« first day (1434 days earlier)      last day (3734 days later) » 

01:10
Hi
Dead chat
 
3 hours later…
04:18
hey @Karl
 
3 hours later…
06:59
@kiheru @fahdijbeli the room is so dead !
haha yes @ItachiUchiha
morning
I have a questionand I want take your opinion
shoot
brb
the question is :
1)The problem:
Iterate over one million of records, apply a processing on them while using the object domain model
2)The ‘classical’ solution
Use a regular query
Instantiates one million of persistent capable objects
… and related references if necessary
… in the same transaction
… OutOfMemoryError
in a blog I have seen this solution is :
The good old cursor way of processing data
… in an object oriented fashion
… and coherently integrated within the framework
so here I didn't understand why the Cursor Oracle is the best solution
to solve the problem of OutOfMemory
theses sentence existe in a blog (confidence)
I can't show the blog because it related to the network to our company
I thought the room being dead would no longer be something worth noticing :-P I have been around here a bit under a year and the chat has always been dead.
I have now a worth question :p
07:15
More about sql than java I suppose
yes you have reason
you are right but I asked here because may be someone passed with it
and by the way, I asked this question in sql room
I'm not sure what is being asked
but I haven't got reponse
Hi People! Here anyone who worked with Socket server/client in android ??
I haven't used cursors (I have not used much sql in general). Looks similar to iterators, so it's fairly obvious why it can save memory (Not all the data is in the memory; just sufficient data to get the next result)
07:22
hi every one
i hav 1 question
i reading a device file in Linux
after reading 64 bytes it's show
@kiheru ok thanks :)
tostring() unavailable- no suspended threads
@fahdijbeli That's how it looks like to me; more intuition than knowledge. So it's quite possible that I'm wrong
07:26
hi...
hi
@Aman I'm not sure what you're doing. Reading 64 bytes and then trying to write it to console?
no in file
@kiheru yes I will check that, and if I got an answer I will tell you ;)
i reading frm device file and writing in other file
it's not shwoing any error
07:30
is the problem that nothing is written?
it's just after 64 times running loop
no
it's prob with while reading file
tostring() unavailable- no suspended threads
07:51
Any javaFX peeps here today?
@Aman The error must be something specific on either how you try to read the file, or to the device in question. I did just try reading from /dev/urandom with no problems
Itachi was here just a moment ago, but seems to have disappeared now
i reading file RandomAccessFile () with bytes wise , i hav a device while a plugged i got a folder in dev with name hidraw file i am reading and writing with the file
08:14
hi
Hello :)
Hello Uni
Hi @kiheru! :P
any one know integration of java spring web portal to share point 2013?
Hmm, sharepoint... No idea sorry :o
08:16
any one else?
i am reading like that
Sep 12 at 19:20, by Unihedron
Please don't dump code blocks. Use gist from github or pastebin or pastie.
Also for @smail2133, you might need to redesign your protocol for an abundant first character in the stream byte such that even if it's missing, you only have the data loss of an unnecessary character.
@Unihedron sry, that was meant to Aman. I forgot to tag it
after run loop 64 time
08:32
@fahdijbeli This question has everything to do with Java. But, I don't get why you are trying to read all data at once and not in chunks ?
NotEnoughCoffeeException: Editing old comments when intended to write a new one
@ItachiUchiha what do you mean by chunks ?
catch (Exception ex) {
  System.err.println("aww, man!");
}
Hi @HamZa!
in chunks mean page by page ? @ItachiUchiha
@fahdijbeli lets say read 1000 records at one time
08:35
yes
@Aman The error would still happen at some certain point of the code, even if it was run in a loop
@fahdijbeli instead of reading all million of record at once, why not read it in chunks ?
@ItachiUchiha I don't understand the word chunks do you have any synonym for chunks ?
ah you mean page by page
slice by slice
no I have to load all to do some compute
08:44
loading millions of data and storing it in memory z never a god approach
whatever calculation you have to do, you need to do on first 1000 and then proceed
ok later I will give you an example for that
@Unihedron I think you should star this message
I have already done it
@ItachiUchiha Why? :P
08:46
@Unihedron Ohh you can't, I forgot :P
See I just starred my message. Of course I can. :P
Ahh ! Then please do it, as you wont have to search for it every now and then
I can delete stars from a message as well, so I can get rid of messages that are not useful or interesting for the transcript but got starred anyway.
I don't, I have a list of messages stamps to refer with.
@Unihedron lolz, you are pretty good with keeping tabs :)
Ugh, that font. :P
08:48
@HamZa @miniHessel heya !
@ItachiUchiha yo man
ssup ?
@Unihedron bold sucks !
I am currently considering traveling alone this weekend. How abut there?
whats the destination?
16
Q: How to deal with persistent incorrect formatting?

