Java CUP resources, is it still used? [closed] - java

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I have recently been tasked to working on code that uses Java CUP. Does anybody still use it? I've found a couple small resources on it, but it looks like there isn't much documentation on the main site, Java Cup Website. If there are any mailing-lists or users out there I would like to know. BTW, I can't use the new engine that is being maintained by the people in Munich, I got to stick with version 0.1.

We use the newer one on the Eclipse XPath2 engine (disturbingly called PsychoPath).
CUP gets the job done, but we use the newer one.
Being a small piece of software, it's easier to understand, which makes up for the scarceness of resources.

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Java framework for desktop application development [closed]

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Due to some constraints in the project I'm working on, I need to develop a desktop application using Java. Now, I face the decision of which framework should I use. Is there any outstanding one? I've searched in different questions already done in this forum, but most of them are from 2014 or earlier.
You can try JavaFx. You can also find a lot of tutorials on JavaFx in google.
https://docs.oracle.com/javafx/2/overview/jfxpub-overview.htm
As #StephaneM told this is off topic. Anyways you should use javaFX. Which is a library that has graphics and media controlling capabilities. Your next question would be what kind of IDE you should use. As I have seen both Eclipse and Intellij Idea have the drag and drop UI building interfaces. So you can only focus on the functionality building. Welcome to Stackoverflow and please read what #StephaneM mentioned.

Java libraries in machine learning [closed]

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I'm doing a big machine learning project in Java.
I tried some libraries but they were uncomfortable. Not many algorithms, few examples, unclear function parameters.
So, I wanted to ask if anyone knew a convenient library in Java for machine learning. (In terms of: easy to import, easy to use, lots of samples, etc.)
In addition, I have already read the csv file to a matrix. So if the library uses it, it will be better. Thank you.
Here are a few links
ApacheSAMOA: https://samoa.incubator.apache.org/
Weka: http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/ml/weka/
Rapid Miner: https://rapidminer.com/

Looking for a Cppcheck-like tool for Java development [closed]

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I'm a software tester and developer. My company is starting a partnership with another development team and we need a new tool for static analysis.
The new team's previous code is written in Java, so we need a static analysis tool with similar features to Cppcheck. We have been trying Macker, PMD and JDepend but none of these are like Cppcheck.
Also, we are trying to get a trial license of Coverity, which it seems like we want, but at the moment I couldn't test it yet.
So, does anyone know of a tool like the one I'm looking for? Thanks!
Have a look at SonarQube. This tool provides a broad analysis of your Java code. Examples can be found here.

Python-like doctesting in Java? [closed]

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One of my favorite features in Python (I know it's not really a feature of python) is doc-testing. For me it really augments standard documentation and helps to keep it up to data. Looking for something similar in Java, I've found JDocTest - http://cscott.net/Projects/JDoctest/ - last updated two years ago, and doctestj http://code.google.com/p/doctestj/ which haven't been updated since 2007.
Obviously, Java is not interpreter based like Python, but maybe there's some up to date library that enables doctest like capability in java?
I know it's long time ago but I just found your post here while searching for something different.
In my company we built a java doctest library because we also like the idea of the python doctests. We're using it in one of our bigger projects to test and generate documentation with it.
You can find it here at Github

Tool for generating control flow in Java [closed]

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I need a tool for generating control flow in java, but not a visual draw, something that I can work with like with path conditions or so.
Anyone ?
To future record, what I´ve found that best suits to my needs is Soot.
http://www.sable.mcgill.ca/soot/
The ASM library can do that, at the JVM-bytecode level. See Method Analysis and Control flow analyses in http://download.forge.objectweb.org/asm/asm4-guide.pdf (page 121).
Atlas is an Eclipse plugin that enables program analysis. It has a querable graph database that includes the control flow graph (as well as data flow and other relationships).
Maybe this is what you were looking for http://www.jboss.org/jbpm

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