Program That Changes The Value Of A Variable When A Predefined Time Arrives
Mar 19, 2014
Is it possible to write a program that changes the value of a certain variable when a certain predefined time arrives, without running the same loop over and over again (and stucking the computer)?
So, I've seen in google mail that the webpage will automatically update whenever a new mail arrives without the user manually refresh the gmail webpage. I'm curious how this is done. Is it polling? or is it something else? how is this done in java web app?
And at the end there is a sinature that looks like this: ‚ R0‚ N0‚ 6 $P Gæ&"ùO]ó]0 *†H†÷ 0h1%0# U DigiSign Qualified Public CA1 0 U DigiSign Public CA1 0 U DigiSign S.A1 0 U RO0 140722065817Z
So, here is the question I have been working on: Write a java class named Time that prompts the user to input the elapsed time for an event in seconds. The program then outputs the elapsed time in hours, minutes, and seconds. (For example the elapsed time is 9630 seconds, and then the output is 2:40:30 ).Hint: an hour has 3600 seconds and a minute has 60 seconds. Use Scanner class for reading the input.
Here is my code:
import java.util.Scanner; public class Time { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner scan= new Scanner(System.in); System.out.println("Enter the elapsed time in seconds:"); int totalseconds= scan.nextInt();
[Code] .....
Now, I know I am supposed to use the remainder operator to figure out the time in minutes and seconds, but the hours has be a little confused. Right now this code compiles but gives me an exception.
I was told to create a program that prints the time between 00:00 (0:00 a.m.) and 23:45 (11:45 p.m.) in the 24-hour clock and 12-hour clock format like this:
Write a java program to read the time intervals (HH:MM) and to compare system time if the system time between your time intervals print correct time and exit else try again to repeat the same thing. By using StringToknizer class.
My objective is to write a program that calculates the bodyfat of people. The difficult thing is, that the calculations are different for males and females, so I tried to prompt the user to state whether they are male or female, then use and "if" statement to tether their response to the corresponding calculations.
Here's my algorithm:
Here's what I have:
package bodyweight; import java.util.Scanner; public class Weightcalc { static Scanner console = new Scanner(System.in); public static void main(String[] args){
[Code] ....
It keeps telling me that bodyweight is not initialized, but when I do, I get a hell of a lot more bugs on everything telling me they aren't initialized. I just want the program to transfer the user to select inputs, based on whether they are male or female.
What I'm supposed to be doing is making it so the program can accept multiple filter and sort commands at one time, and each should be separated by a whitespace.I was thinking about parsing the input again, using whitespace as the delimiter, then normally progressing with each token, as though there was only one command.
However, coding this the way I'm doing it will firstly probably take hours, and secondly, it's likely not even right. I don't have any real way to determine which token contains which data from the Song objects.These are the specific requirements for this portion:A sort/filter command consists of one or more of the following options:
-year:<year(s)>
-rank:<rank(s)>
-artist:<artist>
-title:<title>
-sortBy:<field>
Any number of these options may be given, and they may be given in any order. If multiple options are specified, they will be separated by whitespace.
GazillionSongs Class (the main) Java Code: import java.util.*; import java.io.*;
i am very new to java programming what i am doing wrong here. Write a program that calculates how much an employee would earn over a period of time (in months), if, every month, the employee’ pay-per-hour rate is one dollar more than the month before (so if his starting perhour rate is 7.25, next month it will be 8.25, next month 9.25, and so on). The employee is going to work 20 hours per week, 4 weeks per month.
The program should input from the user and validate both number of months (which should be a positive integer larger than 0) and the pay-per-hour rate (which should be a floating-point number larger than $7.25 – the minimum federal wage pay-per-hour rate). For each one of these values; if the value is wrong, the program should repetitively ask for that value until the value entered is correct. The program should confirm/output the correct value.
/* This program calculates how much as employee would earn if every month the employee pay per hour would increase by a dollar */ package nick.employee; import java.util.Scanner; public class nickemployee {
So I need to make a for loop for this problem: A certain type of bacteria doubles its population every twelve hours. If you start with a population of 1000, how many hours will it take for the population to exceed 1,000,000? Output needs to be in table format, such as:
the below program is to read the time intervals (HH:MM) and to compare system time if the system time between your time intervals print correct time and exit else try again to repeat the same thing. By using StringToknizer class. and i have written like this
import java.io.*; import java.util.*; public class Main { static int k1,k2,v1,v2; public static void main(String args[]) throws IOException { DataInputStream o=new DataInputStream(System.in);
[Code] ....
but is showing correct for some inputs and wrong for some inputs ....
