1600679940
Java StringBuilder class is an inbuilt class that is used to create a modifiable, i.e., mutable string (unlike the String class which provides immutable strings). The StringBuilder class is used to represent the collection/sequence of characters. The StringBuilder class is similar to the StringBuffer class, except that the StringBuilder class is non-synchronized and StringBuffer is synchronized. When there is only a single thread (i.e., the program is not multi-threaded), the StringBuilder class has an advantage over the StringBuffer class being faster than it.
The StringBuilder class is available since JDK 1.5. It can be imported from the java.lang package. Java StringBuilder class is also used to create the mutable (modifiable) string object.
StringBuilder class provides the API compatible with StringBuffer, but with no guarantee of synchronization. StringBuilder class is designed for use as a drop-in replacement for StringBuffer in places where the single thread was using the string buffer.
Where possible, it is recommended that this class be used in preference to StringBuffer as it will be faster under the most implementations.
Instances of StringBuilder are not safe for use by the multiple threads. If such synchronization is required, then it is recommended that StringBuffer be used.
#java #stringbuilder #java stringbuilder
1677668905
Mocking library for TypeScript inspired by http://mockito.org/
mock
) (also abstract classes) #examplespy
) #examplewhen
) via:verify
)reset
, resetCalls
) #example, #examplecapture
) #example'Expected "convertNumberToString(strictEqual(3))" to be called 2 time(s). But has been called 1 time(s).'
)npm install ts-mockito --save-dev
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance from mock
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Using instance in source code
foo.getBar(3);
foo.getBar(5);
// Explicit, readable verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).called();
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anything())).called();
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// stub method before execution
when(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('three');
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// prints three
console.log(foo.getBar(3));
// prints null, because "getBar(999)" was not stubbed
console.log(foo.getBar(999));
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// stub getter before execution
when(mockedFoo.sampleGetter).thenReturn('three');
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// prints three
console.log(foo.sampleGetter);
Syntax is the same as with getter values.
Please note, that stubbing properties that don't have getters only works if Proxy object is available (ES6).
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
foo.getBar(2);
foo.getBar(2);
foo.getBar(3);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).once(); // was called with arg === 1 only once
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).twice(); // was called with arg === 2 exactly two times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(between(2, 3))).thrice(); // was called with arg between 2-3 exactly three times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber()).times(4); // was called with any number arg exactly four times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).atLeast(2); // was called with arg === 2 min two times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anything())).atMost(4); // was called with any argument max four times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(4)).never(); // was never called with arg === 4
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let mockedBar:Bar = mock(Bar);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
let bar:Bar = instance(mockedBar);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
bar.getFoo(2);
// Call order verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).calledBefore(mockedBar.getFoo(2)); // foo.getBar(1) has been called before bar.getFoo(2)
verify(mockedBar.getFoo(2)).calledAfter(mockedFoo.getBar(1)); // bar.getFoo(2) has been called before foo.getBar(1)
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).calledBefore(mockedBar.getFoo(999999)); // throws error (mockedBar.getFoo(999999) has never been called)
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(10)).thenThrow(new Error('fatal error'));
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
try {
foo.getBar(10);
} catch (error:Error) {
console.log(error.message); // 'fatal error'
}
You can also stub method with your own implementation
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
when(mockedFoo.sumTwoNumbers(anyNumber(), anyNumber())).thenCall((arg1:number, arg2:number) => {
return arg1 * arg2;
});
// prints '50' because we've changed sum method implementation to multiply!
console.log(foo.sumTwoNumbers(5, 10));
You can also stub method to resolve / reject promise
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.fetchData("a")).thenResolve({id: "a", value: "Hello world"});
when(mockedFoo.fetchData("b")).thenReject(new Error("b does not exist"));
You can reset just mock call counter
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
foo.getBar(1);
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).twice(); // getBar with arg "1" has been called twice
// Reset mock
resetCalls(mockedFoo);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).never(); // has never been called after reset
You can also reset calls of multiple mocks at once resetCalls(firstMock, secondMock, thirdMock)
Or reset mock call counter with all stubs
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).thenReturn("one").
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // "one" - as defined in stub
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // "one" - as defined in stub
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).twice(); // getBar with arg "1" has been called twice
// Reset mock
reset(mockedFoo);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).never(); // has never been called after reset
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // null - previously added stub has been removed
You can also reset multiple mocks at once reset(firstMock, secondMock, thirdMock)
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Call method
foo.sumTwoNumbers(1, 2);
// Check first arg captor values
const [firstArg, secondArg] = capture(mockedFoo.sumTwoNumbers).last();
console.log(firstArg); // prints 1
console.log(secondArg); // prints 2
You can also get other calls using first()
, second()
, byCallIndex(3)
and more...
