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Mastering the Couchbase N1QL Shell: Connection Management and Security
Couchbase's cbq shell lets you write and run N1QL queries interactively. The shell also lets you securely interact with mixed nodes, among other handy tricks.
December 9, 2016
by Isha Kandaswamy
· 8,671 Views · 5 Likes
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Declarative Programming With Speedment 3.0
Learn more on the fundamentals of declarative programming in this in-depth article on the concept and see how Speedment implements declarative programming in practice.
December 9, 2016
by Dan Lawesson
· 11,185 Views · 8 Likes
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ConcurrentHashMap isn't always enough
When Java developers come to a task of writing a a new class which should have a Map datastructure field, accessed simultaneously by several threads, they usually try to solve the synchronization issues invloved in such a scenario by simply making the map an instance of ConcurrentHashMap . public class Foo { private Map theMap = new ConcurrentHashMap<>(); // the rest of the class goes here... } In many cases it works fine just because the contract of ConcurrentHashMap takes care of the potential synchronization issues related to reading/writing to the map. But there are cases where it's not enough, and a developer gets race conditions which are hard to predict, and even harder to find/debug and fix. Let's have a look, at the next example: public class Foo { private Map theMap = new ConcurrentHashMap<>(); public Object getOrCreate(String key) { Object value = theMap.get(key); if (value == null) { value = new Object(); theMap.put(key, value); } return value; } } Here we have a "simple" getter ( getOrCreate(String key) ), which gets a key and returns the value assosiated with the given key in theMap . If there is no mapping for the key, the method creates a new value, inserts it into theMap and returns it. So far so good. But what happens when 2 (or more) threads call the getter with the same key when there is no mapping for the key in theMap? In such a case we might receive a race condition: Suppose thread t1 enters the function and comes to line 7. Its value is null . At this point thread t2 enters the function and also comes to line 7. Its value is also obviously null . Therefore from this point the two threads will enter the if statement and execute lines 8 and 9, thus creating two different new Objects. Upon returning from the getter each thread will get a different Object instance, violating programmer's wrong assumption that by using ConcurrentHashMap "everything is synchronized" and therefore two different threads should get the same value for the same key. To solve this issue we can synchronize the entire method, thus making it atomic: public class Foo { private Map theMap = new ConcurrentHashMap<>(); public synchronized Object getOrCreate(String key) { Object value = theMap.get(key); if (value == null) { value = new Object(); theMap.put(key, value); } return value; } } But this is a bit ugly, and uses Foo instace's monitor, which may affect performance if there are other methods in this class which are synchronized. Also a common rule of thumb is to try to eliminate using synchronized methods as much as possible. A much better approach should be using Java 8 Map's computeIfAbsent(K key, Function mappingFunction), which, in ConcurrentHashMap's implementation runs atomically: public class Foo { private Map theMap = new ConcurrentHashMap<>(); public Object getOrCreate(String key) { return theMap.computeIfAbsent(key, k -> new Object()); } } The atomicity of computeIfAbsent(..) assures that only one new Object will be created and put into theMap, and it'll be the exact same instance of Object that will be returned to all threads calling the getOrCreate function. Here, not only the code is correct, it's also cleaner and much shorter. The point of this example was to introduce a common pitfall of blindly relying on ConcurrentHashMap as a majical synchronzed datastructure which is threadsafe and therefore should solve all our concurrency issues regarding multiple threads working on a shared Map. ConcurrentHashMap is, indeed, threadsafe. But it only means that all read/write operations on such map are internally synchronized. And sometimes it's just not enough for our concurrent environment needs, and we have to use some special treatment which will guarantee atomic execution. A good practice will be to use one of the atomic methods implemented by ConcurrentHashMap, i.e: computeIfAbsent(..), putIfAbsent(..), etc.
December 8, 2016
by Dima Leah
· 48,782 Views · 12 Likes
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Using Web Components in Plain Java
See how you can use Vaadin, as well as a few other tools, to incorporate web components in your Java projects.
