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01:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

01:51
Anyone here?
02:03
@DemCodeLines Yo.
@CCInc Yo. How ya doin'?!
@DemCodeLines Meh.
 
1 hour later…
03:13
@Eugene sorry had to eat
@CCInc what's up
@Washu yo
 
1 hour later…
04:29
is it possible to linearized pdf using itext pdf library in java
 
5 hours later…
09:27
@Washu Okey. So what about regarding my previous question?
can anyone pls help me with my question? stackoverflow.com/questions/15516979/…
 
3 hours later…
12:10
room topic changed to Java: Vote for a new topic here! [android] [java] [javabeans] [java-ee] [jsp] [servlets] [swing]
room topic changed to Java: Vote for a new topic (here)[chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/26545/java-topic-ideas]! [android] [java] [javabeans] [java-ee] [jsp] [servlets] [swing]
room topic changed to Java: Vote for a new topic at chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/26545/java-topic-ideas! [android] [java] [javabeans] [java-ee] [jsp] [servlets] [swing]
okay, fail topic name by me. Links apparently don't work in topics.
hello @Vegard!
12:54
hi
@Doorknob links dont work in topics
I know @Michael :P
oh ok
 
1 hour later…
14:22
@Eugene sorry, i have this bad habit of dissappearing
Which question?
Ohh :)
Sorry missed that question
Well you only need 2 things first that you know java and second that you are often logged in the chatroom
14:37
howdy folks
hi @ninja
14:55
hi @ninja
@ShotgunNinja how are you doing
15:13
@Washu gooood
15:50
Hey all
I want to know if spring could persist data without using hibernate or JPA ?
@Angelika hey, i have no idea right now but let me see if i can find something about it
 
