard to follow because of the rules
@ShotgunNinja i'm more learning by doing
@ShotgunNinja i could not agree more. i learn the concepts better from the exmaples
@ShotgunNinja and with enough fooling around with it, it eventully sinks in
@user1690130 Well then why are you asking how to do things on here, try it out.
19:37
Well, there are examples here: familysearch.org/developers/docs/sample-app
@Adude11 because i don't even understnd how to get started
You also picked a doozy of a thing to get started on...
working with external APIs usually requires a bit of background knowledge of the technology they are built for.
@ShotgunNinja which one matches the type of example that i'm trying to do?
In this case, the familysearch API is built for Javascript with jQuery.
@ShotgunNinja search does not have all of the prameters
i'[m not looking for person id
19:39
@user1690130 Right; well, if you learn some more Javascript, you could easily add more.
Anyone knows mysql?
@Washu I know MySQL; not the best at it, but still.
@ShotgunNinja i'm designing my db on mysql workbench and i dont understand the difference between Identifying and Non-Identifying relationships....
@ShotgunNinja oh, so i am working off of th search one?
@user1690130 I would say so. The key line that does the search is the restAPI.get() function call.
19:41
i don't know
i got th following output: {
"message" : "Bad Request",
"code" : 400,
"label" : "Bad Request"
}
restAPI.get("/platform/tree/search?" + query).done(function(data)
Oh, you probably need to be authenticated first.
ok, i see
@ShotgunNinja i've ben waiting!!
In the interest of security (which is to say, making everything way more complicated "for your safety"), they have an OAuth2 authentication token that is required for queries.
Make an account, then sign in.
@user1690130 The HTTP 400 Bad Request code is due to there being insufficient query parameters being generated.
19:44
@ShotgunNinja where? how?
In HTTP (which is what you use to request and receive content over the Web), everything is built into HTTP Requests and Responses.
I'm sure you've seen HTTP 404: File Not Found before.
Back to basics much??
That is one of the HTTP response codes.
HTTP builds in session details, URL formats, and request security and additional parameters into its definition.
@ShotgunNinja ok . . .
@ShotgunNinja do you know?
19:46
The 400 Bad Request comes back from the server when you have a bad URL.
I'm guessing you clicked "Search" with nothing typed into the boxes.
have you tried actually printing out the url you made?
The code that builds the query URL, which is visible in the Source tab, isn't working right because you likely have nothing entered.
@Adude11 He's reading an example.
For mine, I got an HTTP 403: Forbidden response, since I was not authenticated with OAuth2.
With REST, your security credentials are passed back and forth in the form of a "security token" (basically a digital ID card). In this case, that is provided by an OAuth2 service on their website.
The user never sees this token, but the programmer must be mindful of it.
Under the source for the "Authenticate" example, at the top of their webpage, there is a lot of code which shows how authentication works.
A lot of that code will be copy-paste work, until you can understand how it all works, what parts are jQuery, what parts are application-specific, and what parts are OAuth2. But the stuff in there is needed for the queries to work.
Essentially, the button redirects you to their login page, and after you put in a username and password, it sticks a "cookie" of information into your Web browser, which has the token number needed to let you use their API properly.
starting with: // OAuth 2 Authentication Example

var clientId = 'ABCD-EFGH-JKLM-NOPQ-RSTU-VWXY-0123-4567';
19:54
@user1690130 Yes, that's it.
The client ID is essentially made up, as far as I can tell.
@ShotgunNinja do you know the difference?
@ShotgunNinja this is java? perl?
@ShotgunNinja can we use that ID for now? is it like a test case?
@user1690130 This is Javascript.
Javascript is far different from Java.
@ShotgunNinja and i will put that in the perl code?
@user1690130 No. You would actually put this into a Webpage, in a <script> tag.
19:56
@ShotgunNinja what?!? not a .pl script?
@user1690130 Correct.
Perl is too limited for this system.
@ShotgunNinja can i do this open source?
on a windows machine?
@user1690130 I have no idea what you're talking about. Of course you can; open-source just means you give away the source code freely (like old homework) when you're done.
Since this is all frontend stuff, it's open-source by default, since the source has to be given to the user in order to be run on a Web browser.
This is in the territory of Web programming.
@ShotgunNinja do i have to purchase some software in order to do this?
@user1690130 Not at all. You can run HTML and Javascript off of a folder on your desktop, if you so choose.
It depends on jQuery, which is an open-source project.
It also communicates with the FamilySearch API, which has open source components, but might require payment.

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