Hi there,
is it possible to start a new thread in a different process in Java?
I mean, I'm running a specific process and main thread, issuing ProcessBuilder for creating a new process. Before start() method is invoked, one must provide the command to be run in another process. Is it possible to start a new thread in newly created process?
Thank you in advance for the reply.
Best regards.
Why is it that in Java, a superclass' protected members are inaccessible by an indirect subclass in a different package? I know that a direct subclass in a different package can access the superclass' protected members. I thought any subclass can access its inherited protected members.
I have a Java application complied to a collection of jars that I want to make installable on Ubuntu and SuSE. I Want the installer to be able to check for the JRE, register a file association and be able to load a website on un-install.
I understand Ubuntu and SuSE are based on different architectures, so is there a consistent way to do this?
Does anyone have an advice on utilities to use or guides to read to help me achieve what I'm trying to do.
Is it possible to write objects in Java to a binary file? The objects I want to write would be 2 arrays of String objects. The reason I want to do this is to save persistent data. If there is some easier way to do this let me know.
Thanks in advance!
Dear all,
I want to integrate facebook api in my webapplication ,from where i can login a user ,gets his online friends ,sends notification messages,logout a user.plese suggesting which api to usein java.
I need to invoke .jar file in separate JVM from another java application, and it very CPU-consuming, so it should run with background priority in order not to affect the rest of the system. Is there any cross-platform method to do this?
If i make java core dump with gcore then what is the best tool to analyze it? I need to be able make jmap, jstack, jstat etc and also i need to see values of all variables.
Something that can take core dump as frozen JVM.
Given the following code:
public class Test {
public void method(Object o){
System.out.println("object");
}
public void method(String s) {
System.out.println("String");
}
public void method() {
System.out.println("blank");
}
/**
* @param args
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
Test test=new Test();
test.method(null);
}
}
Java prints "String". Why is this the case?
How would one go about proving to management that a batch reformat of all .java files in a large code base (to place the code in compliance with the company's coding standards) is safe and will not affect functionality.
The answers would have to appease the non-technical and the technical alike.
Using JNI can we pass custom data types from Java to C (or vice versa)? I see a mapping of primitive datatypes to types in C however not too sure if we can send across our own data types (e.g. Send across or return an Employee object or something!).
Hi.
I wanted a thing like I declare a variable: String a = "test";
And want to know what type it is, i.e., the output should be java.lang.String
thanks in advance
hi there,
I'm looking for an solution to generate a checksum for any type of java object, which remains the same for every exection of an application which produces the same object.
I tried it with object.hashcode(), but as I read in the api
....This integer need not remain consistent from one execution of an application to another execution of the same application.
thank you, best regard alex
I have one SDK that is available in Java and another SDK that is available for .Net and would like to write a single application that interfaces with both of them. I imagine I will need to use a cross platform communication framework that can support named pipes (or other in memory communication), what is the best choice?
After some more research I found Hessian -- does anyone know anything about the maturity of this project?
Having played with Linq (to SQL and Objects) as well as the Entity Framework from Microsoft recently, I was wondering what the non-.Net (specifically Java) equivalents are?
I see many similar questions, however I want to find the Username of the currently logged in user using Java.
Its probably something like:
System.getProperty(current.user);
But, I'm not quite sure.
Hi crew,
I'm searching for a tool, which converts a jsp file into a java file without using a server like tomcat or something else.
Can anyone help me out?
I need a java program to get the current date without timestamp
Date d = new Date();
gives me date and timestamp
But i need only date, without timestamp. I use this date to compare with another date object that does not have timestamp.
on printing
System.out.println("Current Date : " + d)
of d it should print May 11 2010 - 00:00:00 .
This problem occurs over and over. I have some complicated object, such as a Cat, which has many properties, such as age, favorite cat food, and so forth.
A bunch of Cats are stored in a Java Collection, and I need to find all the Cats that are aged 3, or those whose favorite cat food is Whiskas. Surely, I can write a custom method that finds those Cats with a specific property, but this gets cumbersome with many properties; is there some generic way of doing this?
Does anyone know of a tool (besides Eclipse or any other IDE) that I can use to find unused imports in a Java source file?
I am looking for a command-line type of tool (to integrate in a larger script).
Thank you.
I have seen that there are many books titled:
Build Ecommerce website in php
Build shopping carts in php or asp.net
Is there any book which explains, from scratch, how to start building a website in Java using any framework or with servlets or JSP?
Desired topics:
Basic forms with logins and registration
Building catalogue system
Building shopping cart
Building newsletters system