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02:29
0
Q: Extending a singleton in Java

ArhowkWhat I'd like to do is just make a class that when you extend it, you automatically get the getInstance class. The problem is, when i extend it, I can't reference the child class. The only way I could see to do it is by typecasting ((ClassName)class.getInstance()) but its not very user-friendly. ...

user142019
02:50
room topic changed to Java Sucks: Dying from patternitis. [abstractpissingstrategy] [bad-languages] [java] [singletonfactorymanager] [uml]
user142019
14:18
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14:38
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user142019
room topic changed to Java Sucks: Test driving Binbot® 3000™. [abstractpissingstrategy] [bad-languages] [java] [singletonfactorymanager] [uml]
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17:30
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17:52
@FredOverflow Let me clean up this mess.
user142019
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user142019
Fuck…
user142019
room topic changed to Java Sucks: Dying from patternitis. [abstractpissingstrategy] [bad-languages] [java] [singletonfactorymanager] [uml]
18:23
imgur can host PDF files!
user142019
Cool.
user142019
Y u Java. :'(
money
Also Java gives you a great finger workout :)
user142019
:D
user142019
So does a wife. :v
18:25
All eleven of them!
user142019
I think CoffeeScript is one of the nicest languages.
user142019
Except for its terrible Unicode support. :'(
terrible = nonexistent?
user142019
Well, it supports Unicode somewhat kinda crappily.
18:46
coffeescript is ugly. Common Lisp is the greatest language, except for unicode, also
user142019
CoffeeScript isn't ugly.
user142019
It's beautiful.
user142019
Java is ugly.
of course Java is ugly, but that doesn't mean coffeescript is beautiful. Does it have at least true lexical scoping?
yes, it has. Sorry :)
auto-bin me
user142019
18:52
Nah too many bin messages which is annoying.
But how does it work?
hello every body
user142019
hello
18:55
I want to ask you one question
?
can I ?
user142019
Okay.
user142019
Go ahead.
don't ask to ask, only ask ;)
the question is:
thank you :)
18:56
Does Java Suck ?
user142019
Java is horrible.
@rightfold user-based only?
Is there anything on earth worse than java?
user142019
Nope.
do you know any way to share my local web server (tomcat)
user142019
@simonTifo Port forwarding.
user142019
18:57
@kaᵠ Even PHP is better than Java.
give the key to the server room to your friends
@rightfold lol, ofcourse it is
explain me more :)
user142019
Port forwarding or port mapping is a name given to the combined technique of # translating the address and/or port number of a packet to a new destination # possibly accepting such packet(s) in a packet filter (firewall) # forwarding the packet according to the routing table. The destination may be a predetermined network port (assuming protocols like TCP and UDP, though the process is not limited to these) on a host within a NAT-masqueraded, typically private network, based on the port number on which it was received at the gateway from the originating host. The technique is used to pe...
user142019
You need to configure your router to forward port 80 to your computer.
user142019
And configure Tomcat to listen on 0.0.0.0.
18:58
there are so many jobs on java
user142019
Et voilà, public server.
universities teach java
user142019
@kaᵠ because it never changes so it's easy to teach.
it can't be the language, must be the usage
lol #2
@kaᵠ Object Pascal
18:59
ok, I m going to read this
user142019
No, the usage is high because they teach it at universities.
tanks
@YuriAlbuquerque what about OP?
user142019
64
A: Why do we study Java at university?

Jerry CoffinA few Universities have somebody who's sufficiently well known that many (if not most) decisions revolve around that person's likes, dislikes, opinions, taste, etc. Just for example, Texas A&M has Bjarne Stroustrup on staff; it probably comes as little surprise to anybody that their curriculum te...

