How is it possible that the output is 1002,why is the last case being executed despite having a mismatch?
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println("Hello World!");
int i=0,j=0;
switch (i) {
case 2 : j++;
c...
Just curious does anyone know of a implimentation of hashmap where the key/value pair are part of the same data type, and the value has to impliment something like a GetKey so that you can have the key inside the value
A HashSet<MyType> with overloads of MyType.hashCode and MyType.equals that only look at the key would work, except that you cannot ask a java Set to give you the element X. Which is fucking retarded.
@FredOverflow exactly, thats exactly what i wanted to do and tried to impliment it today, though im sure in 6 years since i've touched java (there is spring, AOP, and lots of other frameworks) that somebody else would of used the same technique of have the key/value together in a hash table.
@Chad You are comparing apples and oranges. Even with a plain old Java Set, you can write hashset.get("hello world"), but putting objects in requires an additional parameter.
user142019
I had to write a Java class yesterday and it was annoying.
user142019
List<NameValuePair> pairs = new ArrayList<NameValuePair>();
for (Map.Entry<String, String> parameter : parameters.entrySet()) {
pairs.add(new BasicNameValuePair(parameter.getKey(), parameter.getValue()));
}
request.setEntity(new UrlEncodedFormEntity(pairs));
user142019
Isn't it possible to do this in an actual readable way? I want LINQ. :<
Here's a way using only standard Java library (note that the stream is not closed, YMMV).
public static String convertStreamToString(java.io.InputStream is) {
java.util.Scanner s = new java.util.Scanner(is).useDelimiter("\\A");
return s.hasNext() ? s.next() : "";
}
I learned this trick...