Oh, there's lovely things you can do with a lambda that can read/write the surrounding scope. At the very least, you don't have to pass in local variables that your lamba needs access to. That is a convenience. But now and then you need a lambda to modify a variable in the enclosing scope... that's real nice to have.
Wow. That amazing, because (I think) the reason Java will access only final variables in the enclosing scope is due to some limitation of the JVM. But, now that I think about, JRuby somehow got around that, so there is a way.
It's my goal to become a billionaire, so I can start a college that sends out decisions on 1st April and accepts everybody. And then sends out another decision the next day saying "Haha gotcha April's fools ^.^"
Will do. First I have to get AS to run a test. It's not cooperating so far, but unit testing in AS is listed as an experimental feature so I expect some problems.
Oh, wait, there it goes. It must have been that project sync I did that made it start working.
Weee, this is going to be fun. I'm in my element when I'm writing unit tests.
Maybe it's like selling airline seats. You discount the base product so you show up best in price comparisons, but most people want some luggage, so you make up the discount in the upsells.
AS just showed me the helpful hint that it can automatically make getters/setters. I wish it wouldn't. There are far too many getters/setters in the world already.
The first time I told it to run a test, it went off and did nothing... or so I thought. I didn't notice the little status in the lower-right telling me it was building. The first build took minutes--I think it was downloading junit and mockito. Since I didn't think it was doing anything, I told it to do it again. Hilarity ensued.
First AS unit test written and passing. No need to use mockato yet, so can't report on that, but it went pretty easily. Also: First ever Java generic. Every day is a day of firsts when I'm messing around in here.
Woohoo! Todays task is done. Not much in the way of "business value," but I've got unit tests, a simple digital low pass filter, and a FIFO queue with bounded size (my first Java generic). Much learned. Next up: doing some actual signal processing.
Fuck...you should have called and told me! I just got back from looking through everyone's house on the block for them. The next step was a state-wide search party
No not at all, especially after I where I found them. You could have launched a federal search, and you would have to since they weren't in Indiana but in my living room.