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The Latest Java Topics

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Code Play #1: WebSockets With Vert.x and Angular
In the first article in the Code Play Series, we take a look at using websockets to create a real time, multiuser canvas.
July 20, 2020
by Dale Waterworth
· 6,833 Views · 1 Like
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Dynamically Evaluate Dataweave Scripts
This article demonstrates how to use Dynamic Evaluate Component in Mule 4 to execute dataweave scripts dynamically.
Updated July 20, 2020
by Vikalp Bhalia
· 14,255 Views · 3 Likes
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Why Builder Is Often an Antipattern and How to Replace it With Fluent Builder
Safe Alternative To Traditional Builder
July 17, 2020
by Sergiy Yevtushenko
· 18,037 Views · 19 Likes
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Managed Scheduled Executor Service vs EJB Timer
Debating between Managed Scheduled Executor Service and EJB Timer to implement scheduled tasks in your application? Check out this post for some tips.
July 17, 2020
by Ralph Soika
· 9,677 Views · 1 Like
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Java High Availability With WildFly on Kubernetes
if you need session replication, Wildfly instances need to be clustered. To solve this, you can use the Kubernetes discovery protocol for JGroups: KUBE_PING.
July 17, 2020
by Mauricio Magnani
· 11,005 Views · 4 Likes
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How to Create a Development Environment on Alpine Linux
Step-by-step guidance for setting up an Alpine Linux workstation for C++ and Java development, with some of my favorite tips and resources.
July 16, 2020
by Tal Weiss
· 27,705 Views · 6 Likes
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Java-Friendly Kotlin: Default Arguments
Kotlin functions and constructors can define default arguments, allowing calls to them to skip any argument that has a default value.
July 13, 2020
by Dan Newton
· 12,884 Views · 1 Like
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Top 10 Advanced Java and Spring Boot Courses for Full-Stack Java Developers
These are best online courses to learn Spring Boot, Advanced Java, Docker, React, Microservices, DEvops, and Angular to become full stack Java developer.
July 9, 2020
by Javin Paul
· 53,238 Views · 8 Likes
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Running Streaming ETL Pipelines with Apache Flink on Zeppelin Notebooks
A step-by-step tutorial for running Streaming ETL with Flink on Zeppelin. Let's dive deeper into the Flink interpreter in Zeppelin Notebooks.
July 9, 2020
by Jeff Zhang
· 6,877 Views · 7 Likes
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Jackson, JSON and the Proper Handling of Unknown Fields in APIs
How to proper deserialize json to java objects without facing UnrecognizedPropertyException when getting unkown fields or properties when consuming rest API.
July 9, 2020
by Gilvan Filho
· 27,084 Views · 6 Likes
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Getting Started With Maven For Selenium Testing
Having trouble getting started with Maven? See how to do just that in this end-to-end tutorial on Selenium testing for Java.
July 9, 2020
by Rahul Rana
· 16,220 Views · 2 Likes
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Running a Java App With MySQL in Any Docker Environment
In this article, take a look at using Docker network to take advantage of container isolation features.
July 8, 2020
by Alok Ranjan Meher
· 13,694 Views · 1 Like
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4 Tips for Improving Code Readability
We only get seconds to attract a reader's attention, and readable code snippets can make the difference. Discover 4 tips for improving readability of your code snippets.
July 7, 2020
by Justin Albano DZone Core CORE
· 18,971 Views · 5 Likes
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Detecting and Resolving Database Connection Leaks with Java Applications
Take a look at this tutorial that demonstrates how you can find and remove connection leaks between your application and database in Java apps.
July 7, 2020
by Chandra Shekhar Pandey
· 44,865 Views · 7 Likes
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How to Check if A List Contains a Value in Clojure
This article goes over four different methods for determining whether a list has a specific value using Clojure.
July 6, 2020
by Yuri Mednikov
· 13,621 Views · 1 Like
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Understanding Java Agents
A powerful tool you might have missed.
July 6, 2020
by Sathiyakugan Balakrishan
· 41,974 Views · 53 Likes
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Tutorial: Generating Java Files with Spring and Mustache
If you need to generate complex model from a large source data, you should try this
July 6, 2020
by Farith Sanmiguel
· 9,185 Views · 4 Likes
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Java 8 Parallel Processing With Completable Future
Check out this full-length tutorial on how to take advantage of parallel processing in Java with futures and allOf, join, etc. methods.
