The purpose of life is not to win. The purpose of life is to grow and to share. When you come to look back on all that you have done in life, you will get more satisfaction from the pleasure you have brought into other people's lives than you will from the times that you outdid and defeated them.
Showing posts with label Programming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Programming. Show all posts

Installing MySQL with Ruby Gem

Most of the official guides would recommend to install MqSQL database as
$gem install mysql

This won't work for sure in Windows platform. First setup your proxy. To know more please visit Rails Sucks. And finally after proxy setting setup issue the below command.

$gem install mysql -- --with-mysql-lib=/usr/local/mysql/lib

XML Parsers

Five types of XML Parsers.

Event based push: SAX, XNI
Event based pull: StAX, XMLPull
Tree: DOM, JDOM , dom4j
Data Binding: JAXB, Castor
Query API: TrAX

Source: http://www.artima.com/intv/xmlapis2.html

Push APIs have a number of advantages. They are very fast. You don't need to read to the end of the document before you start working with the beginning of the document. They use very little memory, because the entire document isn't in memory at once. Instead, you just see sort of a peephole into the document, just the current thing you're looking at. Typically in a push API the work goes into building up some data structure and gradually filling it from the input document until there is enough information there to act on. If you're document is, for example, a collection of articles, a list of records, something for which there are clear chunks in the data and you can process each chunk individually, a push API works very well.

On the other hand, the whole callback interface observer design pattern can be less than ideal for some developers. This brings us to the second major style of XML API, and the newest style: a pull API. A pull API is still streaming, still very fast, still very memory efficient. But instead of the parser being in control, telling the client application when it has some new information, the client application is in control, and it asks the parser to give it the next piece of information when it wants it. But the basic advantages of a pull API are the same as with a push API, except maybe the pull API is little simpler. The implementations of the various pull APIs are not very mature yet. When you actually look at the ones out there—NekoPull, XMLPULL—they have a lot of idiosyncracies both with respect to Java and XML. That's mostly just a function of maturity. There's nothing fundamentally wrong with the idea of a pull API. They're not just fully baked yet. With a little time, in a year or two, I expect pull APIs will be a very popular style of XML parsing.

The third style of XML parsing, and perhaps the most obvious style to most programmers, is a tree-based API. In a tree-based API, an XML document is read by a parser, and the parser constructs an object model, typically around a tree with nodes for elements , attributes, comments, processing instructions, text, and so forth. The entire document is stored in memory. You use the methods of the object to query the document, to navigate the document, to change and modify the document, and so forth. There are more tree-based APIs than any other kind of API: DOM, JDOM, DOM4J, Sparta, ElectricXML, and my own XOM are all tree-based APIs.

The fourth style of API, which is also a fairly recent style, is a data-binding API. It is similar to tree APIs in that the entire document is parsed and an object model is built, but in a data binding API rather than having classes which represent XML concepts, like element and processing instructions, you have classes that represent the concepts the XML represents. So a book element might become a Book object. An employee element might become an Employee object. Typically, some form of schema is compiled to produce these classes automatically. Either a W3C XML schema language schema, a DTD, or a special purpose binding schema written just for that purpose in some special purpose schema language.

And then finally the fifth kind of API is what I would refer to as a query API. These would typically be things like TrAX for transforming with XSLT, or various APIs like Jaxen for searching with XPath. There are no real standards here, but there is some interesting work being done. Generally there the real focus, the real code, goes into the XPath or XSLT query, which we merely call from Java or some other language. It's like using SQL from inside a Java program using JDBC.

Top 5 reasons to choose Rails

I've worked on Rails to a certain extent and my top 5 reasons why I would choose rails to design my next app are,
1. Convention over configuration. This enables to set up the application, database configurations, and MVC stuff literally in minutes.
2. Active Record - Built in ORM. Domain object model can be configured easily and can be translated to Database. In J2EE or .Net this would require a lot of XML configurations and corresponding database mappings.
3. Support for REST (Representational state transfer). Rails have an implicit support for REST unlike J2EE and .Net.
4. Test Unit - Embraces test driven development.
5. Every dependency is a gem - Project related dependencies/libraries can be easily downloaded as gem install XXX.
However, the main criticism for Rails being scalability and non-availability of standard tool-set for development. My bet on Rails would be for trivial applications web apps.

Rails Sucks

I've just started to learn Ruby on Rails (RoR). Got stuck when downloading rails behind a firewall. I wonder why Rails has poor documentation regarding the download steps.

Finally I manged to download rails by setting the following ENV_VARIABLE in Windows environment.

HTTP_PROXY=http://user:pwd@host:port

Even more disgusting is the fact, that I needed to change my password couple of times, since my credentials had special characters like @, %, !. Obviously, Rails hated this.

How to crack the SCDJWS ?..

The wikipedia says SCDJWS is the toughest and the most respected Sun Certification.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sun_Certified_Professional#Sun_Certified_Developer_for_Java_Web_Services_.28SCDJWS.29
Very true indeed.

I scored 79% (55/69). Here's the split up.

XML Web Service Standards 80%
SOAP 1.1 Web Service Standards 83%
Describing and Publishing (WSDL and UDDI) 100%
JAX-RPC 85%
SOAP and XML Processing APIs (JAXP, JAXB and SAAJ) 100%
JAXR 75%
J2EE Web Services 71%
Security 75%
Developing Web Services 66%
General Design and Architecture 50%
Endpoint Design and Architecture 80%

Preparation Plan

1. RMH Book for XML Basics, Namespaces, Schemas, SOAP, WSDL
2. Rest of the chapters - MZ notes. - javaboot
3. xyzws.com mock exams

The questions in the real exam were little tough than xyzws mocks. It wasn't that straight forward, but with little thinking it can be answered.

I did practise a little with all the APIs. I hosted a Web Service using JAX-RPC, wrote some schemas and compiled it. I used the tomcat for java web services developer pack.

CSV Parser in Java

public class CSVParser {

public static final String CSV_REGEX_PATTERN = "\"([^\"]+?)\",?([^,]+),?,";
public static final String TSV_REGEX_PATTERN = "\t{1}";
public static Pattern csvRE;
public static Pattern tsvRE;

static {
csvRE = Pattern.compile(CSV_REGEX_PATTERN);
tsvRE = Pattern.compile(TSV_REGEX_PATTERN);
}

private List parse(String line) {

List list = new ArrayList();
Matcher m = csvRE.matcher(line);

// For each field
while (m.find()) {
String match = m.group();
if (match == null)
break;
//this will remove trailing , - comment this out if we dont want that affect
if (match.endsWith(",")) {
match = match.substring(0, match.length() - 1);
}
if (match.startsWith("\"")) {
match = match.substring(1, match.length () - 1);
}
if (match.length() == 0)
match = null;
list.add(match);
}

return list;
}

}