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- What is the percent % operator in java? - Stack Overflow
What is the percent % operator in java? Asked 8 years, 1 month ago Modified 3 years, 11 months ago Viewed 63k times
- How do the post increment (i++) and pre increment (++i) operators work . . .
How do the post increment (i++) and pre increment (++i) operators work in Java? Asked 15 years, 3 months ago Modified 1 year, 1 month ago Viewed 445k times
- What is the Java ?: operator called and what does it do?
Not only in Java, this syntax is available within PHP, Objective-C too In the following link it gives the following explanation, which is quiet good to understand it: A ternary operator is some operation operating on 3 inputs It's a shortcut for an if-else statement, and is also known as a conditional operator In Perl PHP it works as:
- What does the ^ operator do in Java? - Stack Overflow
It is the Bitwise xor operator in java which results 1 for different value of bit (ie 1 ^ 0 = 1) and 0 for same value of bit (ie 0 ^ 0 = 0) when a number is written in binary form
- Proper usage of Java -D command-line parameters
When passing a -D parameter in Java, what is the proper way of writing the command-line and then accessing it from code? For example, I have tried writing something like this
- What are the -Xms and -Xmx parameters when starting JVM?
The flag Xmx specifies the maximum memory allocation pool for a Java Virtual Machine (JVM), while Xms specifies the initial memory allocation pool This means that your JVM will be started with Xms amount of memory and will be able to use a maximum of Xmx amount of memory For example, starting a JVM like below will start it with 256 MB of memory and will allow the process to use up to 2048 MB
- java - Setting active profile and config location from command line in . . .
I was running it from eclipse and not command line till now But I tried running from using "gradle bootRun -Dspring config location=C:\Config\ -Dspring profiles active=staging" and got the same result
- in java what does the @ symbol mean? - Stack Overflow
In Java Persistence API you use them to map a Java class with database tables For example @Table () Used to map the particular Java class to the date base table @Entity Represents that the class is an entity class Similarly you can use many annotations to map individual columns, generate ids, generate version, relationships etc
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