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06:24
Hi there. Does anybody knows lightweight component-based frameworks for java? Links for articles like "You don't need CB-framework, you need Scala" are fine too! Can't decide, rly. Straightforward OOP seems to be too coupling. Many thanks in return.
 
9 hours later…
15:23
Hello, can anyone explain what this code does? for(Object entry: listModel.toArray())
16:07
alicedimarco: iterating with entry over listModel.toArray()?
btw. Hi there, can I force eclipse to be able to write all stuff in 1 file? Does anyone know?
16:26
fine, i found the answer myself: stackoverflow.com/questions/2366310/…
hi, does anybody know how I can create a rmi object which acts like a singlecall object in .net remoting?
 
3 hours later…
19:22
hi @oleg
I made a finishing touch on my PHP-HAPI project (it's not a Java project, but it's the last project I worked on).
Before, it would just use regular Exception objects when throwing exceptions because I wanted to keep the library as simple as possible.
But I thought about it more and decided that it would be better to use a custom exception because, in a real environment, the person might be using other libraries that throw other exceptions.
So, by throwing a custom exception, it gives the user the ability to pick out the exceptions thrown by my library.
I think the project is done now. I can't think of anything else to add to it.
I was thinking about adding more unit test coverage to it, but it would require that I re-engineer a lot of the code in order to extract out the unit-testable parts and I haven't been able to think of a way to elegantly do that.
But the code that I want to unit test isn't really that complex, so I don't really think it's worth the effort.
The code that I want to unit test is code that parses HTTP responses into PHP objects.
It's not very complex code...the responses are form-encoded strings like the kind that get placed in a POST request when you submit a form.
PHP has a special function that automatically parses these strings into associative arrays, so there's not a lot of code to test.
There's also a few corrections and additions I want to make to the documentation.
There's some typos and there is an aspect to making calls to the API that would be helpful to document, which I left out because I didn't think to document it.
I wrote a script that packages the project into a "phar" file, which is like a JAR file. It basically just takes all the PHP files that make up the source code and compresses it into a single file.
However, it's annoying because the file is not a ZIP file like with JARs, so you can't open the phar file like you can a ZIP file.
So if you need to edit the contents of the file, you have to build it from scratch (there might be programs that can open phar files, but I don't know any).
But they are convenient for libraries because you can package all the PHP files into a single phar, which makes it easier to use.
The build script also creates a phpdocs for the project (phpdocs are like javadocs).
It creates the phpdocs, then compresses them into a ZIP file for convenience.
There's one annoying thing about phpdocs--when I write PHP code, I like to put every class into its own file (like Java).
However, you don't have to do this with PHP. You can have as many classes as you want in a file and you can have code that is not contained inside of a class (unlike Java, where everything has to be inside a class).
So, with phpdocs, it expects there to be a documentation block at the beginning of every file, describing what the file does, and a documentation block at the beginning of each class, describing what the class does.
But--for me, each file only has one class. I don't want to make a documentation block for the file because it would be exactly the same as the documentation block for the class!
So, when it builds the phpdocs, it throws a bunch of warnings, saying that there are no page documentation blocks.
It's not a big deal, it's just annoying.

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