Infinite RecursionI came across a user who persistently uses incorrect formatting in their posts. Other users have communicated to them regarding this, but the behavior continues. How should we deal with this? Exhibit A: Exhibit B: Exhibit C:

08:51
@ItachiUchiha considerin Vilnius actually, but nobody want to go with me..So guess I how to man the f up and travel alone for the first time :P
@Unihedron Guess there is a SE site for everything :P
@miniHessel how old are you ?
@miniHessel you are old enough to travel anywhere in the world !
@Unihedron I like Paradise, by ColdPlay
Yep :-) It's not that really, I think more about the fact that traveling alone perhaps is a bit lonely ?
08:54
@ItachiUchiha That's a song.
I listen to tracks and music, the ones without vocals.
@Unihedron what is this ? The site is blocked by firewall here
@Unihedron Ahh I see !
Trance ! Do you like it ?
@Unihedron Thats blocked as well :P
Even harsher than China's Great (fire)Wall, I see.
@miniHessel If you are going to meet someone, time will fly ;)
@Unihedron true :'(
08:58
I am going solo, to photograph :)
@miniHessel Hobby Calling ;)
seems to be a nice city :)
:-)
Is there any library that can help you create awesome user tips? For example the first time the user opens the program, there should be some sort of guide telling the user what the different buttons do
@miniHessel What are you actually looking for? I don't even know why you need a library for that.
@miniHessel Why don't you create a Timeline of images ;)
I don't know what the proper "UX" word is for it.. But ye, first time the software starts I want some guidance for the user.
That's a good idea!
09:01
@Unihedron I am thinking of starting a open source project in Java, any bright ideas ?
@miniHessel rmvr to create a don't show me next, so that it doesn't pops up everytime the user starts the app ;)
@overexchange heya
yep, that's what I am thinking!
@ItachiUchiha It really brings down to what kind of user you are. If you're a hacker who automates everything, then make some life-changing applet that does like gives you a multi-clipboard. I would probably do a PCRE lib later, and considering Java isn't the best language to build the best softwares in, you'd probably need a decent reasoning for building it in Java on the first place, which again brings it down to what you want to do.
Can somebody help me understand this statement? An array is a subclass of Object class and An object is a class instance or an array are the same statements from an inheritance perspective - the first statement views the inheritance from the sub classes point of view (array), the second statement views the inheritance from the super classes point of view (Object)
09:03
@overexchange hello there
am trying tio understand this point from an existing SO query
@overexchange I have no idea what you're asking.
@Unihedron this is the context
4
Q: Why are we able to assign arrays to reference of type Object in Java?

overexchangeAs part of learning, here is the pathological example below that am trying to understand, class C{}; interface I{}; class S extends C implements I{}; class B{}; With these declarations, I can say that, class C class B are immediate subclass of Object class and can access all methods of Obje...

@Unihedron lolz, that was really nice of you Only if I could smash your head to the wall
I'll try to respond to "An array is a subclass of Object class": Every variable in Java stores either something "primitive" (which will not be null, such as int, long), or an "object" (or "dimension bound", as used in generics).
When you declare int a = 1;, you're really saying a is a variable which stores a primitive type - int.
When you declare int[] a = {1};, you're really saying a is a variable which stores an object - an int[].
Arrays are an object because they are not primitive. Variables of such can also be null for this reason.
09:07
Oh
@overexchange C[] c = new C{4]; <- you mad?
the curly bracket and square bracket mix though...
@Unihedron i did not get you last two statements using class C
You wrote "new C{4]".
Please study the brackets carefully.
Ah it is typo
And for your second point - "An object is a class instance" I have no clue what to say about that, it's basic OOP. Classes are what you write in source code, or "defined types", and objects are what's constructed by invoking new on that type's constructor.
So really, look at this:
09:16
sorry to interrupt you When you declare int[] a = {1};, you're really saying a is a variable which stores an object - of type int[] which is subclass of Object class. can i rephrase like this?
Yes.
See also: java.lang.reflect.Array.newInstance()
^^^^^ invoke reflection to make YourTypeHere[] array
I could have said: When you declare int[] a = {1};, you're really saying a is a variable which stores an object - of class int[] which is subclass of Object class
int[] is not a class, because it's not defined as one.
ok
which class does this object(which a is referring) belong to?
@kiheru i am not get all data frm file ; i did like that
09:20
It doesn't have a class. That's why you have to use new (blah blah)[]. Note the []. No class will have that construct, as it represents an array, and array instances are generated by Runtime, instead of constructed by a constructor.
@Unihedron
by misstak it's happen
i m not geeting all data
so, object of type int[] are constructed in run-time and these objects behave like any other object of particular class(say class C).
@kiheru plz check
private static void FinallyDownload(int packet) {
byte[] data = new byte[64];
for (int j = 1; j <= packet; j++)
{
try {
// RandomAccessFile d = new RandomAccessFile("/dev/hidraw0", "r");
raf.read(data);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
for (byte b : data) {
System.out.print((((int) b) & 0xff) + " ");
//System.out.print(b);

