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00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

00:07
hello everyone
00:56
@RyanTernier Fancy seeing you here
Zzzz
Bored/
?
hello everyone
/me waves
how to make direct print on java?
 
2 hours later…
03:22
Is anyone here
 
9 hours later…
12:49
hi
 
2 hours later…
14:25
hi,did any one know any email archiving open source in java ??
14:42
Quiz: What annotation do you use in JUnit if you want to test for a thrown exception?
 
1 hour later…
15:45
@Test(expected = Exception.class)
@MojaveStorm yep
16:04
Been writing JUnit tests all week :D
Me too
Moving to testing javascript this week, that is a whole other beast
16:17
At a previous job we had a saying: "The Real World is the best test harness." Turns out they find lots of bugs, and cripple you while they're at it.
I want to try out Spock.
It's a unit test framework built on top of JUnit for Groovy
You organize your tests so that you separate out, like, your "setup" code from your assertions.
def "this is the test"(){
  setup:
  ObjectToTest obj= new ObjectToTest();

  when:
  obj.foo();

  then:
  assert "bar" == obj.getBar();
}
It uses labels which is crazy lol
@Kylar Yeah but that doesn't mean you shouldn't write good unit tests...
No-one is arguing that. System Tests > Unit Tests > No Tests
yea duh
In addition to writing unit tests, it's good to also use code coverage tools to see which parts of the codebase get touched by the unit tests.
Code coverage tools will tell you what parts of the code have not been executed by your unit tests. You can then modify your unit tests to ensure that this uncovered code gets tested.
One Java code coverage tool is EclEmma. You can download a plugin for Eclipse that color-codes your code to show you what is covered and what is not.
It also tells you what percentage of your code base is covered.
You right-click your file, and select "Coverage As > JUnit Test".
16:35
Emma is available for IntelliJ as well
It's very handy, I've been using it a lot lately.
Oh the "Ecl" is for "Eclipse". Wow I'm dense.
16:57
I've been spending a lot of time refactoring unit tests for a project I'm working on.
Before, I was basically combining 4-5 unit tests into a single test method.
I was also not taking advantage of the ability to test for a thrown exception inside of the @Test annotation.
Instead, I used try/catch blocks and fail() assertions.
Using @Test is a lot cleaner.
user1174868
Java ruined my day again
user1174868
I am getting a "missing return statement" error even though I have a return statement
Your return statement isn't always reachable due to code flow.
user1174868
Is the syntax wrong?
user1174868
return compressedText.charAt(0) + decompress(compressedText.substring(1,compressedText.length()));
17:04
How can Java be ruining your day? That's like saying that guns kill people.
user1174868
Do I need parantheses for what I want to return?
user1174868
Because java won't make sense
user1174868
I have a return statement but it won't compile
Put the whole method in a pastebin
There is probably a code path in your method where that return statement isn't reached.
17:05
Is there an echo in here? ;)
No, you said the return statement isn't reachable. I said...oh wait
@Jordan Protip: Always use brackets, even if the if statement is one line.
user1174868
oh
They aren't required, but it makes your code a lot easier to read and less error-prone.
user1174868
ok
17:08
+1 on that for sure
@Jordan What is returned when if (compressedText.charAt(0) < 58 && compressedText.charAt(0) > 4) evaluates to true?
user1174868
oh
user1174868
I see now
user1174868
oh actually
user1174868
it should be fine right?
user1174868
17:10
It enters another if statement to find which value it is in there and does the appropriate return statement
And what if none of those if statements returns true?
Exactly
There are cases wherein that if could be true, but nothing inside the braces will execute
user1174868
then it wont enter that if statement
user1174868
It had to be true for one of those cases if it enters that statement
@Jordan You see all those if (compressedText.charAt(0) == 49) statements?
user1174868
17:13
@Michael Yes?
What if none of them evaluate to true?
user1174868
Then it won't enter that loop
user1174868
or if statement block
Jordan: While that makes sense - you're not thinking the way a compiler thinks. There is a chance that something else could change one of those values after the first IF and before any of the other ones
user1174868
if (compressedText.charAt(0) < 58 && compressedText.charAt(0) > 48)
{
17:13
multiple threads, reflection, etc etc
@Jordan Right. What will the method return then?
user1174868
If that is true than it has to be one of the cases inside that block right?
@Kylar I think that's a little beyond what he's trying to do... :P
My point is that just because the first IF statement evaluates, doesn't mean that one of the rest will
user1174868
@Kylar So I always have to have a default return statement?
17:14
@Jordan Maybe, but the compiler doesn't know that
(according to the way a compiler thinks)
user1174868
This is why java ruined my day
user1174868
I would have never thought of this on my own
user1174868
lol
Again - it's not the language, it's your grasp of it.
C# or C would be the same
user1174868
17:16
Scheme isnt like this :P
user1174868
My code doesnt work anyways
user1174868
I never really understood how methods work, is that the name for what i am doing?
user1174868
Calling a function inside my main function?
Recursion.
user1174868
Yeah but I mean the function, in java this is called a method and not a function right?
17:18
@Jordan Right, there are no functions in Java, only methods.
user1174868
ok
user1174868
Is the return statement wrong?
user1174868
do I need paranetheses?
user1174868
return compressedText.charAt(0) + decompress(compressedText.substring(1,compressedText.length()));
Just remove the else above it.
user1174868
17:20
but then it will always return that won't it?
No because when a return statement is reached, it exits the method.
user1174868
oh I didn't know that
user1174868
thanks
if it hits one of the others first, it will jump out.
17:22
Michael: trivia for you. What gets returned from this method:
public boolean foo(){
try{
return true;
}finally{
return false;
}
:)
ooo that's an SCJP question.
SCJP?
Sun Certified Java Programmer
It's an exam you can take
I remember having to answer questions like this.
Sun's been kaput for years :)
it should be OCJP
Yeah, it might be :)
I took it before Oracle bought Sun.
I think it returns false.
17:24
I would think it would return true, but assuming that its an actual question, must be a trick, so returns false
Similar one:
or here's a better one: change each one of those to throw an exception
which exception gets thrown :)
public boolean foo(){
try{
throws new ExceptionA();
}finally{
throws new ExceptionB();
}
LOL Yeah, same :)
lol, we think too much alike
17:26
I would say definitely B on that one
user1174868
Is my syntax for concating wrong?
Yeah, I think it's B
Not wrong, but not really right. Try not to use + for string concatenation, it's Bad(â„¢).
@Jordan No, that's right.
It's pretty slow as compared to using a builder
