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I'm writting an editor program. Like any good editor, it should have opening, saving and all the similar functions that go with it (usually found under the "File" menu in editor programs). However, I'm not sure how to write the code to be both functional and well structured.
Since what I'm talking about is major part of so many programs, I'm sure that some kind of standardized way of writing such code exists.
Can you point me to somewhere where I could find informations about that? I'm sure there must be books that deal with this matter, I just don't know what keywords to google to get viable resutls...
Any help is appreciated!
EDIT:
What have I tried so far?
Various combinations of Filechoosers and dialogs with boolean and String markers, always failing in the end, either due to code becoming chaos or getting lost in it's structure and failing to unify my markers.
I could put in some effort and make a working code, but since this is such a widespread problem I'm sure it's been done before, and what is most important, it has been done far better than I could ever do it. It's not that I'm lazy, I just want it to be done as best as possible.
I'm also not asking for the best source or book, but a source or a book. So I'm not encouraging a disscusion by asking for the best suggestion, I just want any suggestion I can get.
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I have just learned JAVA and am wanting to play around with it. I keep seeing Eclipse repeated as the best IDE to write JAVA in. I have been working with it and it appears to be much to complicated for what I am wanting to do. I don't want multiple windows for multiple classes and functions. Basically learning how to use write JAVA in Eclipse seems like an entire different language than the JAVA I learned.
I am simply looking for something similar to notepad that assists you with your code writing (adds ending brackets, color coded).
Please Help!!!
The most simple is Notepad++ http://notepad-plus-plus.org/
hope it fits your needs, its extreme in its simplicity, but works.
(and its free)
Occupy a place for Sublime. Black background looks cooler.
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I am looking for an obfuscator for java. Found one, proguard. This is working only upto one level when i decompile using jad, all codes are visible. Only the method names and some variable names are getting renamed rest all are visible. Are there any better obfuscator which is impossible to get source out of it? Thanks
As long as you deal with software, all you can do is making retrieval of the source code harder. In Java you will almost always be able to get a quite readable source back from the class files. In applications that are compiled into machine code, you might get worse results, but someone who wants to get it, will still be able to retrieve the information. Even when you write software in C, compile it and burn it into a microcontroller, there might be some people eager enough to retrieve the binary program and decompile it.
Honestly, if you want to slow down successful decompilation (and that's all you can achieve), try to find the obfuscator that makes debugging of actively deployed applications least painful for you. Because, if you obfuscate, debugging and maintaining might be painfully slow as well.
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I can't find any documentation for Jagatoo, except for a single PDF in the doc folder. Is there any at all?
Would make it a lot easier to read about the structure, rather than investigating it all.
Read the source code.
Source code really is the best documentation in the absence of adequate documentation. I find that if I really want to wrap my head around a framework or library, the best thing to do is to dedicate an evening (or weekend, depending) to a proper deep dive of the source code. The added benefit is then that you know exactly where missing functionality needs to go if you want to implement it yourself, and better yet, contribute it back to the Open Source community.
PS I presumed you meant that the PDF on this page is the only one you could find.
You could potentially also look at how Xith3D makes use of JAGaToo.
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I want to convert Japanese kanjis to romaji (or kana) in Android.
The most popular library for this is Kakasi, it is not always right (can't be) but still very good.
PROBLEM: It is not in Java. I need a Java library.
Do you know any maintained Java open source library that does that?
A guy called Kenichi has posted a kakasi-java-0.4.0-src.tar.gz on his blog saying he saved the file but the original project does not exist anymore. Anyone knows more about this? Is the project still living somewhere else, or is this file my best starting point?
The project is dead but now it's living somewhere else:
https://github.com/nicolas-raoul/kakasi-java
Have you tried http://www.atilika.org it's by far the most complete solution I've found.
I searched Kakasi/Java but I could not find. The site must have been completely closed.
But for another way, this web service might help you:
http://www.kawa.net/works/ajax/romanize/japanese-e.html
それでは頑張ってください!
I have found another one: Mecab
It seems to have a Java version: http://code.google.com/p/mecab/source/browse/#svn%2Ftrunk%2Fmecab%2Fjava
UPDATE: Unfortunately Mecab-java is just a JNI binding, not 100% pure Java, which makes it more difficult to use on Android for instance.
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I'm a CS student, so obviously IDEs are a bit of an overkill for me. I mainly code with Vim (well technically MacVim) and compile and run using the terminal. In the past I usually debug by using print statements. However I feel that it's time I move on to more appropriate tools for my need. I have heard of and tried jdb but I would prefer a GUI one. Any recommendations guys?
Unless you're already extremely experienced with using another tool and love it to death, if you're doing Java, you should just use an IDE. You can go against the grain if you want, but I don't see the advantages for you. Eclipse and Netbeans are both free and excellent tools. It takes 2 minutes to create a new project thats ready to build/run with a single click. Syntax highlighting, refactoring, debugger, code completion are all things you will learn to love even if its a small program. If its complicated enough to need a debugger, its complicated enough to use an IDE.
I would like to suggest Eclipse for Java.