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  • Java applet for Tower of Hanoi

    - by Naren
    I am planning to write a Java applet for Tower of Hanoi similar to link( http://www.mazeworks.com/hanoi/index.htm ) Can you suggest how should I start and proceed. And, btw, does it require multi threading? And also, major part of my doubt is to make a disc being clickable and being able to drag and drop the disc on a tower. detect a tower (if a disc is being dragged using mouse)

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  • how to implement k-means for simple grouping in java

    - by thandar
    Hi all, I would like to know simple k-means algorithm in java. I want to use k-means only for grouping one dimensional array not multi. For example, before grouping the array consists of 2,4,7,5,12,34,18,25 if we want four group then we got group 1: 2,4,5 group 2: 7,12 group 3: 18,25 group 4: 34

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  • Java declarations (ordering)

    - by incrediman
    In Java, what's generally the most accepted way to organize a class in terms of the order in which declared data members and methods should be listed in the class file, keeping in mind the following and anything else you can think of for each one: its visibility whether it's a constructor, method, or member if it's a method, does it overload, or override other method(s)?

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  • Open PDF file on fly from Java application

    - by Mr CooL
    Is there any way to have a code where it can be used to open PDF file in Java application but do not side to any platform. I mean using batch file in Windows could do that. Can it be any other way to have platform independent code to open PDF on fly.

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  • Java MouseListener

    - by ikurtz
    I have a bunch of JLabels and i would like to trap mouse click events. at the moment i am having to use: public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent arg0) { } public void mouseExited(MouseEvent arg0) { } public void mouseEntered(MouseEvent arg0) { } public void mousePressed(MouseEvent arg0) { } public void mouseReleased(MouseEvent arg0) { System.out.println("Welcome to Java Programming!"); } I was wondering if there is a tidier way of doing this instead of having a bunch of events I do not wish trap?

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  • Ways to clean up java applications.

    - by Begui
    How do java people handle clean up of their apps when the program receives a kill signal? For instance, there is an application i connect to which wants any third party app ( my app) to send a "finish" command. What is the best say to send that "finish" command if one does a kill -9 on me.

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  • FileReader File not Found Java

    - by Lucas Camargo de Carvalho
    I have done everything I know. The file is not a ".filetype.filetype". It is in the same folder as the .settings and the other project files. Why is this not working? Full path isn't working either, but strangely, a Scanner is working. import java.io.FileReader; public class test { public static void main(String[] args) { FileReader testFileReader = new FileReader("hotels.json"); } }

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  • How is hashCode() calculated in Java.

    - by Jothi
    What value is hashCode() method is returning in java?. i read that it is an memory reference of an object. when i print hascode value for new Integer(1), its 1. for String(a) - 97. so i confused. is it ascii or what type of value is?

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  • Java design flaws that are unlikely to change due to backward compatibility

    - by koppernickus
    What are the Java language and standard library design flaws you are aware of? I ask only for flaws that: cannot be changed or are unlikely to change due to backward compatibility, are NOT controversial, i.e. most of programmers would agree that "this is a bug not a feature" (for example checked exceptions seem to be controversial language feature, so I wouldn't classify them as "design flaw").

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  • line is erasing in java

    - by Gogoo
    I make an Application in java and draw rectangle. When I search from combobox the rectangle is under the combobox and when I close combobox some parts of the rectangle which was under the combobox is deleted. How can I make rectangle to be visible after the combobox was closed.

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  • java native Process timeout

    - by deltanovember
    At the moment I execute a native process using the following: java.lang.Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command); int returnCode = process.waitFor(); Suppose instead of waiting for the program to return I wish to terminate if a certain amount of time has elapsed. How do I do this?

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  • Java, dBase microsoft driver and deleted flag

    - by blow
    Hi, im connecting to dBase from java with this string: String url="jdbc:odbc:DRIVER={Microsoft dBase Driver (*.dbf)};DBQ="+databasePath+";DefaultDir="+databasePath+";DriverId=533;FIL=dBase IV;MaxBufferSize=2048;PageTimeout=5;"; Work fine, but with a SELECT statement i can retrieve only record that are not "deleted". In dBase database deletet record are only flagged deleted, so i want retrive deleted record too. Is this possibile? Thank.

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  • Provisioning api using java

    - by user268515
    Hi i tried to retrieve all users from the domain using provisioning api & 2-legged OAuth in java program but it returns unknown authorization header........... when i started to search about it i got the scope as https://apps-apis.google.com/a/feeds/user/#readonly. i dont what what #readonly refers please explain it .... Regards Sharun

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  • Java method missing (ala Ruby) for decorating?

    - by cibercitizen1
    Is there any technique available in Java for intercepting messages (method calls) like the method_missing technique in Ruby? This would allow coding decorators and proxies very easily, like in Ruby: :Client p:Proxy im:Implementation ------- ---------- ----------------- p.foo() -------> method_missing() do_something im.foo() ------------------> do_foo p.bar() --------> method_missing() do_something_more im.bar() -------------------> do_bar (Note: Proxy only has one method: method_missing())

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  • Is Java assert broken?

    - by BlairHippo
    While poking around the questions, I recently discovered the assert keyword in Java. At first, I was excited. Something useful I didn't already know! A more efficient way for me to check the validity of input parameters! Yay learning! But then I took a closer look, and my enthusiasm was not so much "tempered" as "snuffed-out completely" by one simple fact: you can turn assertions off.* This sounds like a nightmare. If I'm asserting that I don't want the code to keep going if the input listOfStuff is null, why on earth would I want that assertion ignored? It sounds like if I'm debugging a piece of production code and suspect that listOfStuff may have been erroneously passed a null but don't see any logfile evidence of that assertion being triggered, I can't trust that listOfStuff actually got sent a valid value; I also have to account for the possibility that assertions may have been turned off entirely. And this assumes that I'm the one debugging the code. Somebody unfamiliar with assertions might see that and assume (quite reasonably) that if the assertion message doesn't appear in the log, listOfStuff couldn't be the problem. If your first encounter with assert was in the wild, would it even occur to you that it could be turned-off entirely? It's not like there's a command-line option that lets you disable try/catch blocks, after all. All of which brings me to my question (and this is a question, not an excuse for a rant! I promise!): What am I missing? Is there some nuance that renders Java's implementation of assert far more useful than I'm giving it credit for? Is the ability to enable/disable it from the command line actually incredibly valuable in some contexts? Am I misconceptualizing it somehow when I envision using it in production code in lieu of statements like if (listOfStuff == null) barf();? I just feel like there's something important here that I'm not getting. *Okay, technically speaking, they're actually off by default; you have to go out of your way to turn them on. But still, you can knock them out entirely.

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  • Finding out if LDAP user in Sun Directory Server 5.2 is locked out, in Java

    - by simon
    I'm developing an application using Java, Tomcat, Spring Framework and Spring LDAP 1.2.1 for LDAP access. According to our LDAP administrator, it is not possible to find out programmatically, if a specific user is locked out in the directory - the user is just not returned. This makes life difficult for me, as I need to identify locked out users. Is our administrator right, or is it possible somehow to find out, if a particular user is locked out? If yes, how?

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