Right now I am working on a project where I have to read a series of Strings in from a text file in java.
I know how to do it in the general way (using a FileReader, Buffer, etc.). My issue arises because I am not allowed to use external libraries at all. Are these considered external libraries?
To put things more easily, whats a good definition of an external library? Is it anything that I would have to import?
As a follow up question, how would I be able to read from a text file without using any of those libraries, if they're not allowed?
External libraries would be ones you download that do not come with Java API. An example would be the apache commons API. If you can just import it then it's not an external library.
Related
I'm aware of all the other questions about this topic, but I haven't found a good solution for my problem. Currently I am trying to use Java code in my C# project. I've already tried to convert the JAR files into .DLL files with IKVM, but this didn't work for me because the JAR files are to complicated to translate into C# because not every component, which were used in Java, can be found in C#. The normal call of the JAR file doesn't work for me either because I need to work with the class instances of the declared classes in the Java code.
Back to my question: Does anybody know how I could use Java code in my project? I've heard that it may be possible to implement Java code like it would be native, is that true? Note that I've to work with the class instances of the classes declared in the Java code.
I highly appreciate any kind of help, sheers!
Edit:
My work around would be that I include batch files, which are calling the JAR files. I will include these batch files into my C# Project and work with the batch files. This may be a even better approach for me because every input and output of the JAR files are done via XML files.
This kind of mixup are not generally a good approach. I think the .Net Framework is very mature and you can find everything you want to do your work.
I would suggest you the following approach :
You can wrap your Java library in a REST API and call it in your C# code. Your REST API can be hosted on an external server or use an embedded server or even a spring boot project.
You can read this post for more details.
I'm trying to read a .qm translation files with Java.
.qm files are binary files. I don't have access to the .ts files.
And I don't find much info on these .qm files.
How are they structured ?
Regards,
There's no documentation that I know of, but if you look at QTranslator::load you should be able to follow the format of the QM file.
You will probably need to reimplement QTranslator in Java, as you need not only the ability to load the files, but also to extract and apply translations in Qt fashion.
As per request of OP:
You could use those files by using the Qt libraries and JNI. By using the translator in a c++ dll you can translate strings easily. However, you cannot extract the files or list the contained translations. But if all you need is the actual translation, this solution should work.
I cannot give a real example, because I only now how it works in theory, I haven't tried it, because it's not trivial. But if you are eager to try it out, the general idea would be:
Create a C++ dll and build it against QtCore. The easiest way is to download Qt from their website qt.io. You can for example create a default library project with QtCreator. Note: Besides Qt5Core.dll, Qt requires other libraries to correctly run. They are all included in the installation, but once you deploy your application, those of course have to be includes as well.
Include JNI to the C++ project and link against it. if you're new to this, here is a nice tutorial: Java Programming Tutorial
Create your wrapper methods. Methods in cpp you can call from java that take java strings, convert them to QString, translate them with QTranslator and convert them back.
Load the library in Java and execute those methods
Important:
First, I don't know how java handles dll dependencies. If you encounter errors while loading the dll, it's probably because dependencies of your dll are not present. Second, Qt typically requires a QCoreApplication running in the main thread for most of it's operations. I tested the translator without such an app, and it worked. So apparently for translations only the app is not required. However, depending on what you do in your dll, I think this is important to know.
If you need more details, feel free to ask.
I would like to use a Java library in my Android application. The class constructors and methods of this library often take paths to files (configuration file, dictionary, etc.) and then build java.io.file instances based on the given paths.
In my android application, I would like to store these file in the 'res' folder (possibly in res/raw). The problem is that I have to give a path to these files to the methods of the library.
I could easily get an InputStream using getResources(), but this would not be directly usable by my library. I would have to go through all the methods taking a path as an argument, replace it by an InputStream and modify the content to deal with InputStreams instead of Files. This represent quite a lot of work and I would much prefer to use the library without modification and keep it easily upgradable.
Even though using java.io.file based on resource file would not be a good practice, is it something possible? It would definitely help if you could indicate a way to do this.
Thank you.
If the library uses java.io.File then I don't think there is a way to do this in Java (let alone the Android subset of Java). It might be possible to solve the problem with a loopback filesystem, but this depends on your Android device's kernel, etc.
See:
https://android.stackexchange.com/questions/25396/how-to-find-out-if-my-devices-kernel-has-loop-device-support
If the library uses java.nio.file.Path, then it may be possible to implement a custom FileSystemProvider that maps the resources into the default file system namespace.
Note this is for regular Java 7. It would require a back-port of the relevant NIO libraries to get this to work on Android. I had another look for a viable backport, and couldn't find one.
See:
Tweaking the behavior of the default file system in Java 7
How to use java.nio.file package in android?
There is another "clunky" way to do this. Get your application to copy the relevant resources to files that can be accessed via a File.
I would like to write toy IDE for Java, so I ask a question about one particular thing that as I hope can help me get started.
I have editor implemented on top of swing and i have some text in there. There is for example:
import java.util.List;
Now I need a way to send "java.util.List" string to a method that returns me all the information I may need including JavaDoc document.
So is there any tool that can set up classpath with libraries, that would parse every string I send and try to find if there is any Class/Interface with documentation to return?
So is there any tool that can set up classpath with libraries, that would parse every string I send and try to find if there is any Class/Interface with documentation to return?
AFAIK, no. There is no such free-standing tool or library. You will need to implement it yourself. (Don't expect that writing a Java IDE is simple ... even a "toy" one.)
Libraries will have class files, which will not have javadocs.. So it is not clear what you want to do.
There are many byte code engineering tools to analyse and extract information from class files. For example asm or bcel. Javassist allows to process both source and byte code, so may be close to what you need.
You could use html parser to get the javadoc and other info from the web using the full path to the class (including package names to construct the correct URL per class). This will of course depend on the version of java you are using.
You can also use the javadoc tool from within java to generate the desired documentation from java source files (which can be downloaded from the web). The source code of the tool could also help you out. See http://java.sun.com/j2se/javadoc/faq/#developingwithjavadoc
Lastly, if you need information based on runtime types in your program, you might want to check reflection capabilities.
First you need to know How to print imported java libraries?. Then download java API documentation here. Once you find out imported libraries, open an inputStream in order to read appropriate HTML file.
Beware! This technic will only work when importing from jdk.
I'm interested in dealing with archive contents in a similar way to dealing with Images through the awt.imageio api: Just get them as a file and see if you know how to decode them.
Obviously, there's the jar apis but I believe they only work with zip formats.
End use is Clojure code.
I think that some of the types you can handle through Apache Compress library. I think, that you can also make a close look to Apache Tika library, that extracts text and metadata from different file types, and as I remember, that they want to extend Apache Compress with more archive types (look onto patches in the JIRA)