17:27
@Kylar No, it's fine as long as you don't have multiple lines of it.
No, the compiler converts it to a StringBuilder automatically.
However, this is bad:
String str = "foo" + "bar";
str += "car" + "mar";
user1174868
Actually I don't think I even need to return do I? I can just System.out.print?
It converts to:
String str = new StringBuilder().append("foo").append("bar").toString();
str = new StringBuilder().append(str).append("car").append("mar").toString();
You're creating 2 String instances.
So, in this situation, it's better to use a StringBuilder:
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
sb.append("foo").append("bar").append("car").append("mar");
String str = sb.toString();
user1174868
I ahve never heard of stringbuilder before
user1174868
My problem now is that my code outputs nothing
Same, and I've been coding for 7 years lol.
17:31
It increases the performance of your application.
By a significant amount? Or would you really only be able to tell if you were.. say.. looping over 100k strings
user1174868
I am confused why my program outputs nothing?
@MojaveStorm No, it's not significant unless you are doing lots of string manipulations.
Oh okay, well good to know at least. Thanks.
@Jordan What are you doing with the return value of decompress in your main method?
user1174868
17:33
THis is really frustrating, java is javaing me
user1174868
nothing I guess
@Jordan lol
user1174868
Shouldnt the method take care of that all?
-_-
You have to tell it to print it out...
You're not doing anything with the return value.
user1174868
so I am doing the whole program wrong...
user1174868
17:35
I have to alter the variable inside of the method?
user1174868
and then print it outside of the method?
No, you just need to assign the return value of decompress to a variable and print out the variable.
user1174868
this is so unintuitive
user1174868
but that won't work
user1174868
17:35
because of the way I do it with recrusion
user1174868
You are saying
No, in your main method.
user1174868
return (compressedText.charAt(0) + decompress(compressedText.substring(1,compressedText.length()))); }
user1174868
needs to be variable = (compressedText.charAt(0) + decompress(compressedText.substring(1,compressedText.length()))); }
user1174868
?
17:36
String value = decompress(comp);
user1174868
what is happening with my return statements?
user1174868
where do they "return" to?
Your return statements are fine.
user1174868
I dont get what they do
user1174868
where does that information return to?
17:37
It returns to where ever the method was called from.
user1174868
but it doesn't do anything with it?
user1174868
But I can access it?
See line 8?
user1174868
ok I got I think
user1174868
String outs = decompress(comp);
System.out.println(outs);
17:39
There you go
user1174868
I remember why this works
user1174868
thanks
This is why methods/functions are so powerful.
You can have them perform some operation and then return a result of the operation.
user1174868
I think java is doing something strange to my code
user1174868
it is printing numbers instead of the ascii character I think
17:47
Java doesn't do anything to your code.
:)
user1174868
is it geting cast as integers because I use + to concat?
Is what getting cast?
user1174868
well something malicious is mistreating my code
And no, probably not
user1174868
return (compressedText.charAt(1) + decompress(compressedText.substring(2,compressedText.length()))); }
user1174868
17:48
I am getting really large numbers when no numbers should be returned in my code
hey there
@MojaveStorm do you know how to start bountry in my question ?
There should be a 'start a bounty' url when you view that page yourself. I'm not sure if you need a certain level of reputation to be able to do that, though.
Well, you have more than I do. So you should be able to see that link.
@Jordan When you do compressedText.charAt(0) + compressedText.charAt(0), it may be performing an addition operation instead of a string concatination, since they are char variables a not String objects.
17:51
@MojaveStorm Thank you :)
char is a numeric type, but if any of the objects are strings it should promote the char to a string.
Anyone knows how to add a video to a Jframe ?
@Kylar Yeah, that's what I was thinking
I think the first item has to be a string for that promotion to work properly
try using:
String str = ""+compressedText.charAt(0).... etc
hi there, some neo4j "expert" around us? :)
17:53
@Kylar Maybe
please guys help me
how to add video to a jframe in netbeans ?
For primitives, it can be in either place in the operation
but since you're mixing concatenation and numeric types, I think you have to be explicit that you want it as a string
@AbdelrahmanTarekWahdan It's not that easy. you need a library to play videos.
You can't just drop a video on a JPanel or JFrame
what kind of library ?
@AbdelrahmanTarekWahdan Look at the Java Media Framework (JMF) to start. Then search questions on StackOverflow - there are lots about playing videos in Swing. You're going to have to do some legwork though.
user1174868
How do I type cast a return statement?
17:55
return (ClassToCastTo)value;
@Kylar Thank you very much
But you can't cast primitives to a string, you need to create a String and return it
like:
user1174868
@Kylar Thanks, so like return (String) whatever
char c = 'd';
return ""+c;
user1174868
what is that?
17:56
Like I just said: you can't just tell the compiler it's a string and hope it works
it actually has to BE a string
or when you cast it will throw a ClassCastException
user1174868
I suppose everything I output is a char
char c = getAChar();
String s = (String)c;//this will throw a ClassCastException.
user1174868
but how would I do it with recursion?
user1174868
return (compressedText.charAt(1) + decompress(compressedText.substring(2,compressedText.length()))); }
user1174868
oh
user1174868
17:58
nevermind
user1174868
I know enough about recrusion to make this work
user1174868
just not java
user1174868
eh I still get numbers
return ""+ (compressedText.charAt(1) + decompress(compressedText.substring(2,compressedText.length()))); }
18:16
i made an advanced login system in java netbeans, it's a desktop application connected to MySQL database, to be sure that is really advanced, what will be the basics ?
any reply ?
user1174868
@Kylar I am still getting numbers for some reason
user1174868
18:32
oh lawd
user1174868
I is figured it out
user1174868
I need to grab the hand of java and hold it tight
@Jordan What is your problem ?
user1174868
I was having trouble type casting characters as strings, they kept wanting to be ints
user1174868
but Kylar showed me how to fix it
user1174868
18:36
@Kylar I had to get rid of the parentheses, I think it was doing what was in the parentheses first...actually i have no idea what happened but getting rid of the ( infront of comrpessedText and at the end fixed it all
18:54
so you need to convert chars to strings ?
19:08
@AbdelrahmanTarekWahdan What is your question? What do you mean 'what will be the basics?'
i mean how can i be sure if my login system is really contains all the options like password confirmation and password reset with secret answer, etc