July 6, 2020
by Naveen Yalla
· 52,388 Views · 2 Likes
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SVG-Path Animation in React Native
Program Statement: Designing mesmerizing, interactive timeline for the user’s weight loss journey. For the past few months, we are working on a health app that helps users in their weight loss journey. Here we call it more of a Wellness Journey. This app keeps track of your weight, your inches, water intake, and of course your calories. We are creating a platform that acts as a personal assistant in their journey. Lately, our users have been asking us for a feature in the app where they can view their entire journey i.e what was their weight when they started, and how things progressed along the weeks, their major achievements (things like the 1st pound lost, after a month and so on….). So we decided to give it a go. Read along to see what we came up with. Solution: After brainstorming with UX designer, UI designer, and fellow developers, and discussing multiple approaches from a simple listing to complex timelines we finally settled on the one which had maximum opportunity for micro-interactions, animation, and user engagement. The idea was to show the weight loss journey to a user, quite symbolic of the journey on the road which can have milestones in between based on the achievements the user has attained. A path that will be laid out in front of the user and then will be filled accordingly to the point where the user has reached a particular point in the duration of the program. Below is the final implementation of the feature in our app. I am only going to cover the animating path in this blog and other animation and interaction in the next one. Step 1 Drawing leader line Leader Line is the centerline (dotted line in the above video) which is equidistant from the inner and outer contour line. This is the simplest part of this animation. We have to draw a series of connected horizontal lines and semicircles. The above illustration explains how we draw in SVG. You can read more about SVG paths here. The negative sign in horizontal lines means we want our lines drawn from right to left. Arcs in SVG require extra attention. Arcs accept parameters as 'RX', 'ry', 'x-axis rotation', 'large arc flag', 'sweep flag', 'finalX', 'finalY'. As we are drawing a semicircle, we don’t need an 'x-axis rotation flag' and 'large arc flag'. 'Sweep flag' determines which side we want to draw. 1 means the positive side and 0 mean the negative side. To know more about SVG arc check this link. Java x 27 1 export function getPath(month, line) { 2 let fullPath = 'M90 100'; 3 const forwardLine = 'l${line.width} 0'; 4 const backwardLine = 'l${-line.width} 0'; 5 const leftCurve = 'a${line.radius} ${line.radius} 0 0 0 0 ${line.radius * 2}'; 6 const rightCurve = 'a${line.radius} ${line.radius} 0 0 1 0 ${ 7 line.radius * 2 8 }'; 9 10 for (let i = 0; i < month; ++i) { 11 if (i % 2 == 0) { 12 fullPath += '${forwardLine} ${rightCurve}'; 13 } else { 14 fullPath += '${backwardLine} ${leftCurve}'; 15 } 16 } 17 18 return fullPath; 19 } 20 . 21 . App.js 22 . 23 this.granularity = 5;this.leaderLineProperty = { 24 lineWidth: width - 180, 25 radius: 50, 26 }; 27 this.path = PathHelper.getPath(this.month, PathHelper.LeaderPathProperty); From the above line of code, we have our leader line ready. Step 2 For this step, I want you to stop and have a look at the animation video above. Our ultimate goal is to animate the path. For smooth animation, we have to break down into smaller segments and then attach them piece by piece. To divide the leader line into smaller chunks we will use the SVG-path-properties library. Java xxxxxxxxxx 1 40 1 // path is our leader line svg, totalDays is the no of segments we have divided our lines into radius is distance between leader line and outer, inner line 2 getPathProperty(path, totalDays, radius) { 3 const pathProperty = new svgPathProperties(path); 4 const pathSegmentArray = []; 5 6 let { 7 x: 8 previousX, y:previousY 9 } = pathProperty.getPropertiesAtLength(0); 10 11 for (let i = 1; i <= totalDays; ++i) { 12 const leaderSegment = (i / totalDays) * 13 pathProperty.getTotalLength(); 14 15 const{ x:lx, y:ly 