The biggest problem getting a lib for this purpose is that nearly every single one of them only handle swiping items away, or swiping to the edge to have something triggered
I started a timer to continuously increasing the reading on TextView with how much time has past. etc "2 mins" I needs to stopping the timer when that item is removed. Im now looking on Adapter.onViewDetachedFromWindow(vh) but VH given has no adapter position or old position inside it, so I cant get which item's timer is need to stop.
@MarkO'Sullivan do you need framelayout as a container for both top and bottom or could you use any other container and then use swipereveal as a root container
I've read about some houses with 2m10 between ceiling and floor, and the fact it creates a not so healthy environment for the mind, not sure it's true :D
the F house ( or flat, whatever floats your boat) sits right below the castle, so the builders decided to make part of it trapezoid to avoid getting near to the cliff and giving more space to the pool. i like it.
@OleV.V. Never mind, I'm an idiot. I am constantly surprised by how counter-intuitive Scanner's behaviour is. No wonder it stumps so many beginners. — Michael1 min ago
You can define a long instead of an int if you need to store large values but there's no way to exclude negative values.
> In Java SE 8 and later, you can use the int data type to represent an unsigned 32-bit integer, which has a minimum value of 0 and a maximum value of 2^32-1. Use the Integer class to use int data type as an unsigned integer. Static methods like compareUnsigned, divideUnsigned etc have been added to the Integer class to support the arithmetic operations for unsigned integers.
Is there a way to declare an unsigned int in Java?
Or the question may be framed as this as well:
What is the Java equivalent of unsigned?
Just to tell you the context I was looking at Java's implementation of String.hashcode(). I wanted to test the possibility of collision if the integer were ...