1 hour later…
16:59
@Angelika angelika use JDBC, it's java 101
17:13
@crypticツ brohoof /)
@Washu sorry ?
@crypticツ you don't watch My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic?
D:
@Washu ahh got it ..just googling meaning ..
hellwo
@crypticツ hi :D, how are you?
@Washu i am good you ?
user1174868
17:20
Any clue what is wrong with my if statement?
user1174868
if (compoundingOption == 1.0)
user1174868
it is always false
user1174868
I can set it to 1, 2, 3 and only 3 will work
@crypticツ working
@Jordan hm
How is that possible?
@Jordan give more code
17:24
jordan
user1174868
yeah
it's a double
user1174868
does that matter?
yea
it could be 1.000000002
user1174868
but 3 works
17:26
jordan it wont work if its .00000001 off
user1174868
I hate java
user1174868
so much
Lol
it's not java
jordan how are you getting it?
user1174868
I think these people jsut made it up as they went along, zero planning and no looking back
user1174868
17:27
double k = Finance.computeApy(5.50, 1);
user1174868
so I need to do some overloading crazy stuff
jordan make computeApy return an int
user1174868
but the other number has to be a double
huh?
user1174868
there are two arguments
user1174868
17:29
one is a double, one is an int
user1174868
I think it would be easier if the conditionals ranged from .5 - 1.8 for 1
user1174868
does that work?
what arguments
@Jordan explain the whole exercise please
user1174868
I need to use a method to compute the Apy
17:31
You should never do direct == comparisons of floating-point data types.
user1174868
so I call that method in a main method
user1174868
wow
user1174868
I hate java so much
user1174868
truly is satan's language
It's not just Java. You'll encounter this problem in any programming language.
user1174868
17:32
scheme doesnt do this
If the number is off just by a small fraction, it will return false.
Well, if there's even a small chance that the number will not be whole, then you shouldn't use == comparisons.
You could do something like if (Math.abs(compoundingOption - 1.0) < 0.000001)
user1174868
is that a valid statement?
user1174868
oh nm
user1174868
I just gave it a range from 0 to 1
user1174868
17:35
1.1
user1174868
I think that will work
user1174868
nope
user1174868
still doesn't work
What is the value of compoundingOption?
user1174868
double k = Finance.computeApy(5.50, 1);
user1174868
17:37
this is truly the devil's language, it exists just to frustrate me
user1174868
I think something else is wrong
No what is the value when you run the program?
@Jordan You use Scheme.
user1174868
this is like the anti programming language
user1174868
@ShotgunNinja I would glagly but this is for a class
17:38
@Jordan Malbolge?
user1174868
I don't know that word
user1174868
@Michael I don't know what you mean
@Jordan No, I'm saying, if you're switching to Java, at least learn how to approach an object-oriented language before you start hating on Java. There's enough that it does wrong otherwise.
user1174868
the return value?
When you run your program, what is the value of the compoundingOption variable?
user1174868
17:39
@ShotgunNinja I just hate that anything I do in this language you have to jump through about 300 hoops
user1174868
1
How do you know that
user1174868
double k = Finance.computeApy(5.50, 1);
@Jordan Well, you're a keeper. Just do us a favor, figure out which parts are Java, and which parts are (every OO language ever).
I know but how do you know the value of the variable is 1
user1174868
17:40
I have no clue
-_-
Print it out to the console
user1174868
print what out?
The value of the variable
user1174868
I don't know how
System.out.println(compoundingOption);
user1174868
17:41
the variable is only in existance inside the method
user1174868
I am calling the method in main
Fine, then print it out from there.
user1174868
there is a scope error I think
user1174868
that variable doesn't exist in main, only in finance
jordan print it out from in the method...
user1174868
17:43
I hate java
user1174868
that broke my program
user1174868
all I did was add a print line
user1174868
now I am getting a no return statement error
user1174868
this language is insufferable
user1174868
It doesn't do anything
17:44
Stop
user1174868
I have it print out in the method but nothing happens
Whining
user1174868
last one
ok
user1174868
programming in java is like having half your fingers cut off
user1174868
17:44
the important ones
user1174868
I think I need ot use return maybe
Haha
Hi @AmberRoxanna
user1174868
can a method return two things?
if it's an array yes
user1174868
nope
17:47
jordan why do you need to return two things
@Washu hi
user1174868
so I can see what compoundingOption is
jordan just print it out from inside the method...
You don't have to return it, you can print it out from inside of the method.
user1174868
It doesn't print
Let's see your code.
17:49
@Jordan Can we see your code? Maybe a SSCCE or a snippet?
Also: SSCCE := Short Self-Contained Correct Example.
lol
jordan compoundingOption is an int
user1174868
I know
You've been treating it like a double
Simply do if (compoundingOption == 1)
user1174868
I have tried everything
user1174868
17:52
I had that originally, didn't work
@Jordan it's an int you can't do 1.2 on an int
Then compoundingOption must not have been 1...
user1174868
it was 1
user1174868
I have the code saved earlier in chat
It couldn't have been 1 if compoundingOption == 1 returned false.
user1174868
17:53
it was
user1174868
I think something weird is happening with double k = computeApy(3.45, 1)
user1174868
is it then casting those variables as doubles?
Possibly
user1174868
I think I need a beer
Java will not throw a compile error if you assign an integer value to a double variable.
It automatically converts it.
17:55
@Jordan get one for me
user1174868
just a foreword
user1174868
I am not retarded
user1174868
I had n because i was trying to figure out how to extract variables from a method w ith only one return