16 } =pathProperty.getPropertiesAtLength(leaderSegment); 17 18 const diffX = lx - previousX; 19 const diffY = ly - previousY; 20 previousX = lx; 21 previousY = ly; 22 23 const angleForOuterContourLine = Math.atan2(diffY, diffX); 24 const angleForInnerContourLine = Math.PI - 25 angleForOuterContourLine; 26 27 const ox = lx + radius * Math.sin(angleForOuterContourLine); 28 const oy = ly - radius * Math.cos(angleForOuterContourLine); 29 const ix = lx - radius * Math.sin(angleForInnerContourLine); 30 const iy = ly - radius * Math.cos(angleForInnerContourLine); 31 32 const point = { 33 outer: {x: ox, y:oy }, 34 leader:{x: lx, y:ly }, 35 inner: {x: ix, y:iy }, 36 }; pathSegmentArray.push(point); 37 } 38 39 return pathSegmentArray; 40 } Suppose the height of the road is 20pt. Then to make a close path from a single line we need an outer and inner line having 10 points distance from the leader line each. In the above lines of codes, we get points for the leader line directly. Now we have to calculate the same for the inner and outer line. Another point of significance that I would like to mention here is that we just can’t subtract or add 10 to the leader lines to get our outer and the inner path without considering direction. Just like vectors, we will also use direction here and for this, we will use our old friend ‘Trigonometry’. We will get two points on the leader line and find the angle between the line formed by the last two points and the x-axis. If you have two points, (x0, y0) and (x1, y1), then the angle of the line joining them (relative to the X-axis) is given by: theta = atan2((y1 – y0), (x1 – x0)) We know tanθ = Perpendicular / Base = (Difference in height)/(Difference in width). We can calculate θ by using the formula for the tan inverse. After calculating angle we calculate x and y position as: Δx = radius * sin(θ) Δy = radius * cos(θ) Step 3 Now since we have coordinates for the inner and outer path, we need to translate them into a closed SVG path to form our road. Here D3 library comes to our rescue. We use the d3-shapes’ “area” method to get our path. Java xxxxxxxxxx 1 45 1 // progress is a no. between 0 to totalDays and 'pathSegment' is an object containing our inner and outer path segmentsexport const calculateProgressArea = (progress, pathSegment) => { 2 const forwardArray = []; 3 const backwardArray = []; 4 5 let point = pathSegment[0]; 6 forwardArray.push(point.outer); 7 backwardArray.push(point.inner); 8 9 for (let i = 1; i < progress; ++i) { 10 point = pathSegment[i]; 11 forwardArray.push(point.outer); 12 backwardArray.push(point.inner); 13 } 14 15 backwardArray.reverse(); 16 const allPoint = [...forwardArray, ...backwardArray, forwardArray[0]]; 17 18 const area = d3 19 .area() 20 .x1((x) => { 21 return x.x; 22 }) 23 .y1((y) => { 24 return y.y; 25 }) 26 .y0(allPoint[0].y) 27 .x0(allPoint[0].x); 28 29 return area(allPoint); 30 };. 31 . In App.js 32 .this.area = PathHelper.calculateProgressArea( 33 this.totalDays, 34 this.pathSegmentArray, 35 );. 36 . In render function 37 . 38 45 Please note that I am appending the Inner path point at the end of the Outer path point. Step 4 Till now we have only laid down the solid block of the path. Now we have to animate the path as well. As I said earlier, for animating the path we will render pieces after pieces. By pieces, I meant we will take a small subset from the outer and inner path segment array and convert it into a path and render it. Java xxxxxxxxxx 1 15 1 addAnimationListener = () => { 2 this.state.animation.addListener(({value}) => { 3 const progress = value * this.totalDays; 4 const path = PathHelper.calculateProgressArea( 5 progress, 6 this.pathSegmentArray, 7 ); 8 9 if (this.progressPath) { 10 this.progressPath.setNativeProps({ 11 d: path, 12 }); 13 } 14 }); 15 }; Final output:-
Updated July 6, 2020
by Nitish Prasad
· 9,886 Views · 1 Like
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Getting Started With Apache Camel Part 1
Looking to get up and running with Apache Camel? Have a look how to start a basic Camel project and what tools are available.
July 2, 2020
by Krzysztof Kaczmarczyk
· 11,122 Views · 3 Likes
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