For Example in shell script:
_CLASSPATH =.
for jar in lib/*.jar
do
_CLASSPATH=${_CLASSPATH}:${jar}
done
How can I dynamically build a Java classpath in Perl?
Looking for quick, simple way in Java to change this string
" hello there "
to something that looks like this
"hello there"
where I replace all those multiple spaces with a single space, except I also want the one or more spaces at the beginning of string to be gone.
Something like this gets me partly there
String mytext = " hello there ";
mytext = mytext.replaceAll("( )+", " ");
but not quite.
As far as I can see the key advantage of dynamic languages like Ruby or Python over Java/Scala/C# etc is "hot" applying of your changes to source code to the running application. What are the frameworks for JVM or .NET that support the same workflow - apply changes to configuration and source code on the fly? Can they also watch changes to custom configurations and notify application?
Note: Frameworks for dynamic languages on JVM/.NET like Grails or Compojure are out of scope here.
I personally like the 'exclusive or' operator when it makes sense in context of boolean checks because of its conciseness. I much prefer to write
if (boolean1 ^ boolean2)
{
//do it
}
than
if((boolean1 && !boolean2) || (boolean2 && !boolean1))
{
//do it
}
but I often get confused looks (from other experienced java developers, not just the newbies), and sometimes comments about how it should only be used for bitwise operations. I'm curious as to the best practices others use around the '^' operator.
What would be the best way (ideally, simplest) to convert an int to a binary string representation in Java?
For example, say the int is 156. The binary string representation of this would be "10011100".
As we all know java program will start executing from the main method of the class. So was curious to know that is there any other way by which we can make another static method as the entry point, that is can we override this property of the JVM to start with some other method than main?
many of you will ask why do you want to do this? so want to make it clear that its just a curiosity to know about. And if it is there then it might help in many ways
Java does not have concept of operator overloading.
Still + operator behaves as addition operator with numbers and concatenate operator with strings. This is similar to the operator overloading behavior.
Please suggest.
I have an application where I need to check for a file which may be created dynamically during my execution, I will give up after some MAX time where the file has yet to show up. I wanted to know if there was a more efficient method in Java of checking for the file other than polling for it and then sleeping every X seconds? If not what would be the most efficient manner of doing this?
Hi is there any tool available in Java world that will parse/read a source file and pull SQL statements out in to a text file. This is a complex task given that you can write SQL statements in different fashion within the source (ex: using + sign or using .append()) or even conditional building of SQL.
Hi all,
I want to genrate following JSON dataobject using org.json.simple.JSONObject, how to do it in java?
{
friends : [
{
name: 'David',
interests: 'Cooking',
},
{
name: 'Charles',
interests: 'Hiking',
},
{
name: 'Mary',
interests: 'Football',
},
]
}
If code snipet is provided then that will be really helpful!
Regards,
Abhi
Is this possible in Java: Map<SomeObject, Map<SomeOtherObject>>? I'm trying Map<Integer, Map<String>> am getting an
"Incorrect number of arguments for
type Map; it cannot be
parameterized with arguments "
error.
You launch a java program from a console (maybe using a .bat script).
I don't want the console to remain visible, I want to hide it.
Is there a simple way to do this ? Without JNI ?
Thanks.
Hi,
We have discussion in my job place about question (We use 1 of the php frameworks):
Why program with php frameworks big web application if it can be done better with rubi on rails, python or java?
Please say our opinion
thanks
Is it possible to use a for-each loop in Java and somehow still get the index of the iteration?
for (Object obj : ListOfObject) {
// I want to know the index of obj!
}
I want to know what kinds of data structure in Java and not in the util package?
For example: Hashmap, Collection, Set.
Please give me a list of them as many as possible.
Thank you
I am a Java EE developer working mainly with JSPs, Servlets, and frameworks like Spring.
Will learning PHP be a wise decision ?
What would PHP offer me ?
Hello,
I have a problem. I need to host many (tens, hundreds) of small identical JAVA web applications that have different loads during one time. I want to use Glassfish V3. Do I need to use a load balancer and clusters or something else? Advise where can I find information about similar problems and their solutions...
Best regards,
Alexey.
I'm looking for some simple tasks like listing all the running process of a user, or kill a particular process by pid etc. Basic unix process management from Java. Is there a library out there that is relatively mature and documented? I could run a external command from the JVM and then parse the standard output/error but that seems like a lot of work and not robust at all. Any suggestions?
I'd like to communicate with a USB device under Windows and Java but I can't find a good library to do so. I don't want the user to have to install any extra hardware or device drivers to make this work. That is, I want to be able to interact with USB just like other Windows applications do.
I am familiar with jUSB and JSR 80 but both seem to be dead projects (at least for Windows).
I have multiple Java projects in Eclipse. I would like to reuse some classes in my new project from my old project. What is the best way to do that in Eclipse?
I.e. is it possible to add another "project folder" to the build-path for my new project?
In Java, an array IS AN Object. My question is... is an Object constructor called when new arrays is being created? We would like to use this fact to instrument Object constructor with some extra bytecode which checks length of array being constructed. Would that work?