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00:00
o well
why did ppl think java was a good idea? I freaking hate oop
So you don't care for C++ or C# either then
@Nathvi What version of Java are you using?
If you're getting "expecting Integer" it's probably pre 1.5
00:32
yeah...
user1174868
01:29
I can't take it anymore
user1174868
java is satan's language
user1174868
what is wrong with this line?
user1174868
java is being incredibly helpful and telling me I am missing a semicolon
user1174868
thanks a lot java
user1174868
return decompress(compressedText.charAt(1)) ""+ decompress(""+ n + compressedText.charAt(1) + compressedText.substring(1));
01:33
should read:
return ""+decompress(compressedText.charAt(1))+ decompress(""+ n + compressedText.charAt(1) + compressedText.substring(1));
I'm guessing
I can't tell without seeing the whole method
user1174868
yes that was right
user1174868
but it angers me that it was
user1174868
my problem now is that if I enter thestring 4j 5k it only recognized until the space
user1174868
is there something java is doing to ignore everything after the same?
not unless you tell it to.
user1174868
01:37
oh I got it
user1174868
I am doing substring(1) when I need to do substring(1,length)
user1174868
well that didnt work
substring (1) goes from character 1 to the end.
user1174868
it appears to only go until a space
user1174868
but I could be wrong
user1174868
01:39
well then I dont know what is wrong
user1174868
java has trouble with spaces for some reason
user1174868
the logic to my code is flawless, but java is having problems with it
Obviously your logic is flawed.
Or your syntax is broken
You know what the difference is between theory and practice, right?
user1174868
I am getting real sick of else statements without an if
user1174868
what is causing this?
user1174868
01:42
I have two ifs, then an else
Pastebin and show me where you're flawed
user1174868
I got it
user1174868
java got me in a really bad mood
LOL
 
1 hour later…
02:51
hey guys really need help with this stackoverflow.com/questions/15691156/…
hey i put a 500 bounty on this, and i dunno whats best answer :\ stackoverflow.com/questions/15604015/…
 