@ShotgunNinja +1
user1174868
17:58
also I tried == 1 ==2 ==3 before and it only worked with 3 for some reaosn
@Jordan Well, you clearly don't know Java.
user1174868
no shit
user1174868
What am I suppose to do instead of system.exit?
user1174868
I just need a way for the program to exit
@Jordan lol, no one have said that you are a retard
17:59
The program will exit once it reaches the end of the main method.
@Jordan Fair enough, though you could have easily thrown an exception, or returned a useless value.
@Jordan Also, there's no need to use foul language, especially when I'm just trying to explain things and help you.
user1174868
well it is coming off as really condescending
A better approach might be to throw an IllegalArgumentException, since there is something wrong with the input.
user1174868
I know that I don't know any java at all and I know that I really suck at programming
@Jordan
stop
whining
I'm terrible too and i don't say anything
user1174868
18:01
I really am bad at this :P
Programming takes time and patience.
user1174868
what the hell...my program is outputting "Invalid inputs" even after I removed that line
user1174868
Is "Invalid inputs" a default java thing at all?
user1174868
something is wrong
user1174868
my program won't save
18:06
There, I cleaned up the code the way I would write it.
user1174868
I broke java
user1174868
It is outputting lines of code I have commented out
@Jordan I love how quickly you go to deduce something incorrectly.
user1174868
I don't know what is going on
user1174868
it is calling a different method or something
18:07
@Jordan Then don't jump to conclusions.
Which IDE are you using?
user1174868
notepad++
user1174868
outputs Invalid Inputs
That is not an IDE.
user1174868
which isn't in my code anywhere
user1174868
18:08
I am not using an IDE
Then recompile your damn code.
You kinda forgot a step.
user1174868
I did about 40 times
@Washu how well Java should be known?
See? I can swear for no reason too.
@Jordan Are you using the correct classpath, or the correct JAR?
user1174868
I don't know what either of those are
18:09
x.x
You're not calling the computeApy method that's inside of your file.
JARs are Java Archives. They contain compiled Class files.
You're calling Finance.computeApy.
The Classpath is what the Java Virtual Machine (the program that runs Java code) uses to find and load Class files.
Effectively, it's just a file location, but it also determines package names and other stuff.
user1174868
oh
18:10
@ShotgunNinja I think he should focus on getting his program to work first
user1174868
what do I do instead of FInance?
Just computeApy.
user1174868
it doesn't need a class name or whatever?
@Jordan It assumes the scope of the current class, and this (for instance methods).
Not if it's located in the same class as your main method.
user1174868
18:11
Well now it works, thanks
user1174868
I guess the problem was the FInance. part
You were calling the computeApy method that's part of the Finance class.
Oh.... what happened was when you tried to recompile, the compilation failed, and didn't output new class files or JARs.
So you were running the old ones.
You should really look into using either NetBeans or Eclipse.
Those are full-fledged IDEs.
They have their own system for organizing Java projects, compiling them, and debugging their output.
user1174868
I was told not to use an IDE to learn the language better
With Java it doesn't work that way
18:13
@Jordan To a certain degree, yes; however, I'm assuming that you are trying to get something to work quickly, right?
@ShotgunNinja No way. You should never use an IDE to learn how to program.
In 99.99% of all practical Java programming, though, you will be using an IDE.
user1174868
@ShotgunNinja I just want something that is simple to use really
@ShotgunNinja Yes but not while you are learning.
@Jordan IDEs are not simple.
@Michael I'm still calling bullshit on this. I learned on an IDE first, then figured out how to compile and run from the command-line later.
However, Java was not by any means my first programming language.
So I already understood the concept of using a barebones toolchain to compile programs from scratch, by learning C and C++ that way first.
18:16
@ShotgunNinja I didn't mean you, i meant in general.
It doesn't matter what you use, so long as you know what's actually happening in the background, and aren't just dicking around hoping stuff will work.
The central concept isn't what you use, it's understanding the language itself.
In this case, I started using an IDE for Java, and I understood the underlying behaviors, whereas @Jordan started using command-line toolchains, and did not understand the underlying behavior. The concepts are mutually exclusive.
If you begin learning a language while using an IDE, you'll think that " 'int' has to be purple", not "the syntax has to be correct".
Heh, the funny thing is, he's been using Notepad++, which still does syntax coloring.
If he were using an IDE, he'd have seen red squigglies under the part of his code that was wrong, and wouldn't be having these issues.
He'd also get a message when his build failed, and would know that he wasn't actually recompiling the code he thought he was.
user1174868
I just don't know methods at all, they are like magic
18:37
@Jordan See, this points to a fundamental corruption of a human being during the earliest vestiges of their education as a programmer.
user1174868
I learned functional programming first
@Jordan You, my friend, should be dissected in a laboratory to figure out how your brain works.
user1174868
lol?
You comprise the 0.000000001% of all programmers who START by learning a functional language.
user1174868
It was a class
user1174868
18:39
I do think it is a more natural and mathematic way of thinking
user1174868
to the class part?
@Jordan Yes indeedy.
user1174868