December 8, 2016
by Alejandro Duarte DZone Core CORE
· 11,632 Views · 9 Likes
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Creating Maps With Named Lambdas
Learn how you can create a Java Map like this: map = mapOf(one -> 1, two -> 2) using a trick to get the lambda parameter name.
December 7, 2016
by Per-Åke Minborg
· 23,515 Views · 49 Likes
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Apache Ignite With JPA: A Missing Element
Learn how to persist your entities with Apache Ignite and JPA. This tutorial will guide you through the setup of execution of that handy ability.
December 7, 2016
by Shamim Bhuiyan
· 15,255 Views · 14 Likes
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IntelliJ IDEA Inspection Settings for Java 8 Refactoring
Follow along as Trisha Gee explains how you can use IntelliJ IDEA to refactor your code for use in Java 8, covering loops, streams, and more.
December 6, 2016
by Trisha Gee
· 22,919 Views · 6 Likes
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Java Holiday Calendar 2016 (Day 5): CRUD Operations
See how, with a handy open-source tool, you can alter your database entities, with standard CRUD operations, in Java.
December 5, 2016
by Per-Åke Minborg
· 9,256 Views · 6 Likes
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How to Write R Script Explained with an Awesome Example
If you have a long analysis to perform in R, and you want to be able to recreate it later, a good idea is to type it into a script.
December 5, 2016
by Srini Pesala
· 127,232 Views · 2 Likes
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A Review of Java Template Engines
In this article, Miro Kopecky provides a thorough review of Java template engines Apache Velocity, Apache FreeMarker, Thymeleaf, and Pebble.
December 2, 2016
by Miro Wengner
· 86,987 Views · 12 Likes
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More Than LIKE: Efficient JSON Searching With N1QL
See how the latest iteration of Couchbase allows you to split and search JSON data with tokens.
November 30, 2016
by Keshav Murthy DZone Core CORE
· 12,458 Views · 6 Likes
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When to Use (and Not to Use) MongoDB
If you've been considering a jump to NoSQL, here's an overview of MongoDB and how it can help you and your work.
November 30, 2016
by Prashanth Jayaram
· 190,928 Views · 23 Likes
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7 Steps to Preparing for Java 8 Certification
If you're considering getting your Java skills certified, take a look at what you can do to give yourself the best shot possible.
November 30, 2016
by Serdar Mustaoglu
· 147,541 Views · 35 Likes
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Camel and Kura: Providing Telemetry Data as OPC UA
If you're using an industrial M2M protocol, consider the combined power of Camel and Kura to get your telemetry data squared away as OPC UA.
November 29, 2016
by Jens Reimann
· 6,050 Views · 3 Likes
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REST With Java 8
See how you can build your own REST services with Java, Maven, and the Spark Java framework.
Updated November 27, 2016
by Unni Mana
· 51,926 Views · 53 Likes
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Interactive Console Applications in Java
Learn how to make your applications pay more attention to what users are telling them.
November 27, 2016
by Serban Iordache
· 163,412 Views · 45 Likes
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PyGitHub Quickstart Examples
Helpful examples can make up for a lack of documentation. In this article, Chase Seibert shares some of his example code.
November 24, 2016
by Chase Seibert
· 10,157 Views · 1 Like
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Make Your Own Light Switch With Java and a Raspberry Pi
Looking for an IoT project? Look no further than developing your own switch with the helping hand of a library, some Java, and a Raspberry Pi.
November 23, 2016
by Hemambara Vamsi Kotari
· 19,158 Views · 9 Likes
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Control a CNC Machine Using Java or Groovy
Feel like doing your own woodworking, or other, similar work? Take a look at how you can give commands to your own computer numeric control machine.
November 22, 2016
by Igor Suhorukov
· 15,285 Views · 16 Likes
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Create Facebook Messenger Bot With Structured Messages in PHP
In this article, learn how to create a simple Facebook chatbot that can carry out effective conversation with your users.
November 22, 2016
by shahroze nawaz
· 30,909 Views · 10 Likes
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