Hi,
I have a list of binaries written in java, ada,C, python and I want to execute them.
How to do that ?
Is there any JVM binding to those languages ?
Thanks for your answers
How to sort a map(?,B) on the values in Java with google collections ordering function, if B is a class, which has a field of type double, which should be used for ordering.
Is there any good reason to avoid unused import statements in Java? As I understand it, they are there for the compiler, so lots of unused imports won't have any impacts on the compiled code. Is it just to reduce clutter and to avoid naming conflicts down the line?
(I ask because Eclipse gives a warning about unused imports, which is kind of annoying when I'm developing code because I don't want to remove the imports until I'm pretty sure I'm done designing the class.)
I was wondering how Java sorts items in the Map (HashMap or Hashtable) when they are added. Are the keys sorted by the hashcode, memory reference or by allocation precedence...?
It's because I've noticed same pairs in the Map are not always sorted in the same order
My multithreaded Java program crashes because it runs out of heap space and I don't think it should. Assuming the culprit is unintentional object retention, what's a good free tool to investigate what objects are being unintentionally retained?
My IDE is Eclipse.
I want to cut the svn/cvs recods in pieces and then put in to database. After that i can make use of those data easily.
Any java function can get out the record? and How?
If possible, please provide a example. Thank you.
I am currently facing a situation where i have a table with almost 80 millions data and i have to take a dump of that table and store it into a csv file. Currently i am using a not so professional approach( with a perl script+DBI interface , printing the values to stdout and redirecting to a csv file). Now i am planning to use java threading approach. Can you suggest a way forward. Thanks in advance
Hello, I am developing a new Java Desktop app. Something like a media player. I want to load most of the resources in the background when the computer starts up. But the users can turn this option off form within the app or using some other utility. So, what I want to do is if a ban instance of the app is already running and the user starts the app again then I can communicate with the already running instance so that it can launch a new window?
I want to access a MySQL database from Java, but remote connection is disabled by the host.
So I will send the data to PHP and then PHP will locally access the database.
The data is pretty big (about 2~4kb)
I've never done this before.
What should I do?
I asked a question about Garbage Collection in Java in this topic.
But the answer I got, gave me another question.
Someone mentioned that classes can be collected by the garbage collector too.
Is this true?
And if it is true, how does this work?
I have two pieces of text. I would like to make a word-based diff between them (like whe unix utility wdiff does) but with more information in the output (I mean, the character's posizion where the added/delited word starts).
I need to do this in Java, so a simple output of the differences (like wdiff) doesn't suite for me: I would like to manipulate objects representing differences.
Have a Map which contains objects that I want to keep in sync across multiple servers, such that if objects in the map are created, deleted, or modified - this is reflected immediately (ie. within a second or two) across all servers, in a way that can potentially scale up to tens of servers.
Is there a lightweight open source Java tool that can do something like this? I'm aware of Terracotta but it is rather heavy weight for what I need.
I need to capture portion of user screen usign java applet. It is easy to do using Robot class but I'd like user to select which portion of screen to capture in draggy-droppy way.
So I need to draw rectangular frame over users desktop and response when user resizes it.
How could I do it? Thnx.
I just want to play a very simple, straight forward note by giving my computer a certain frequency as an integer, and from there I can figure out how to make it play the note longer or shorter. It does not necessarily have to come out of the actual sound card - if it's generated and output by the internal speaker that's okay.
I looked at the midi libraries that java has included, and they are way more than what I want to do. This just needs to be very basic.
For instance:
private final Object o;
public void doSomething(){
final Object local = this.o;
//access methods of local;
}
This practice is followed in lots of java classes (such as ArrayBlockingQueue). What's the benefit of this?
@Override
public boolean equals( Object otherObject )
is not allowed in Java for an Enum, since the method equals(Object x) is defined as final in Enum. Why is this so?
I cannot thing of any use case which would require overriding equals(Object) for Enum. I'm just curious to know the reasoning behind this behavior.
what java method takes an int and returns +1 or -1? the criteria for this is weather or not the int is positive or negative. I looked through the documentation but i'm bad at reading it and i can't find it. I know i've seen it somewhere though.
I'm designing a web application.
I was wondering if it was feasible to design a php front end (using some php framework e.g. CakePHP), which stores and retrieves data to display to the user.
Then develop a java backend which listens to the database for changes, and depending on what was changed, performs some actions and updates the database.
Any thoughts on this type of implementation would be appreciated.