Tutorial by Examples: r

To add markers to a Google Map, for example from an ArrayList of MyLocation Objects, we can do it this way. The MyLocation holder class: public class MyLocation { LatLng latLng; String title; String snippet; } Here is a method that would take a list of MyLocation Objects and place a M...
The shared remote interface: package remote; import java.rmi.Remote; import java.rmi.RemoteException; public interface RemoteServer extends Remote { int stringToInt(String string) throws RemoteException; } The server implementing the shared remote interface: package server; im...
You should be careful when comparing floating-point values (float or double) using relational operators: ==, !=, < and so on. These operators give results according to the binary representations of the floating point values. For example: public class CompareTest { public static void main...
Classes implementing Iterable<> interface can be used in for loops. This is actually only syntactic sugar for getting an iterator from the object and using it to get all elements sequentially; it makes code clearer, faster to write end less error-prone. public class UsingIterable { pub...
Button button = new Button("I'm here..."); Timeline t = new Timeline( new KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(0), new KeyValue(button.translateXProperty(), 0)), new KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(2), new KeyValue(button.translateXProperty(), 80)) ); t.setAutoReverse(true); t.setCy...
Annotation @XmlAccessorType determines whether fields/properties will be automatically serialized to XML. Note, that field and method annotations @XmlElement, @XmlAttribute or @XmlTransient take precedence over the default settings. public class XmlAccessTypeExample { @XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessT...
Annotations @XmlElement, @XmlAttribute or @XmlTransient and other in package javax.xml.bind.annotation allow the programmer to specify which and how marked fields or properties should be serialized. @XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.NONE) // we want no automatic field/property marshalling public cla...
The + symbol can mean three distinct operators in Java: If there is no operand before the +, then it is the unary Plus operator. If there are two operands, and they are both numeric. then it is the binary Addition operator. If there are two operands, and at least one of them is a String, then i...
The Java language provides 7 operators that perform arithmetic on integer and floating point values. There are two + operators: The binary addition operator adds one number to another one. (There is also a binary + operator that performs string concatenation. That is described in a separate e...
The == and != operators are binary operators that evaluate to true or false depending on whether the operands are equal. The == operator gives true if the operands are equal and false otherwise. The != operator gives false if the operands are equal and true otherwise. These operators can be used ...
While using the foreach loop (or "extended for loop") is simple, it's sometimes beneficial to use the iterator directly. For example, if you want to output a bunch of comma-separated values, but don't want the last item to have a comma: List<String> yourData = //... Iterator<Str...
To create your own Iterable as with any interface you just implement the abstract methods in the interface. For Iterable there is only one which is called iterator(). But its return type Iterator is itself an interface with three abstract methods. You can return an iterator associated with some coll...
WebHistory history = webView.getEngine().getHistory(); The history is basically a list of entries. Each entry represents a visited page and it provides access to relevant page info, such as URL, title, and the date the page was last visited. The list can be obtained by using the getEntries() met...
import static java.awt.BorderLayout.*; import javax.swing.*; import java.awt.BorderLayout; JPanel root = new JPanel(new BorderLayout()); root.add(new JButton("East"), EAST); root.add(new JButton("West"), WEST); root.add(new JButton("North"), NORTH); root.add(...
PrinterJob pJ = PrinterJob.createPrinterJob(); if (pJ != null) { boolean success = pJ.printPage(some-node); if (success) { pJ.endJob(); } } This prints to the default printer without showing any dialog to the user. To use a printer other than the default you can use th...
PrinterJob pJ = PrinterJob.createPrinterJob(); if (pJ != null) { boolean success = pJ.showPrintDialog(primaryStage);// this is the important line if (success) { pJ.endJob(); } }
var person = new Person { Address = null; }; var city = person.Address.City; //throws a NullReferenceException var nullableCity = person.Address?.City; //returns the value of null This effect can be chained together: var person = new Person { Address = new Address { ...
You can use Scanner to read all of the text in the input as a String, by using \Z (entire input) as the delimiter. For example, this can be used to read all text in a text file in one line: String content = new Scanner(new File("filename")).useDelimiter("\\Z").next(); System.o...
You can use custom delimiters (regular expressions) with Scanner, with .useDelimiter(","), to determine how the input is read. This works similarly to String.split(...). For example, you can use Scanner to read from a list of comma separated values in a String: Scanner scanner = null; tr...
This is placed in a Windows Forms event handler var nameList = new BindingList<string>(); ComboBox1.DataSource = nameList; for(long i = 0; i < 10000; i++ ) { nameList.AddRange(new [] {"Alice", "Bob", "Carol" }); } This takes a long time to execute,...

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