I have this program I have to write(attached). I am having problems with what the structure will look like. The following what I have so far. The questions I have are in bold.
>get userInput of how many observations
>for(int i = 1; i <= userInput; i++) >for(int j = 1; j <= 1; j++) >use a switch(case) method to ask user to select an option(1,2,3) >example, user chooses option 1: >ask to input time >print displacement >ask user to stop application(Y/N) >IF "No" is selected --------->>
How do I continue with the loop if user decides to not quit? -- And do I need to put this in each 'case'?
Alright so I wrote a switch statement that decides what range to print based on the letter grade input.
import java.util.Scanner; public class SwitchPractice { public static void main(String [] args) { Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);
[code]...
It works fine, but once it the user enters a letter grade and then displays the value, it does not prompt the user for another letter grade so that it can perform the output again. Also if I wanted to display an error message to the user if they enter an invalid letter grade how would I do that. I tried using a while loop and if statement in the switch statement but that didn't work.
I am copying the xml files from one folder to other folder, in the source folder, i have some files which have some content like "backing File="$IDP_ ROOT/metadata/iPAU-SP-metadata.xml" but while writing to the destination folder.i am replacing the "$IDP_ROOT" with my current working directory. The entire copying of files is for deploying into tomcat server. The copying is done only when server starts for the first time.Problem: If i change the folder name from my root path in my machine after i run the server,the entire process will be stopped because the destination folder files already contains the content which is with existed files names or folder names.
So i want to change it to relative path instead absolute path. What is the best way to do it? Please look at code below:
[ // Getting the current working directory String currentdir = new File(".").getAbsoluteFile().getParent() + File.separator;
I want to implement a kind of "container" in which to store objects (instances) of different types. Then with an iterator I'd call common methods. This is what I have in mind:
Where translate(x, y, z) is a method common for objects in Positionables which objects are of different types (Sphere, Box etc.).
Now I was thinking Positionables could be a List<Positionable> and Positionable is an abstract class and Sphere and Box extends from it. But I don't know how to propagate the call of translate() to the subclasses.
What are the best approaches for this matter? It would be perfect if I could make it so I could somehow use the "with" construction like in the example above.
I have a JPanel with vertical BoxLayout. It contains four components. I set the JPanel to LEFT_ALIGNMENT, which has no effect on its components. I set the first component to LEFT_ALIGNMENT, which has no effect. Only after I have set all four components to LEFT_ALIGNMENT do any of them align properly.
This suggests that it is impossible to have varying alignments in a container. They must all be the same alignment.
I accept that this is just the way things are: "Java works in mysterious ways." And I'm sure that it is possible to work around this limitation by stacking boxes that themselves have different internal alignments.
But I still wonder what in the world was going on in the minds of the Java developers. Is there a rational reason for this oddity?
This raises my most serious criticism of Swing: the hidden gotcha. Swing is a tangled mess of cross-connecting requirements that are impossible to divine by simple inspection of the documentation. If you want to use, say, a JRadioButton, it's not enough to study the documentation on JRadioButtons; you must also consult lots of documents for which there is no obvious connection to JRadioButton other than it being part of Swing.
I am looking for a way to have a Servlet (my container is Tomcat) calling a JSP file and processing it in order to retrieve the generated HTML. The compete scenario:
I have virtual shop and whenever a purchase is being carried out, the customer is redirected to a Servlet that post-processes the purchase (list of the items, etc.)
Among all these, the Servlet is also supposed to send me an email about the new purchase. I would like to have nice designed HTML mail and not just a simple plain text notification. I thought of having a designated JSP as a view, and it will only be available from the Servlet container, for this purpose. One way is having the Servlet create an HTTPClient (or any other method of network communication) to my own host and ask for the JSP.
I wonder if there is a simpler way to ask my own container to process a JSP, since I am not really making a request to an outside web application. Something like getServletContext.processAndReturnJsp("mail.jsp")
BTW, if you think my approach is too cumbersome to fill an email with HTML code, it would be great to know of a simpler way.
When casting a char which is read from a file to an int, can i assume that the mapping used will be ASCII? I've learned that unicode uses ASCII mappings for the characters that overlap.
