jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

You can't know from where the servlet was called unless the servlet can somehow determine that based on the URI and parameters (either request or session) it received.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

You NEVER do that.
You NEVER use Java code in JSP.
ALWAYS use JSTL or JSF instead.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

yes, NEVER use Java scriptlets in JSP code.
NEVER do database operations from JSP.
ALWAYS use PreparedStatement for database operations.
ALWAYS use parameterised queries for database operations.

So basically restart from scratch.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

and references are always passed by value (unlike pointers in C which can be passed by reference) and cannot be manipulated by something like pointer arithmetic.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

2 more pictures to help you along.
Sadly that's about everything I have on the aircraft that doesn't show the type designation for all to see :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

Yeah, I'm talking abt the limited access area of Daniweb.

I was referring to vmane's comment, not your original question :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

no, it's not a modified AMX.
I admit this one is extremely hard. Few people will ever have seen this aircraft (AFAIK it's only been shown on 2 or 3 airshows ever, and is not in operational use anywhere at the moment).

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

1) read the manual.
2) ditch Notbeans after deciding on reading the manual that it's no better than Eclipse.
3) buy IntelliJ and use the import wizard to import your entire Eclipse project.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

I thought you were posting about the limited access area of Daniweb...

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

It's indeed a P.166, congratulations.

#20 is a Bearcat
#31 is an Atlantique.

Another hard one. Another Italian one too. And another rarity, but this time for another reason (which I won't mention yet).

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

that customer service would have to be part of a contract as well.
If you start doing things like that for free without an SLA pretty soon you'll be working for them fulltime without payment and getting bombarded with "critical" "issues" night and day leaving you no time to do work that actually pays the bills.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

if it includes Visual C++ specifically it probably includes DirectX. It's the library of choice after all for game development with Visual Studio :)

DarkBasic and GameMaker both are kiddie programs.
Amateur stuff, but handy to guickly set up something to see those models you made in Maya and 3DS Max in action, and to get some of the basic paradigms into your head without bothering you with "complicated" (for the average kiddo) C++ syntax.
That's probably why it's used, as a stepping stone towards the real work to be done at a later stage (and maybe some scripting and tool making).

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

no, but the product's website should.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

apart from the SMS part (which is simply a matter of hooking up some libraries any service provider should be able to provide you with as part of a contract for their services) this is something that's probably been done by everyone who's ever written anything.

And if you substitute other communications technology, that's pretty much a certainty.

The SMS part is also far from unique.

So any search engine should be able to provide all the information you need.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

clue: it's Italian.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

that would be one resultset per statement, not per connection.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

no, find an Excel forum. It's an Excel question, not a Java question.

didn't we have this exact same conversation on the Sun forums earlier?

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

The source you posted is copyrighted and not for distribution.
If you got it from any other source than the author by buying the user guide you are using pirated software which is a criminal act.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

if you want to do an entire system of a style that usually takes larger teams of people a year or more, yah.

A small subset of such a system, with limited functionality, should be doable.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

To kill the suspense: the bonus question, Tail #46 is a Super Etendard. And like I said it says so right there on the tail :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

nope, nope, nope, nope. It's a Lockheed Constellation.

Still no answer on my latest though (and yes, I know it's a rarity, very few were built and most went to rather obscure operators).

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

no, it will be just as easy as anything else for those who know how.
It will have to be decrypted, all you need to do is intercept the decrypted script before it's fed into the processor.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

You shouldn't do it like that anyway.
Use a PreparedStatement instead, with SQL "update emp set total=? where id=?".

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

yeah the thing between birds, mammals and fish can be seen between human leg , whale leg and bird leg

except of course that a whale is not a fish, it's a mammal :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

they're not, they have it. It's called Microsoft Excel :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

It's an F-16, Japan built them under license and may have made some small changes but it's basically the same aircraft.

For those of you with bad eyes :) here's a bigger view of the aircraft I showed earlier that noone has yet identified: http://hornet.demon.nl/Dscn1451.html

Double points if you know what the aircraft with tail number "46" is that you can only see the tail and exhaust of (tip, you might be able to read it if your eyes are good) :)

And another one for those up to a bit of a challenge. http://hornet.demon.nl/DSCN1473.html

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

hmm, not quite sure when I started programming.
It was using IBM Advanced BASIC on an IBM 5155 PC Portable, which was sold roughly in 1983/84. That makes well over 20 years now.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

and not only does it lack the communications skills to succeed, it also lacks the common sense to take to heart advice offered.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

though depending on what you want to use it for it may or may not require the static attribute.
That's the only one that in some cases is dictated.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

next time think about the topic BEFORE you submit your proposal.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

you're both wrong.
It's a high wing aircraft, two seat version of what's normally a single seater.

#11 is a Fiat G.91. Looks like a trainer version of the Italian airfarce.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

I was interested but your aggressive attitude made me decide not to even look.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

Wrong plane, right era :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

How many real life optimization projects have you worked in ? let me guess ZERO

Several. Which is more than you can say, as you're just a nutcase who thinks it knows it all.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

Is it obligatory for everyone on the net to have access to a local smtp server..??

I am really unable to get this idea?

Is there any way out??

no, but if you want to send email apart from through some web interface you will need to have access to some SMTP server which will authenticate you either by your network address or by some other credentials you supply it.

If you don't have that, tough luck.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

I know there are people more intelligent than me.
I also know you are not one of them.

Going from the constant battering here the topics I mentioned ARE hot, in fact they're pretty much all that's being asked.

You now have 2 posts here in one thread, both of them showing how stupid you are.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

so you have no smtp server that will allow you to connect to it and serve as your spam relay.
How surprising.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

something a bit more obscure now (at least for the youngsters ;) ).

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

and so is sneekula. It's an Aloutte 3.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

it happens, but is exceedingly rare.
And the person surviving is even more rare, usually there are all kinds of problems with organs and parts of organs being rejected (as would happen with transplant patients without special medication) even before birth, resulting in a stillborn child.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

nope. That's utter nonsense, as we've come to expect from "ithelp" who only helps people see what an utterly incompetent person it is.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

Yahoo (as does any self respecting mailserver who doesn't want to be blocked as a spam relay by the entire world) doesn't allow connections by just about anyone.
And a kid from trying to write his first mass mailer is not someone they'd allow access to.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

and giving an answer that's incorrect too...

darkagn commented: good point +1
jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

just be warned, I've got tons of aircraft pictures of my own making :)

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

And another whirlybird.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

USMC AV-8B. Can't tell the unit.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

yep, it's the language of choice for lazy loosers who don't want to learn how to do things properly.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

the hottest topic for the last several years seems to be "how to trick people to do my homework for me".
Second hottest is "how to get people do think up a project title for me".

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

yup, a Lynx.

jwenting 1,905 duckman Team Colleague

The MiG-29 has undergone constant development over the years. This version is the very latest, with new avionics, engines, moving nozzles, etc. etc.
See the other photos in the series for what it can do :)

Yep, that's a Mustang.

And here's another one for the whirlybird lovers.