« first day (869 days earlier)      last day (4301 days later) » 

00:05
@Code-Guru for real?
have you seen this movie before: I Saw The Devil?
@aboadam Do you mean that you only want to print out the elements that have changed? Or do you still want to print out all of the elements after the values changed?
@Kneel-Before-ZOD nope
@Kneel-Before-ZOD yah...to be fair, it was also tagged as a Java question and my answer is about Java
46
A: Multiple Main Functions

Code-GuruIn Java, the computer determines the "entry point" when you actually execute the program, not when you compile. For example, from the command-line java MyClass searches for main() in MyClass. All other main() functions are ignored. If you are using an IDE, then you can set which class contai...

Sweet! 46 votes now!
@Kneel-Before-ZOD You must have found it ;-)
hey, does anybody know a "wildcard" delimiter for StringTokenizer, where each delimiter is just any char
@Nathvi .
"*" ?
00:14
I suggest you use String.split() or regexes rather than StringTokenizer.
11
Q: Why is StringTokenizer deprecated?

donnytonThe Java documentation doesn't seem to mention anything about deprecation for StringTokenizer, yet I keep hearing about how it was deprecated long ago. Was it deprecated because it had bugs/errors, or is String.split() simply better to use overall? I have some code that uses StringTokenizer and...

In fact after reading that Q&A, it looks like String.split() is the preferred method because you can use a regex for your delimiters.
so, do you happen to know the wildcard delimiter, ?
For String.split()? It's ".".
For just a single character.
01:00
that's awesome
hey guys, never came across this algorithm but how exactly does rank sort work?
was trying to google some details on it but getting articles related to excel in some way or another
@Tohmas I've never heard of rank sort. Where did you hear of it?
@knowbody isn't that quick-sort?
@Code-Guru was asked to implement this sorting algorithm by some guy,apparently it exists, but not much info on it
he is showing all types of sorts as far as I remember, but I'll find something better for u
01:09
@knowbody don't worry,i think i found a good article
@knowbody thanks for the help though!
@Code-Guru in-case you are interested too, the 4th slide on this pdf explains rank sort rather well.tjhsst.edu/~rlatimer/assignments2005/WilkinsonOddEvenVer2.pdf
@Tohmas thanks
@Tohmas makes sense now. Good luck with implementing it ;-)
@Code-Guru thanks! :D
01:30
any of you guys ever used mpj express?
ahh ok :)
01:59
gnite Java!
 
2 hours later…
03:35
waka
if anybody could help me figure out this error I would be most grateful:
the problem is:


Write a method , getFirstLine, that is passed a String  argument  and that returns the first line. (Recall that lines are terminated with the "\n" character .) Assume  that the argument  contains at least one complete, newline-terminated line.

Instructor's notes: The String might be something like this: "first\nsecond\nthrid\n". In this case, you'd want to return "first" -- everything from the beginning up to the first newline.
What I wrote:

public static String getFirstLine (String input_1) {

if (input_1.equals(null)) {
return ();
}

else {
String[] parts = input_1.split("\n");
String answer = parts[0];
return answer;
}

}
Everything is right, except when a null paramater is passed, I get a Exception java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: 0 occurred
the real code I wrote is:

public static String getFirstLine (String input_1) {

String[] parts = input_1.split("\n");
String answer = parts[0];
return answer;


}
04:02
if anybody feels like helping, just @nathvi me
 
2 hours later…
05:49
@Nathvi you should use if(input_1==null) to avoid the exception, it isn't going into the if because you can't invoke a method on null, so it can't do .equals, then when it tries to split it fails because the string is null
shouldn't it be if(input_1.equals(null)) ?
@AlliK?
I guess I don't understand why
nvm
I tried that, and it dose not work...
@nathvi is it still the same error?
you can't have input_1 == null, because it is an array
you have it as a string
also, it should return "" not ()
I just did it in eclipse and it works fine
hummm
so my code looks like this now:

public static String getFirstLine (String input_1) {


if(input_1==null) {
return "";
}

else {
String[] parts = input_1.split("\n");
String answer = parts[0];
return answer;
}

}
@AlliK, does that look right?
06:02
yes
I still get the same error :(
if you pass nothing to the method, you don't get an error?
it can't be static
why not?
(still get the same error)
it's working for me with the static actually
but you still have to pass something, i called getFirstLine(null)
yeah that's the problem, I have to output nothing when I input nothing into the paramater
so it has to output "" when you call "getFirstLine();"
or I guess return nothing
06:10
then you need an overloaded method, so that you have one method that is getFirstLine() and one that is getFirstLine(String input_1)
humm
so should this work?

public static String getFirstLine (String input_1) {
String[] parts = input_1.split("\n");
String answer = parts[0];
return answer;
}

public static String getFirstLine () {
return "";
}
yes
damn!
I tried this, and the server still won't accept it
I guess it's because it's looking for a single method
oh it only wants one method?
you could potentially use vargargs
humm... and how would that help?
06:19
public static String getFirstLine (String... input_1) {

if(input_1.length==0) {
return "";
}

else {
String input_1s=input_1[0];
String[] parts = input_1s.split("\n");
String answer = parts[0];
return answer;
}

}
it makes your input into an array of that type so it could be either null, which would have a length of zero, or 1 (a string)
still wont accept that :(
lol damn you codelab
btw
@AlliK
I like your picture :)
thanks
this is frustrating. I can't think of another way it would accept nothing or a string
me either :p
maybe it is broken
it works on bluej...
I'm pretty sure it's broken
time to email the instructor
o great
now our email client is down
haha oh no
 
6 hours later…
DD.
DD.
12:16
anybody here?
 
1 hour later…
14:18
hello?
any bady here?
 
3 hours later…
17:29
hi @all
 
2 hours later…
19:49
Question, guys:
If I have this code: System.out.println(((Window)this).size)
Is the cast really necessary?
Wouldn't System.out.println(this.size) work as well?
 
2 hours later…
21:33
Hello, Java!

« first day (869 days earlier)      last day (4301 days later) »