Are there any other possibilities for int values of one character? I still have trouble understanding character encodings.
the focus traversal policy (hereafter "tab order") in forms and panels doesn't follow the order in which controls were inserted into the container, but is derived from the position of the components on the form or panel. This is very neat (and probably allows sloppy coders and GUI builders to exist without actually ever thinking about the tab order), except when it isn't. As when you actually want to specify a different component order, for example.
In the following example, I've created a form with two columns of buttons. I want the tab order to go through the first column of buttons, followed by second column of buttons (ie. a column-by-column schema). The default tab order is row-by-row, however, and can be obtained for reference by commenting out the setupFocus() call in the constructor.
I had hoped that the ContainerOrderFocusTraversalPolicy would do the job, but there is a couple of problems (which I've addressed in the setupFocus() method). Firstly, the container itself is part of the focus chain. This at least is easily remediable by calling setFocusable(false), but I don't have to do that with the initial focus traversal policy, so I wonder why I have to do it with this one. The other problem is more pressing, though - the ContainerOrderFocusTraversalPolicy lets me (un)hapilly tab through JLabels. Again, I've fixed this, but the initial policy knows all by itself that it's not a good idea to focus a JLabel. Moreover, I'm afraid there might be other components that do not receive focus with the original policy, but ContainerOrderFocusTraversalPolicy might plod though them.
isn't there some focus traversal policy implementation that I could just set and it would tab through exactly the same components as the original policy, except it would order them according to their order in the container?
I am writing a program where I need to split an array of full names into First names and Surnames, using mapping. However, I am struggling how to split it up... and my First Names and Surnames list are both just displaying the full name.
public static void main(String[] args) { String[] names; names = new String[8]; Scanner s = new Scanner(System.in); for (int i = 0; i < names.length; i++) { System.out.println("Enter full student name:");
And this works fine: URL....The war file is deployed under the context root /bankconnect/ I want to make a servlet mapping, before the context root "i still want the context root bankconnect". URL....
I'm working on a project and I'm just about to implement different stages (menus etc). The program is opened in an intro stage that just renders a text (slick, Unicode font) looking like this:
After switching to a different stage hat uses shadow mapping and then back to the intro stage it looks like this:
I'm looking for a working example of shadow mapping with java code using shaders. There are so many c++ or c tutorials out there but i haven't managed to rewrite them since I'm too bad in c/c++. I've been trying to implement this a long time but can't get the hang of it. Any example out there? Preferably as sstripped down as possible except for the shadow mapping.
We need to process (read and parse) big xml files (500 Mo to 1 or 2 Go). What's the best framework or Java library to use for this requirement ? Then what's a good OXM (in this case xml to object mapping) solution for this kind of file ?
We generally use [URL] ..... for running web applications.
What I want is to access my web app using something like this: [URL] ....
How to achieve this? Actually what i want to ask is that how URL like WWW.example.com is mapped to web applications? Assuming that i am using tomcat server.
What is in each iteration:this.orikaFacade.map(a1, a2); or a2 = (A) this.jmapper2.getDestination(a1);
I know, that Orika and Jmapper are great libraries from Google and they use reflection in a different way than for example Dozer, which is much slower, they se reflection to generete code somehow..
I have 3 questions:
1) How they work - when the code is generated, during maven build, in runtime - everytime when I create mapper in code? Are they change class code byte dynamically? 2) Why there is this speed difference that I noticed? 3) Which library would you choose and why? Both have the same capabilities? Why both come from Google? Why Google didnt develop Orika and created Jmapper instead?
I have configured form based JAAS in my app. Basically, in web.xml I have declared security constraints on certain jsp page, declared specific roles, login and error pages. So, my login form is:
When I map my servlet to the ROOT of the site, the javascript, CSS and image files are not served. The conversation between the server and browser shows the files are being sent, but they are not rendered in the browser. This happens in both Firefox and Chrome.
If I change the mapping to anything other than the root, such as /x/, everything works as it should.
I read JEE6 doc and confused with : Does container managed entity manager (injected by PersistenceContext annotation) is thread-safe in stateless session bean in multiple-thread env?
See code below, if there are 2 requests to stateless sesion bean in 2 concurrent threads , is it using same Entity Manager Instance or not?
@Stateless(name = "HRFacade", mappedName = "HR_FACES_EJB_JPA-HRFacade-HRFacade") public class HRFacadeBean implements HRFacade, HRFacadeLocal { @Resource SessionContext sessionContext;