I couldn't do it on my own? lol
I really doubt you would have taught yourself functional programming.
user1174868
18:40
I am sure someone somewhere learned scheme on their own as a first language
For one thing, historically speaking, functional languages have been mostly dead since the 80's.
Now, with the advent of Haskell and functional programming stuff in Javascript, C# and C++, plus the fact that they are INCREDIBLY useful for task parallelization and code cleanliness, functional programming is making a huge recovery.
Which means you are either at least 35 years old, or you are one of the first few people of the New Functional Programming Era.
Or you had a really, really unconventional education.
user1174868
lol
user1174868
It was based on the MIT class
user1174868
I think they teach Scheme for their intro
Understood; MIT is one of the only institutions that teaches functional programming as an introductory course, because they were one of the few top-ranked institutions who taught it even back in the 70's and 80's.
user1174868
18:44
I took the intro course at one school, transferred and have to taken anotheri ntro because no one does scheme
You will soon become one of the more conceptually-strong programmers of your group, because of your unique background.
However, you also need to know procedural and object-oriented concepts.
First of all, things like "functions", "inheritance", and "polymorphism" take on different meanings in Procedural and OOP languages.
user1174868
yeah I read on it a little befoe the class but it is al ot different
It's an entirely different mindset or paradigm of programming.
user1174868
I learned a little bit of OOP with C++ but java is different and uses different nomenclature
Indeed it does.
I suggest pushing aside most of what you know about programming syntax for the sake of learning procedural/OO languages for the time being.
I'm doing roughly the same thing while learning C#'s functional programming elements.
Except in reverse.
user1174868
18:49
I like java I just don't know a lot about it and the API is really hard to read as a new user
Completely understood. It's a very poorly-designed language, to be honest.
The API and documentation is full of nasty kludge, partially because of Java's long and unglamorous history.
user1174868
I liked learning scheme because it was so simple
user1174868
and python too really
user1174868
I mean for a print line is java you need System.out.println("stuff");
user1174868
that is absurd
18:55
Yeah, because of OO principles that everything belongs in a class.
In this case, you are accessing the static scope of the "System" class, in the java.util package, which contains a static instance of the "OutputStream" class named "out", that is tied at program runtime to the console.
user1174868
System is the class right? and out is a reference to the function in the class? Or I guess java would say method
user1174868
ok
The "OutputStream" class itself contains a "println" method, which is what is being called here.
It's a PrintStream object, IIRC
@Michael Oh, right, sorry.
But since PrintStream inherits from OutputStream, it can be pointed to by an OutputStream reference, hence my confusion.
user1174868
18:59
C++ handles a lot of this with namespcaes right?
Generally speaking, functions and methods are used to refer to the same thing, although technically "method" is the more correct term.
A "method" belongs to a class, a "function" doesn't belong to anything.
@Jordan Somewhat; the closest equivalent in Java to a C++ namespace is a Java "package", which denotes the file path as well as namespace-style scope resolution.
@Michael But you can't have standalone functions in Java, since every function must either be an instance method or a static method of a class.
Right
user1174868
So functions don't really exist in java?
19:01
@Jordan Indeed. The C programmer in me still likes to call methods "functions" from time to time.
user1174868
or the function can be a standalone thing inside a program?
@Jordan There are no functions, only methods.
user1174868
ok
Methods are divided into static and non-static (or instance) methods, which approximates C++'s static keyword for methods.
The C++ line static int someMethod() { return 1; } has nearly the same meaning in Java, in that the method cannot access this, and must be called as qualified by the scope of the class in which it is declared.
Except that in C++, the means of calling it would be DeclaringClass::someMethod(), whereas in Java, you would write DeclaringClass.someMethod().
In addition, every non POD-type in Java is an automatic reference type, similar in usage to a &-suffixed reference in C++.
You don't have to use delete in Java on dynamically-allocated objects, either, because of the garbage collector.
References in code are counted, and when all references to an object fall out of scope, that object is tagged for deletion when the garbage collector runs again.
user1174868
POD?
user1174868
19:08
that is interesting about the deletion
Plain Old Data types, like int, char, or double.
user1174868
oh primitives?
Well, there are some fringe cases of PODs that are not primitives, or primitives that are not PODs, in certain languages.
A plain old data structure (POD) is a data structure that is represented only as passive collections of field values, without using encapsulation or other object-oriented features. Plain old data structures are appropriate when there is a part of a system where it should be clearly indicated that the detailed logic for data manipulation and integrity are elsewhere. PODs are often found at the boundaries of a system, where information is being moved to and from other systems or persistent storage and the problem domain logic that is found in other parts of the system is not relevant. For ex...
user1174868
oh
If you like language theory, then I highly suggest you hang out in Lounge<C++>.