I've got a very simple java program (J.java, see below) on my application server that successfully connects to an Oracle 11.2 database on a database server (both servers are Linux CentOS) using JDBC thin driver from Oracle.
As you can see from the setURL command in the Java code below, I've configured the application and database servers to sit next to each other, and they're on the same network (cross-cable connected to each other), so there's no network traffic on these (development) boxes except my code.
The problem is the execution time varies a lot. If I run it 5 times, it (seemingly randomly) could take 0.01 seconds, or 10 seconds, or 50 seconds, or over a minute to execute. If it takes over a minute (roughly), the program doesn't complete, but the error shown below is returned instead.
------error returned when execution take more than about 1 minute------- gf@host9 [~/dbwork]# java -cp ./ojdbc6_g.jar:. J Exception in thread "main" java.sql.SQLRecoverableException: IO Error: Connection reset at oracle.jdbc.driver.T4CConnection.logon(T4CConnection.java:494) at oracle.jdbc.driver.PhysicalConnection.<init>(PhysicalConnection.java:547)
I don't understand how i'm supposed to define a variable when the user has to type it into the program so it can be converted. This program i'm working on is supposed to convert from meters to feet (meter = feet * 0.305) but the user has to type in the meters they want converted. how do i solve the problem that keeps coming up that says "variable meter symbol cant be found" ? I keep trying different lines to no avail
public class Lab2 { public static void main(String[] args) { double feet = meter * 0.305; double meter = feet/0.305; System.out.println("Enter in feet for conversion to meters"); meter = meter * 0.305;
I am working on an assignment that I can't seem to figure out the final part to. The program takes in course data such as the time the class starts and how long it lasts. The time is in military time (0000 - 2400)
I need the output time to be the time the class started, plus the length of the class, and displayed in military time.
I can't for the life of me figure out how to do this. I have gotten a program that works for this time and minutes, and displays the correct 1020. But when I change the information to say
Start time: 0700 Length = 90 minutes
I get:
Endtime = 90
90 is technically correct, the way the formula is setup, but I need it to display 0900 not 90.
Here is the code that I have. Be easy, I'm still learning, and this is just the file I created to get the formula to work. Also, the verbose in here is just for my own debugging to make sure values should be what I'm expecting them to be.
public class calc { public static void main(String[] args) { double hours, minutes, length; double temp; int time = 2400; hours = time / 100; System.out.println("Hours are: " + hours);
I have two classes. time_runner is used for testing my code.
This is what I'm using to test my code:
class time_runner { public static void main(String str[]) throws IOException { Time time1 = new Time(14, 56); System.out.println("time1: " + time1); System.out.println("convert time1 to standard time: " + time1.convert()); System.out.println("time1: " + time1); System.out.print("increment time1 five times: "); time1.increment();
[code]....
The two constructors are "Time()", which is the default constructor that sets the time to 1200, and "Time(int h, int m)" Which says If h is between 1 and 23 inclusive, set the hour to h. Otherwise, set the hour to 0. If m is between 0 and 59 inclusive, set the minutes to m. Otherwise, set the minutes to 0. Those are my two constructors that I pretty much have down. The three methods however I'm having trouble with. The "String toString()" Returns the time as a String of length 4. The "String convert()" Returns the time as a String converted from military time to standard time. The "void increment()" Advances the time by one minute.
public class Time { private int hour; private int minute; public Time(int h, int m) { if(h > 1 && h < 23) hour = h;
I wanted to know some hints on where to begin if I wanted to create a program which compares an audio file with real time captured audio. I found this website "[URL]...", but I think this would not do the job, so what are the basics of audio in java and how to compare audio files and see if they are compatible.
The term "Local variable" is related to scope. That is a local variable is one which is defined in a certain block of code, and its scope is confined inside that block of code.And a "Member variable" is simple an instance variable.
I read in a discussion forum that when local variables are declared (example code below), their name reservation takes place in memory but they are not automatically initialized to anything. On the other hand, when member variables are declared, they are automatically initialized to null by default.
Java Code: public void myFunction () { int [] myInt; // A local, member variable (because "static" keyword is not there) declared } mh_sh_highlight_all('java');
So it seems that they are comparing local variables and member variables. While I think a member variable can also be be local in a block of code, isn't it?
when we create another variable and set it equal to the first : Car c2 = c1;
we're pointing c2 at the same car object that c1 points to (as opposed to pointing c2 at c1, which in turn points at the car). So if we have code like,
Car c1 = new Car(); Car[] cA = {c1, c1, c1, c1};
are we doing the same? Are we creating four *new* reference variables, each of which points at the same car (again as opposed to pointing them at c1 itself)? I think so, but want to make sure I'm understanding this correctly.