Hi, I had a quick question. I am using javax.script.* with Rhino for scripting in a Java program. A script can implement an interface just fine, but when I try to use similar syntax to instantiate an abstract class(giving the definitions for the unimplemented methods) I get an error saying that MyTestAbstractClass(the class I am trying to instantiate) is an interface or abstract. Am I doing something very wrong?
I am using javax.script.* with Rhino for scripting in a Java program.
A script can implement an interface just fine, but when I try to use similar syntax to instantiate an abstract class(giving the definitions for the unimplemented methods) I get an error saying that MyTestAbstractClass(the cla...
Can you extend a Rhino-bound Java class with a Javascript subclass? I don't think that is supported, since Javascript's version of class polymorphism is based on prototypes instead of traditional subtype polymorphism.
I have an application that uses 3rd party library. The library creates some threads or lets say I create some threads.. When user hit close button, I need to check if there is any thread that is working or is alive. I don't have access to the object, so I cannot do Thread.isAlive(). How would I check that...Basically I need to check all the thread that spawned from my main method process?
So if I make a concrete outer class and an inner interface, where can I create anonymous classes that can implement the inteface. Anywhere within the outer class? Or just anywhere using new Blah{String foo{return "bar"}}?
@ShotgunNinja I have some worker threads that are copying some files...A user may hit close button which may kill those threads...I need those threads to finish copying and then let the user close it.
foo.addEventListener(new EventListener() {
@Override
public void onEvent(Event evt) {
// Do something.
}
});
So, in one fell swoop, you declare an anonymous implementation of EventListener, implement its onEvent(Event) method, and create an instance of that anonymous class.
@Moiz Do you have access to the Thread objects at all?
if not, then do you have an event producer you can listen on?
Generally speaking, if you have a well-designed library (which is often a stretch), you'd have a worker task that generates some event you can listen for, so you know when the worker's task is complete.
I do have access to Thread objects...I was just hoping to do it without having references of those objects inside main method or MainApp class ( this class has main method that initializes the UI)
So, what you could do is, keep track of any copy threads working in the background by a synchronized list of event listeners, then when they complete, lock the list, remove them, and unlock. If you want to close the window, lock the list, get its size, unlock it, then send up an error message if the size is non-zero.
@Adude11 Nah, just writing up a verification procedure for some sites at work that I have to test.
@ShotgunNinja OK, but how would I implement something like EventListener on my side? Googling, the source of EventListener is a giant comment, a package name, and a blank interface.
This is what I haveL
public class TestObject {
interface TestInterface {
public abstract String test();
}
}
I'm kindly informed by the interpreter that " class com.merkle.TestObject is interface or abstract (<Unknown source>#1) in <Unknown source> at line number 1".
The trick is that I can do most of this on the Java side. But I cannot get a class instance (or anonymous class) on the Javascript side.
Would it be possible for the script to pass a method over the js-java bridge and have the method used as the implementation on the Java side with some sort of reflection?
@ObsessiveSSOℲ I don't think so, although you could probably make it into an anonymous interface which takes the information as arguments and gives it back via returns.