user142019
@kaᵠ This answer explains it all.
19:00
it's worse. It has everything bad that Java has, only more verbose, and no anonymous classes
I mean, must be the practices, programming practices/implementations of jabba must suck
user142019
Every impure language is bad. Haskell ftw!
what's haskell lacking?
user142019
Users.
i know it's good for math related things, schientific, psyhics
19:01
what are require devices to implement this forwarding port
.
user142019
You don't implement it.
user142019
You configure it on your router.
user142019
See your router's manual.
@rightfold actually, the exactly opposite. Java is bad because it's pure OO. It doesn't have functional features
Common Lisp is awesome because it allows you to develop on the paradigm that you need to
user142019
@YuriAlbuquerque With impure I mean "allows side-effects".
19:02
is there any other way to share it in internet
?
user142019
Connect your computer to a modem directly without a router.
and then
?
user142019
Then you configure Tomcat to listen on 0.0.0.0 and you're done.
@rightfold Common Lisp allows side-effects. The language shouldn't cripple you. The language is dumb, you're smart, you should know when you want side effects or not
it's not because CL allows side-effects that CL developers use side-effects often
user142019
I've never used Common Lisp so I can't say anything about it.
19:05
can you link me to any tutorial that explain that more
user142019
I can't, but Google can.
or you can hire someone
@rightfold have you ever had the feeling that you'd like to code in the parsed tree of your program directly? To generate code in compile-time, to change your software in run-time, and to configure it directly using the language, all this with a fast, compiled language?
well, this is Common Lisp
user142019
Nope.
user142019
Also, "compiled" is not a property of a language.
19:07
no, no, it's not
user142019
It's a property of the implementation.
user142019
:^)
@YuriAlbuquerque what about rebol?
but there are languages that don't have a compiled implementation. Python, Ruby, Javascript, etc.
most Common Lisp implementations allow for compilation and interpretation
user142019
A subset of Python compiles to machine code ahead-of-time, called RPython. See PyPy. (Okay, not strictly Python. :P)
user142019
19:08
For Ruby there's MacRuby which compiles to machine code ahead-of-time.
like JS' V8? =P
user142019
V8?
user142019
That's just-in-time, not ahead-of-time.
user142019
MacRuby can do both. PyPy can compile RPython ahead-of-time, as well as Python just-in-time.
true. But in Common Lisp you can even connect to your application and recompile parts of it while it's running
user142019
19:10
Erlang! :D
not that this is something impossible in other language, it's just that CL is mature enough
yes, like Erlang
but Erlang doesn't have CL's macros
user142019
I've never really used a Lisp.
user142019
I used Clojure for implementing hello world.
HipHop for PHP
try one
Clojure is nice for pure functional evangelists, because it's also inspired by Haskell
also, Ruby is pretty much a crippled Common Lisp. I say this as a Ruby lover
user142019
19:14
Ruby is great.
user142019
Also crappy Unicode support though.
user142019
irb(main):001:0> 'é'.upcase
=> "é"
irb(main):002:0> # lolwot
I created a calculator using reverse polish calculator in Ruby some months ago, for fun. Then, while learning Common Lisp, I decided to reimplement it. Here are my results:
https://gist.github.com/Denommus/3189739
https://gist.github.com/Denommus/5415395
CL-USER(2): (string-upcase "ú")