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
user1174868
19:12
Language theory? Like idealogies?
No, like the formal study of programming languages.
Programming language theory (PLT) is a branch of computer science that deals with the design, implementation, analysis, characterization, and classification of programming languages and their individual features. It falls within the discipline of computer science, both depending on and affecting mathematics, software engineering and linguistics. It is a well-recognized branch of computer science, and an active research area, with results published in numerous journals dedicated to PLT, as well as in general computer science and engineering publications. History In some ways, the his...
I've recently gotten back in touch with my PLT geek side.
user1174868
oh yeah that is interesting
Did you took 70 messages to explain @Jordan the double thing?
No, we were holding a delightful conversation about functional and object-oriented languages.
hello everyone
19:17
hi @knowbody
Heyo @know
good to see this place busy
That it is.
I should really get back to the website I'm working on...
My "lunch break" has now gone an hour and 19 minutes longer than expected.
user1174868
@ShotgunNinja Thanks for the help
user1174868
and everoyne else too
19:22
@ShotgunNinja bye
19:39
@Michael do you think is a good idea to have an actionlistener on a jcombo?
@Michael if i have this
public Material() {
	super("Ingreso de Materiales", true, true, true, false);
	initComponents();
    setSize(520,240);
    setResizable(false);
    setLocation(0,0);
}
it means everytime i call the class it will do the initComponents?
@ShotgunNinja you there?
@Washu Never.
19:54
@ShotgunNinja halp :/
I have a combobox on which i added the actionlistener
jComboBox1.addActionListener(new java.awt.event.ActionListener() {
        public void actionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
        	jComboBox1ActionPerformed(evt);
        }
    });
and then on the actionperformed i do the next
private void jComboBox1ActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {
        // TODO add your handling code here:
    	jComboBox2.removeAllItems();
    	String categoria = jComboBox1.getSelectedItem().toString();
    	Object[] tmp = getCategoriaList();
		for (int i = 0; i < tmp.length; i++) {
			jComboBox2.addItem(tmp[i].toString());
		}
I don't want to look through this, for fear I might find something wrong and forget that I'm at work, being paid to fix their code instead of yours.
xD
no worries
then just answer me this simple question
@ShotgunNinja if in the constructor of the class i call initComponents() does this make the jComboBox ActionListener to react to it and execute the method?
@Washu I don't see why it would...
@ShotgunNinja well it is doing it... :(
01:00 - 20:0020:00 - 00:00

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