@Unihedron It should be. The standard Policy loads the permissions from a file. All I did was override it to return what I wanted and set it. I dunno how much more complicated it would be.
How do I simplify this? sb.append(new String(subarray( sb.toString().getBytes("UTF-8"), sb.toString().getBytes("UTF-8").length - distance, 1), "utf-8"));
*Sings* I wanna be, the very best (student) like noone ever was! To code java is my real test, readable and strong..! Java code~ It's you and me~ I know it's my destiny! You teach me and I teach you Java code! ♪ Gotta code it all!
Hey all! I'm a newbie to Java servlets, and I am developing a servlet-based application for my project. I am quite used to django templating, so I found it quite difficult to replicate HTML for different pages. I then came across rythm, a templating library that offers features such at template inheritance which is awesome. I'm having some issues making it work properly. Has anyone here worked with rythm or a similar templating library before. Also, is this the right place to ask this?
@BenBeri Java has two distinct types - int (a primitive, must have an integer value), and Integer - which is an Object reference, the same as other objects. An Integer is an Object that is manufactured to hold an int value as well as do a few other things
What I mean is, you have a method named method() returns Integer, and then u do int a = method(); I am just failing to understand how int can hold Integer if Integer is an object reference and not primitive int
What's important to know though is that when you write int a = method() and method() returns an Integer is that you can get errors because int = Integer only works if the Integer actually contains an int. Integer can be null. Int as a primitive can not be null. @Ben
public class AutoBoxingUnBoxing {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int i = getValue();//Unboxing
System.out.println(i);
}
public static Integer getValue() {
return 5;//AutoBoxing
}
}
I kinda like using Integer = null for while loops where you return an int. While Integer == null the loop will go on until I get a number to put into the Integer. That doubles as an assurance that the method always will return a number.