"Ú"
user142019
user142019
A bit. :v
19:28
I thought about implementing "last=" for array, too. But the size of the script would actually grow, not shrink. But yeah, it got a little better in readability, indeed
one thing that made the script bigger on Ruby, though, was its inability to read directly on a symbol/numeric object
user142019
Also, $stdin.each_line do |n| instead of loop do/s = gets/break unless s.
user142019
@YuriAlbuquerque what do you mean exactly?
@rightfold check the CL code. All I did for n was (read t) [which could also be simply (read)]. Then CL read my input as a symbol or number instantly, I don't need to convert from a string
user142019
Ah type inference.
user142019
No wait.
19:35
not actually type inference. It's the way that Common Lisp reads... things. When I use the function (read), Common Lisp reads the next s-expression
user142019
Ah.
user142019
In Ruby you could eval(gets). :)
nope, then I'd need to type :+ instead of simply +
user142019
But it's a big ugly unsafe hack.
user142019
x = gets
x = /[[:number:]]+/ === x ? x.to_f : x.to_sym
user142019
19:36
Two lines, though. :L
I don't mind if it's unsafe, it's just a script, if the user runs something bad on it, that's for his own loss
user142019
Wait. We don't use gets anymore.
user142019
$stdin.each_line do |n|
    n = /[[:number:]]+/ === n ? x.to_f : x.to_sym
    # …
end
user142019
\o/
I'll edit my code to compare it
user142019
19:42
user142019
Didn't test it though.
user142019
Also: fun, op2, op1 = arr.pop, arr.pop, arr.pop.
user142019
last= isn't strictly necessary, so 16 lines just like your CL version. :P gist.github.com/rightfold/5483990
the problem with your new solution is that now it only prints when it reads a symbol
user142019
Oh shit.
user142019
19:47
Whoops. :v
also, I could technically put fun, op2 and op1 on the same line on CL, too
I could also use a if instead of a cond, which would reduce in some lines. But cond is prettier
user142019
Naj it doesn't work.
now it's always printing "not enough numbers in stack", even when I input a number (which should be pushed into the stack and print the stack)
user142019
19:49
unless must be if.
now it's printing some weird shit
user142019
daknok% ruby foo.rb                                                   ~/Desktop
1
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
2
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
3
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
(?-mix:[[:digit:]]+)
user142019
LOL
user142019
I think it <<'s the regular expression.
arr << (/[[:digit:]]+/ === n ? n.to_f : n.to_sym)
this solved the problem
user142019
19:50
I think << takes precedence over ?: yes.
user142019
Now it works.
anyway, it's still one more line. The empty line after #! doesn't count =P
user142019
Let's see.
you can replace the next by an else
user142019
Doesn't make a difference in line count.
19:54
indeed
good eye, now we're tied
but what if I do this?
user142019
No minification. :v
user142019
I can rewrite the Ruby code using {} instead of do and end and ; instead of newline and put everything on two lines. :)
20:02
I'm not doing anything equivalent to that. I replaced the cond by an if
and now I managed to reduce the code even more
user142019
Yes I see the diff. :P
both codes are pretty similar. As I said, Ruby's main problem in this solution is having to parse the input. Common Lisp reads a s-expression by itself, so I don't have to worry
the other problem is "end", which is not exactly a problem
if I don't count end, Ruby wins
because of line 12
user142019
Write it in Brainfuck.
user142019
You know, just because you can.
user142019
Well, for integers.
20:08
I'll do it, when I have more time :)
user142019
What languages do you know beyond Ruby and CL?
C#, Java, Javascript, C
user142019
C# is nice.
I also knew Object Pascal, a long time ago
user142019
in C#, Apr 24 at 17:52, by Zoidberg
C# is like Java but with features.
20:13
I also know some C++ and some Lua, but not really proficient with either
user142019
Never used Lua.
user142019
C++ is pretty bad.
user142019
There isn't anything in the world that is more complicated than C++' overload resolution.
well, unfortunately, there isn't a language that can really replace C++ in its niche.
user142019
I mostly use Haskell, Ruby and CoffeeScript.
20:16
Haskell'll be the next language I'll try to learn
then PROLOG
user142019
I also know Java to some extent, JavaScript, Python, C#, Objective-C, Erlang, Elixir, PHP (yes, I'm ashamed) and C++ but I don't like all of them. I like Elixir and C# but that's about it.
user142019
Erlang uses lists of integers as strings, Objective-C is more verbose than Java, PHP is sad, and Python is Ruby--. :P
user142019
C++ is a clusterfuck.
Erlang is not meant to make string processing, anyway
user142019
Massively concurrent string processor.
20:20
I'll usually resort to Ruby when I need to do string processing
Abe
Abe
hi
user142019
Me too. In rare cases Perl.
user142019
Hello @Abe.
user142019
user142019
20:21
Best game ever.
does Python has a lambda syntax yet? It has been a long time since I used it
user142019
Yes.
user142019
map(lambda x: x + 1, xs)
user142019
It's limited to single expressions; no statements.
wow, Python still has statements? What a sad thing
I just lost any interest in learning more Python
user142019
20:23
C++' lambdas will be improved in 2014 or 2017.
user142019
Python isn't very interesting.
user142019
@YuriAlbuquerque where did you learn C++?
high school
user142019
From a teacher or a book?
I used some C++ at work, too. But I didn't use any feature that wasn't in C, so...