i mean if you made a login system, what will you do in it ?
I would suggest finding a website or some system that you use often, and re-implement all of the features it provides with its login
That lets you decide what you want to add so you can focus on each feature individually. An entire login system if a very broad subject
@AbdelrahmanTarekWahdan The connection would have to be encrypted, of course.
And to increase security, it's an industry standard to force users to reset their passwords approximately every three months.
It's also common to enforce a set of rules for what characters are allowed in a password.
This is called an eye of newt password.
Some examples of such rules are:
"Password must contain at least one numeric character"
"Password cannot contain consecutive, identical characters"
"Password must contain at least one punctuation character"
19:20
i can't do the password strength level like [weak][medium][strong]
iam using java
and i can't do the first name shouldn't contains (!@#$%^&*()_-+=)
netbeans
any help ?
abdel you need to to make it advanced...
yea yea
i understand
i mean i don't have the ability to do that
abdel you can do it
weak = if it doesn't contains (!@#$$%%^^^&*)
what about medium and strong ?
That's up to you
19:24
abdel is this homework...?
Generally the more discrete elements you require, the stronger: ie: uppercase, lowercase, letter, special character, longer than 8, longer than 16
abdel you have to learn it for yourself
it's not a homework
@Kylar Many systems also check for consecutive characters. For example, it won't let you put "aaa" or "123" in a password
i'm just training on that
19:27
oh ok
did you see the search box of the facebook ?