You can set multiple returning values for same matching values
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one').thenReturn('two').thenReturn('three');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three - last defined behavior will be repeated infinitely
Another example with specific values
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).thenReturn('one').thenReturn('another one');
when(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).thenReturn('two');
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // another one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // another one - this is last defined behavior for arg '1' so it will be repeated
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two - this is last defined behavior for arg '2' so it will be repeated
Short notation:
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// You can specify return values as multiple thenReturn args
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one', 'two', 'three');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three - last defined behavior will be repeated infinity
Possible errors:
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// When multiple matchers, matches same result:
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one');
when(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('one');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
foo.getBar(3); // MultipleMatchersMatchSameStubError will be thrown, two matchers match same method call
You can mock interfaces too, just instead of passing type to mock
function, set mock
function generic type Mocking interfaces requires Proxy
implementation
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock<FooInterface>(); // instead of mock(FooInterface)
const foo: SampleGeneric<FooInterface> = instance(mockedFoo);
You can mock abstract classes
const mockedFoo: SampleAbstractClass = mock(SampleAbstractClass);
const foo: SampleAbstractClass = instance(mockedFoo);
You can also mock generic classes, but note that generic type is just needed by mock type definition
const mockedFoo: SampleGeneric<SampleInterface> = mock(SampleGeneric);
const foo: SampleGeneric<SampleInterface> = instance(mockedFoo);
You can partially mock an existing instance:
const foo: Foo = new Foo();
const spiedFoo = spy(foo);
when(spiedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('one');
console.log(foo.getBar(3)); // 'one'
console.log(foo.getBaz()); // call to a real method
You can spy on plain objects too:
const foo = { bar: () => 42 };
const spiedFoo = spy(foo);
foo.bar();
console.log(capture(spiedFoo.bar).last()); // [42]
Author: NagRock
Source Code: https://github.com/NagRock/ts-mockito
License: MIT license
1600135200
OpenJDk or Open Java Development Kit is a free, open-source framework of the Java Platform, Standard Edition (or Java SE). It contains the virtual machine, the Java Class Library, and the Java compiler. The difference between the Oracle OpenJDK and Oracle JDK is that OpenJDK is a source code reference point for the open-source model. Simultaneously, the Oracle JDK is a continuation or advanced model of the OpenJDK, which is not open source and requires a license to use.
In this article, we will be installing OpenJDK on Centos 8.
#tutorials #alternatives #centos #centos 8 #configuration #dnf #frameworks #java #java development kit #java ee #java environment variables #java framework #java jdk #java jre #java platform #java sdk #java se #jdk #jre #open java development kit #open source #openjdk #openjdk 11 #openjdk 8 #openjdk runtime environment
1662107520
Superdom
You have dom
. It has all the DOM virtually within it. Use that power:
// Fetch all the page links
let links = dom.a.href;
// Links open in a new tab
dom.a.target = '_blank';
Only for modern browsers
Simply use the CDN via unpkg.com:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/superdom@1"></script>
Or use npm or bower:
npm|bower install superdom --save
It always returns an array with the matched elements. Get all the elements that match the selector:
// Simple element selector into an array
let allLinks = dom.a;
// Loop straight on the selection
dom.a.forEach(link => { ... });
// Combined selector
let importantLinks = dom['a.important'];
There are also some predetermined elements, such as id
, class
and attr
:
// Select HTML Elements by id:
let main = dom.id.main;
// by class:
let buttons = dom.class.button;
// or by attribute:
let targeted = dom.attr.target;
let targeted = dom.attr['target="_blank"'];
Use it as a function or a tagged template literal to generate DOM fragments:
// Not a typo; tagged template literals
let link = dom`<a href="https://google.com/">Google</a>`;
// It is the same as
let link = dom('<a href="https://google.com/">Google</a>');
Delete a piece of the DOM
// Delete all of the elements with the class .google
delete dom.class.google; // Is this an ad-block rule?
You can easily manipulate attributes right from the dom
node. There are some aliases that share the syntax of the attributes such as html
and text
(aliases for innerHTML
and textContent
). There are others that travel through the dom such as parent
(alias for parentNode) and children
. Finally, class
behaves differently as explained below.
The fetching will always return an array with the element for each of the matched nodes (or undefined if not there):
// Retrieve all the urls from the page
let urls = dom.a.href; // #attr-list
// ['https://google.com', 'https://facebook.com/', ...]
// Get an array of the h2 contents (alias of innerHTML)
let h2s = dom.h2.html; // #attr-alias
// ['Level 2 header', 'Another level 2 header', ...]