}
System.out.println();
}
hey guys, does anyone know hot to do a daily rollover for a fileoutputstream? I've been looking at log4j but all I've got it to do so far is just debug messages. I'm trying to do just a fileoutputstream
@Unihedron let me rephrase: **object of type int[](subclass of Object) are constructed in run-time and these objects behave like any other object of particular class(say class C).**can i say this?
09:28
@overexchange Yes, arrays has a unique field as well, .length
@Eggy Daily rollover?
yes, so when the time hits midnight write to a new file, which has the current date as its name
so, similarly C[] is subclass of Object class? where object is instantiated in runtime?
@Aman That reads repeatedly to the same data array (packet times 64 bytes). You'll need to store the previous reads somewhere if you intend to use them. Either a longer array, or a container for arrays
@Unihedron so, similarly type C[] is subclass of Object class? where object is instantiated in runtime?
@overexchange Yeah, any non-primitive type is of subclass Object. Arrays makes a special case because the type is not explicitly constructed and is instantiated in runtime.
@overexchange yes
09:32
@Eggy Is your application running on a server ?
I'm making a client which receives constant information, so yes
@kiheru ya i did but after packet (for loop) 64 it's not reading file
@Eggy so you can use log4j
@Aman What do you mean it's not reading? The code snippet above overwrites each previous read with the next, so you only have the last read data left
09:36
I'm using it now (I haven't used it before, a noob with log4j), but I can't find anything online about it using a FileOutputStream
All I've gotten it to do so far is produce debug and info messages
the data we get back is serialized
@Unihedron i wrote this sample code, and i see that class Cconstructre is not invoked
@Eggy Why do you need FileOutputStream, you can write directly to a file using it
class C{
private int i;
public C(){
i=0;
}
};
public class dummy {
public static void main(String[] args){
C[] c = new C[4];
System.out.println(c.length);;
}
};
Of course it's not! You're invoking an array initialization. No C objects are constructed, so the constructor is not called.
09:38
we're using google protobufs to receive the messages
8 mins ago, by Unihedron
@overexchange Yeah, any non-primitive type is of subclass Object. Arrays makes a special case because the type is not explicitly constructed and is instantiated in runtime.
The type is not explicitly constructed
i was trying to understand your point from this code: Arrays makes a special case because the type is not explicitly constructed
yes
@kiheru i mean to, i m printing each 64 byte data on console, so after 64 time loop control going to raf.read(data); function and stck there
@Eggy I dont know what they are
I say it's not explicitly constructed because it isn't. new int[] doesn't create a new int, instead a new [] which represents int[].
09:41
it's not come next line of code
Same with new C[], which creates a [], which is then blue-stamped to C[] by runtime.
No new C at all.
@ItachiUchiha yeah that's fine. Do you reckon i'll get downvoted to oblivion if I ask a question on stack about it?
@Unihedron so when i say C[] c = new C[4]; only 4 reference variables of type C pointing to null would be available?
@Eggy It depends how you put the question to the user
@overexchange You will get a [] which is of state [null, null, null, null] which is then blue-stamped to C[] so it's typesafe. null is of no type.
09:43
@ItachiUchiha ok thanks!
Expanding on the null trivia, you can cast null outside their object types. This may be an interesting know for you. Look at this:
@overexchange do you know that only objects can use methods ?
@overexchange try using c.clone() ! it means it is an object, coz it overrides the methods provided by the Object Class
@ItachiUchiha .clone() in array basically returns itself.
Use Arrays.copy(c).
@Aman Ah, ok, sorry. I didn't notice you had placed the printing inside the loop. I do not know, however, what data is not read? You say you don't get all the data, but don't specify how.
@Unihedron yeah, I am making @overexchange understand that unless c is not an object, how can it use methods ?
09:47
oh
@kiheru it's depend on packet ; each time it's will give only 64 bytes data ; how many packets we have to read file that much time but after 64 times it's give data after award it's going to read but on raf.read(). control stk there.
Sorry, I don't understand that sentence
@kiheru it's depend on packet
how much data i hav to read
09:55
The code above reads packet * 64 bytes. Should it be something different?