it contains text hint ("Search")
when i click it , it removed automatically
i tried to make that
etc*
etc?
in my textfield for first name , last name , etx
What did you try to do for that?
by adding mouse listener to the textfield when user clicks the textfield will be ""
it works fine
but what if the user pressed the tab button ?
19:33
should be an event attributed with that html element if it gains focus
iam not working on web application
There's probably an onGainFocus() event or something
Oh, right. Wrong chatroom. lol.
it's just for desktop app
lol
@Michael yea, i tried the focus listener
do you know how to control the TAB index
it will helps
??
4
Q: How to set the Tab Order in Swing Java?

ChanI want to know how to adjust the Tab order in a Swing interface. I found an example and it showed this method should do the trick but it seems that it's deprecated and not working. getCombox("cmbFrom").setNextFocusableComponent(getCombox("cmbTo")); Note :- Below method returns a Combox object ...

19:45
@Michael you there ?
i removed the tick from focusable from the textfields and when i run the program and try to write anything , the textfield can't be selected to write in it
??
20:05
i succeeded to make the textfield works fine without focus listner
listener*
@Michael I wan to thank you very much , you are better than google search lol
20:33
@AbdelrahmanTarekWahdan wooo thx np
20:57
@Kylar you there ?
00:00 - 21:0021:00 - 00:00

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