user142019
20:25
So you basically wrote C with a little more type-safety.
from a teacher. My high school was focused on computers. I don't know how to translate the kind of course to English
user142019
Ah nice.
user142019
Did he tell you about RAII?
user142019
Because if he didn't: bad bad bad.
at high school I used classes, and developed some small games using OGRE3D, but never got really into the language
user142019
20:26
Ah okay.
user142019
I learned C++ when I started visiting the Lounge<C++> chat room.
user142019
The taught me not to read tutorials since they're all bad (and they are oh God).
I don't remember learning about RAII. But, as I said, I know some C++, but I'm not very proficient.
user142019
We get punished with Java in college.
user142019
I'm uninterested and I'm going to quit school soon.
20:29
I work with Java...
user142019
My condolences.
don't have much choice. Android.
user142019
Scala! Ruby!
if only other people were interested in learning new languages, like I am
I have to work in a team, so... I'm stuck. But this may change in the next few weeks. I'll start to work with C# and/or C++. C++ is painful, but I prefer C++'s pain to Java's.
also, I don't think anybody here understands immutability
user142019
C++ is far less painful than Java.
user142019
20:33
At least it has type inference for variable declarations and lambdas (and next year for function return types).
I'm anxious for this: wukix.com/mocl
user142019
And C++ has automatic deterministic resource management.
user142019
@YuriAlbuquerque seems nice.
the CL community is afraid of it being vaporware, though
but there is an implementation that was ported to Android. Clozure CL. I don't think it's on iOS, though
user142019
There's a Lisp for the Objective-C runtime but I think it's by large incompatible with CL.
20:37
it seems that ECL runs on iOS
user142019
Implement your own Lisp that runs on Android and iOS.
too much work to be worth it -.-
Clojure still has problems on Android
I'd help a CL port to iOS, though
user142019
I want to learn Go.
@YuriAlbuquerque James Gosling isn't too fond of anonymous inner classes:
> Closures were left out of Java initially more because of time pressures than anything else. Closures, as a concept, are tried and true - well past the days of being PhD topics. The arguments are in the details, not the broad concepts.
> In the early days of Java the lack of closures was pretty painful, and so inner classes were born: an uncomfortable compromise that attempted to avoid a number of hard issues. But as is normal in so many design issues, the simplifications didn't really solve any problems, they just moved them. We should have gone all the way back then.
@FredOverflow I don't like them. But it's better having an anonymous inner class as closure than not having closures at all
@YuriAlbuquerque Java should have had closures right from the start.
And just imagine if it had taken them so long as it does now, Java might never have seen the face of the earth! Yay!
user142019
21:24
@FredOverflow generics too.
user142019
> There are 16 methods of Regexp that match a regular expression and identify the matched text. Their names are matched by this regular expression: Find(All)?(String)?(Submatch)?(Index)?
user142019
Go's documentation is so meta.
is there a FindAllStringSubmatchIndex method?
user142019
Yup.
user142019
> func (re *Regexp) FindAllStringSubmatchIndex(s string, n int) [][]int
Lispers hate PROGN
I'm still too focused on CL to start learning Go. But I hear it is fast
user142019
Speed is not a language feature.
user142019
It's an implementation feature.
21:53
jabba babba
user142019
Merhaba.
habibi mrrrrr shhhht grr aa
jabba babba
22:09
@rightfold I beg to differ. Some languages are naturally faster. C, for instance
/jabba babba
22:49
@YuriAlbuquerque I can make a super-slow C interpreter if I want to.
user142019
23:00
@FredOverflow I'm learning Go now and I like it.
0
Q: Handling private write methods on singleton EJBs

syntiI have a singleton EJB whose business methods are all @Lock(READ). However, on special ocassions, some of them call a private method that persists stuff on a database. What's the best way to handle this situation? Should I: Use @Lock(WRITE) for that private method even though it's not a busines...

user142019
I like how it's very strict about unused variables and unused imports (aka errors).
user142019
Even though it's imperative I like Go.
user142019
It's like C: safe edition.
user142019
With excellent support for concurrency.
23:34
good morning
The last time I touched java was Java SE 6, though just wondering how much has java changed since version 6 to today standard?
is there any blog posts, or tutorials that introduce a lot of the new features in java or is pretty much still the same?
Java 6:
List<String> xs = new ArrayList<String>();
Java 7:
List<String> xs = new ArrayList<>();
@Chad Also, you can switch on strings. And that's about it ;)
yeah when i was doing java it was more basic than that
using autoarrays not templated types
It was a long time ago, I did my computer science with Java,C++ and have been working in C++ for the past 6 years and now moving back into enterprise software for web development.
Its nice to see that templated types for list are both in .net and also java now :)
does java now have auto?
closuers?
23:53
@Chad nope
@Chad scheduled for March 2014
ahh okay
damn i was hoping i could write
public void method(){
private void method(){

}();
}

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