@ if i put mouse point on the function (raf.read); it's saying : tostring() unavailable - no suspended threads
@Unihedron i did not understand this code syntax gist.github.com/Vincentyification/eb6ec378a921526cd434
@overexchange It would help if you point out which line you don't understand.
{
First objFirst = null;
Second objSecond = (First) objFirst;
// But this won't throw a ClassCastException!
objFirst = new First();
objSecond = (Second) objFirst;
// This will!
}
it should be part of a method
Do you understand scopes?
It's in the initializer block (Type { { ... } }), so it's in method level.
10:02
@overexchange that's an initializer block
s/docs\..*/rtfm/
yeah, but it's not always obvious which fm to r
but eclipse is showing errors
@Unihedron but eclipse is showing errors
What does the error say?
@Unihedron Do you see this?
10:11
Sorry for the late reply, heya @Unihedron @ItachiUchiha
still grumpy about the removal of the gimme teh codez close reason
@overexchange That's because I should had written (Second) insteadof (First).
@kiheru I use a custom reason!
or just "unclear what you're asking"
@HamZa too broad, it's not a specific programming problem as defined by the tour, instead an entire task, so it's too broad
The "errors" on my end are warnings that can be disabled, not compliance level.
@Unihedron Oh I see
10:14
"Unclear what you're asking" is the recommended (or at least was when the change was made). It's just plain miss leading. It's often very clear what is being asked.
You can go for unclear - bad questions deserves to get closed anyway. But closing it as too broad gives the OP a chance to revive the question with a narrowing edit.
@Unihedron this example is to explain which concept?
@overexchange null trivia.
You can cast types that aren't within hierarchy only if the value is null and you're casting as objects (no unboxing deref)
10:16
@kiheru plz check let know
i want you to disable he warning and show you
@Unihedron Does this code even compile ?
@Unihedron Please disable the warning and check it
This code uses Array.newInstance() to create an array instead of new ...[], you might like it:
if you feel this is warning
10:17
public static <T>T[] getArrayCopyWithOneElementDeleted(final T[] array, final int index) throws IndexOutOfBoundsException {
    final int origLenMinus1 = array.length - 1;
    if (index == origLenMinus1) return Arrays.copyOf(array, origLenMinus1);
    final T[] copy = (T[]) Array.newInstance(array.getClass().getComponentType(), origLenMinus1);
    if (index == 0) System.arraycopy(array, 1, copy, 0, origLenMinus1);
    else {
        System.arraycopy(array, 0, copy, 0, index);
        System.arraycopy(array, index + 1, copy, index, origLenMinus1 - index);
@Aman In the debugger? That's quite different issue - nothing to do with the code
If that's an old eclipse version, there should be plenty of information in the net by just the error message
@kiheru i Google it but i didn't get any solution
ok
@overexchange I just disabled the warnings and compiled the program successfully. It throws a ClassCastException on line 13 objSecond = (Second) objFirst; as expected.
If it's eclipse's debugger, see: stackoverflow.com/questions/1972682/…
@Unihedron how do i disable warnings?
10:25
Java > Compiler > Errors/Warnings
Hehe, asking advice about how to do things you should not do.
in eclipse?
Not sure why you should though.
10:54
Can you tell me which one is better to name a table in SQL: a.b or a-b ?
@M.S. frankly neither sounds nice...
then which char is recommended?
@Unihedron is there any issue with using "." inside table name in MySQL?
Nope. Databases frequently uses ., but usually in naming fields instead of tables.
See: score, score.rank, score.total
Programming Language Theory is now in Commitment!
@Unihedron you mentioned: And for your second point - "An object is a class instance"
Then which other special character is preferred?
11:02
but
an object is class instance or an array
@M.S. underscores?
You can edit messages instead of double-posting them.
except underscores, a-z, A-Z and 0-9?
@overexchange An object is constructed from classes.
ya that you explained using class Ball example
You cannot say "An object is a ball" or "An object is an array", but an object is an instance of a class, and that is true. However it's not that every class is accessible. One good example are arrays. Arrays are classes.
11:10
@Unihedron If you say Arrays are classes, Can't i say int[] is an intrinsic class instead of saying it as type?
@Unihedron How do you understand this? `The Java Language Specification section 4.3.1 starts off with:

An object is a class instance or an array.`
@overexchange Practically I meant that the types representing arrays are inaccessible classes.
@overexchange Which message are you replying to?
inaccessible class is more appropriate
yes
@Unihedron am refering to this point: so, similarly type C[] is subclass of Object class? where object is instantiated in runtime
hi
16 mins ago, by Unihedron
You can edit messages instead of double-posting them.
@madhu heya
11:19
@madhu hello there
@overexchange The type C[] is of its own type. It just doesn't have an accessible class because that class is held and invoked in runtime.
You can access that class with reflection, like the code block I posted upstairs.
@overexchange All array of any types (primitives ,non-primitives,even Object arrays)all are of type Object and they store data on heaps
@overexchange I can't find that statement anywhere.
It does say For a class literal C.class, where C is the name of a class, interface, or array type, the corresponding type is C. The return descriptor in the constant_pool will be an ObjectType or an ArrayType. And both are Types, and both Types inherit from Object as its own class.
@Unihedron The type C[] is of its own type. am still trying to understand this.
@overexchange Even C.class has a type. That statement gives a Class<C> instance, which is of type Class.
Then you can use C.class.class to get an instance, Class<Class>... oh boy!
I love your blog @Gemtastic.
C[].class gives class[LC as output
11:31
@overexchange That's the inaccessible class I mentioned. You can only access it with reflection.
so [LC is one type?
No, class[LC is the class holding type C[].
Try C[][].class.
@Unihedron so new is running on class [LC when i say C[] c = new C[4];?
11:32
@overexchange No, nothing has been run in relation to construction (new). It's an instance created by runtime.
Something happens to class[LC, but it's not new.
@Unihedron when you say runtime, will there be any constructor within class [LC{} that gets executed when i say C[] c = new C[4];
3 mins ago, by Unihedron
@overexchange No, nothing has been run in relation to construction (new). It's an instance created by runtime.
so what is the significance of class [LC
are we really using it?
6 mins ago, by Unihedron
@overexchange That's the inaccessible class I mentioned. You can only access it with reflection.
@Unihedron are we creating instances of this inaccessible class?
11:38
haha
@Unihedron have fun ;)
19 mins ago, by Unihedron
@overexchange The type C[] is of its own type. It just doesn't have an accessible class because that class is held and invoked in runtime.
YES
yes refers to?
Your question
2 mins ago, by overexchange
@Unihedron are we creating instances of this inaccessible class?
Ugh, I'm out of coffee. Be right back.
ok
@Unihedron With what line of code, are we creating instances of inaccessible class? and How the object(inaccessible class instance) looks like in memory ?
@overexchange "With what line of code" - Somewhere in the Runtime class. "How the object(inaccessible class instance) looks like in memory" It looks like class[LC@1312a123b1.
11:45
with what line of code, i mean, C[] c = new C[4] ?
which could internally work with Runtime class
@Unihedron But one point here, C[] c = new C[4]; is just creating [null, null, null, null] which is then blue-stamped to C[] so is this an object?
just 4 reference variables
@overexchange Everything not primitive is an object.
[null, null, null, null] is its state.
I'm curious, how old are you @over if you don't mind sharing?
so [null, null, null, null] is the state of the object of type class [LC after running C[] c = new C[4];
@Unihedron is that correct?
@Unihedron and c is pointing to that object.
11:57
@Unihedron haha
Patience is the key to everything !
@ItachiUchiha Patience is overrated.
Unihedron: you read my blog? :D
(Sorry for late reply)
@Gemtastic heya
11:58
Hey :)
@Gemtastic I liked the immutable drama of map.
That's what happen when I'm reading the source code XD

« first day (1434 days earlier)      last day (3734 days later) »