// Get whether any of the attributes has the value "_blank"
let hasBlank = dom.class.cta.target._blank; // #attr-value
// true/false
You also use these:
innerHTML
): retrieve a list of the htmlstextContent
): retrieve a list of the htmlsparentNode
): travel up one level// Set target="_blank" to all links
dom.a.target = '_blank'; // #attr-set
dom.class.tableofcontents.html = `
<ul class="tableofcontents">
${dom.h2.map(h2 => `
<li>
<a href="#${h2.id}">
${h2.innerHTML}
</a>
</li>
`).join('')}
</ul>
`;
To delete an attribute use the delete
keyword:
// Remove all urls from the page
delete dom.a.href;
// Remove all ids
delete dom.a.id;
It provides an easy way to manipulate the classes.
To retrieve whether a particular class is present or not:
// Get an array with true/false for a single class
let isTest = dom.a.class.test; // #class-one
For a general method to retrieve all classes you can do:
// Get a list of the classes of each matched element
let arrays = dom.a.class; // #class-arrays
// [['important'], ['button', 'cta'], ...]
// If you want a plain list with all of the classes:
let flatten = dom.a.class._flat; // #class-flat
// ['important', 'button', 'cta', ...]
// And if you just want an string with space-separated classes:
let text = dom.a.class._text; // #class-text
// 'important button cta ...'
// Add the class 'test' (different ways)
dom.a.class.test = true; // #class-make-true
dom.a.class = 'test'; // #class-push
// Remove the class 'test'
dom.a.class.test = false; // #class-make-false
Did we say it returns a simple array?
dom.a.forEach(link => link.innerHTML = 'I am a link');
But what an interesting array it is; indeed we are also proxy'ing it so you can manipulate its sub-elements straight from the selector:
// Replace all of the link's html with 'I am a link'
dom.a.html = 'I am a link';
Of course we might want to manipulate them dynamically depending on the current value. Just pass it a function:
// Append ' ^_^' to all of the links in the page
dom.a.html = html => html + ' ^_^';
// Same as this:
dom.a.forEach(link => link.innerHTML = link.innerHTML + ' ^_^');
Note: this won't work
dom.a.html += ' ^_^';
for more than 1 match (for reasons)
Or get into genetics to manipulate the attributes:
dom.a.attr.target = '_blank';
// Only to external sites:
let isOwnPage = el => /^https?\:\/\/mypage\.com/.test(el.getAttribute('href'));
dom.a.attr.target = (prev, i, element) => isOwnPage(element) ? '' : '_blank';
You can also handle and trigger events:
// Handle click events for all <a>
dom.a.on.click = e => ...;
// Trigger click event for all <a>
dom.a.trigger.click;
We are using Jest as a Grunt task for testing. Install Jest and run in the terminal:
grunt watch
Author: franciscop
Source Code: https://github.com/franciscop/superdom
License: MIT license
1600679940
Java StringBuilder class is an inbuilt class that is used to create a modifiable, i.e., mutable string (unlike the String class which provides immutable strings). The StringBuilder class is used to represent the collection/sequence of characters. The StringBuilder class is similar to the StringBuffer class, except that the StringBuilder class is non-synchronized and StringBuffer is synchronized. When there is only a single thread (i.e., the program is not multi-threaded), the StringBuilder class has an advantage over the StringBuffer class being faster than it.
The StringBuilder class is available since JDK 1.5. It can be imported from the java.lang package. Java StringBuilder class is also used to create the mutable (modifiable) string object.
StringBuilder class provides the API compatible with StringBuffer, but with no guarantee of synchronization. StringBuilder class is designed for use as a drop-in replacement for StringBuffer in places where the single thread was using the string buffer.
Where possible, it is recommended that this class be used in preference to StringBuffer as it will be faster under the most implementations.
Instances of StringBuilder are not safe for use by the multiple threads. If such synchronization is required, then it is recommended that StringBuffer be used.
#java #stringbuilder #java stringbuilder
1620458875
According to some surveys, such as JetBrains’s great survey, Java 8 is currently the most used version of Java, despite being a 2014 release.
What you are reading is one in a series of articles titled ‘Going beyond Java 8,’ inspired by the contents of my book, Java for Aliens. These articles will guide you step-by-step through the most important features introduced to the language, starting from version 9. The aim is to make you aware of how important it is to move forward from Java 8, explaining the enormous advantages that the latest versions of the language offer.
In this article, we will talk about the most important new feature introduced with Java 10. Officially called local variable type inference, this feature is better known as the **introduction of the word **var
. Despite the complicated name, it is actually quite a simple feature to use. However, some observations need to be made before we can see the impact that the introduction of the word var
has on other pre-existing characteristics.
#java #java 11 #java 10 #java 12 #var #java 14 #java 13 #java 15 #verbosity