14 hours later…
17:02
hi
Eh
kylar you're supposed to say hi
I'm canadian. We say Eh.
And I won't bring up the laughable idea that a computer geek is trying to point out shortcomings in interpersonal relationships.
oh that makes sense
;)
17:07
it's a bug
assertEquals("hi", human.getResponse());
Clearly it's a localization issue.
true, i didn't add i18n support
I have a whole group that does that, thankfully
assertEquals(messageBundle.getMessage("greeting.response"), human.getResponse())
nice
E_X
E_X
hello all :)
17:17
Eh
E_X
E_X
I have a client/server socket question
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E_X
specifically in datagramSocket
is there a way for the server to know that the client closed the datagramSocket from his side
I would think that an IOException would be thrown.
E_X
E_X
I tried sending a packet with a "close" messages, and the server detects by the message
an IOExcepetion in the server side @Michael?
17:21
@E_X Yes
I think a "close" TCP message is sent when you close a socket.
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E_X
@Michael but it isn't an exception, because the server have like a dozen of sockets with a dozen of clients
@Michael the datagramSocket is UDP
if one client closes his socket with the server, the server will keep on working, aka no exception is catched
Maybe the client should send a "close" message before it terminates its connection with the server.
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@Michael yeah I did that, but it's like am cheating on the damn thing lol
there must be an implemented way
Maybe the API you are using lets you attach a listener of some sort which will alert you when a client closes its connection.
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mhmmm
well the API am using is java's
17:26
Then again, maybe it's normal to require an explicit "close" message before connection termination.
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java.net.DatagramSocket
This is how HTTP works, after all. If you were to send an HTTP request for a webpage that takes 20 seconds to load, and you click "Stop" in your browser, the server continues to process the request.
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so your saying there would be a listener
Perhaps.
The server itself needs to keep track and make a decision based upon some predefined heuristic that the client is no-longer there
IE: "I haven't seen a datagram from client XYZ in 120 seconds. I'm assuming he's gone."
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E_X
17:29
@Kylar but what if the client is just reading not sending anything
you know like, the client is just reading what other clients are sending, but not sending any packets
it wouldn't be right for the server to assume he's gone
You're stuck with two issues:
E_X
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I think..
1) If the client is disconnected abruptly, it can't send a close. So your server needs to take that into account.
2) If you want to keep track, there needs to be a heartbeat.
So you either need to have an ongoing communication at some interval, or be tolerant that your client could mysteriously vanish and be OK with that.
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E_X
@Kylar what your saying is well understood, but what comes in mind that when the client is gone in any way the socket is closed
so why the server can't know that such specific socket is closed
I tried the boolean method on server side DatagramSocket.isConnected() , and discovered that once the client connects that boolean is always true (even if the client disconnects)
anyone know if Java has an easy way to parse a | ^ ~ \ & delimited file, where each level of indentation gives a different node, or a way to tell the indent/parse level?
17:47
@RyanTernier Sounds like a job for String.split()
@Michael That will "work" but it doesn't tell me the indent level's
I need to know what level each section of the string each portion is
I know the HAPI code can split these, but it's not advanced enough for the health code parsing I need
You'll probably have to write your own parser. Should be easy - split by line, then count the whitespace at the front, return a count/string tuple
you could build a tree to hold it fairly easily
You also may need to take into account escaped delimiter characters.
For example: foo|bar|escaped\|pipe
MSH|^~\\&|ASDF|FOO|A^V^C|A^B~BB~BBB|20130213094112||QBP^Q22^QBP_Q21|46320||2.4\n"
sample string
Sounds like fun, I love writing parsers for this sort of stuff.
It might be better to avoid using regular expressions at all, and just step through the string character by character instead.
17:54
REgex will be too much
I'm taking what was written for HAPI and trying to implement similar work
Yeah, that looks pretty complicated.
then see if I can contribute it back
cool
18:41
Hi
hi @lews
Hello :P
I'm getting a weird error with placeholders in preparedstatements.
Have you ever worked with Servlets?
Yes
Ok for some reason.. it doesn't like placeholders with subqueries
Are you using the correct character to denote a placeholder?
18:45
Sub-queries?
Select blah from table where not exists (Select something,blahtwo from table where something = ? AND blah=blahtwo)
That's roughly how it looks like
something = ? Seems to be problem
That should be fine, actually
What error are you getting
You are missing the table name.
You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '?
LOL
Good catch
18:46
-_-
No, the table name is in the actual query
I just made this up now.. sorry
Nice catch though ;)
What's the actual query?
Pretty much the edited statement
> You have an error in your SQL syntax; check the manual that corresponds to your MySQL server version for the right syntax to use near '?
It works if I hardcode ? for a value
Maybe you can't put placeholders in a sub-query
What DB
18:50
MySQL lol, it said so in the error ;)
Oh it works..
I'm a fool
We already knew that ;)
Ah! Nice one dude :D
One more annoying thing..
string+="Say I had Lews Therin's sword";
The single quote screws a lot of shit up
It shouldn't if you're using PreparedStatements.
This happens when I am building an HTML string
PreparedStatements will take care of encoding/decoding.
Then yeah, you're going to have issues.
18:53
How does that screw with HTML?
How do I store it in the DB, to avoid that, without knowing which row uses '
@Michael It thinks that's the end of an attribute
@LewsTherin Ah ok
Unless I replace all ' with "'"
That may work..
One of the Apache Commons libraries has an HTML-escaping method.
Mmn, I don't want to use an external library
18:57
Then you'll have to escape it by hand.
Double quote is " I forget what a single quote is. :/
Mmn.. Won't ' to "'" work?
Not if the attribute value is enclosed in single quotes, which is valid HTML.
7
Q: How to escape single quote

RaviHow can I escape a ' (single quote) in JS. This is where I'm trying to use it. <input type='text' id='abc' value='hel'lo'> result for the above code is "hel" populated in the text box. I tried to replace ' with \' but this what I'm getting. <input type='text' id='abc' value='hel\'lo'> resul...

Oh, that could solve it :D
Thanks
I have to go now.. brb in an hr
If the attribute value is enclosed in single quotes, then it will treat the single quote as the end of the attribute value.
Bye :)
hello al
nyone willing to help me with
a small program im writing?
19:24
no?
19:34
heyya ask it
20:20
Hey hey
 
3 hours later…
23:34
O java, how you spite me
if anyone comes in here, just @Nathvi me, I'll be working elsewhere

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