Searching for "i"

Q:

What are Native methods in Java?

Answer

Java applications can call code written in C, C++, or assembler. This is sometimes done for performance and sometimes to access the underlying host operating system or GUI API using the JNI.


 


The steps for doing that are:


First write the Java code and compile it


Then create a C header file


Create C stubs file


Write the C code


Create shared code library (or DLL)


Run application

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

What is the SimpleTimeZone class?

Answer

SimpleTimeZone is a concrete subclass of TimeZone class. The TimeZone class represents a time zone, that is to be used with Gregorian calendar.


The SimpleTimeZone is created by using the base time zone offset from GMT time zone ID and rules, for starting and ending the time of daylight.

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

What is the Dictionary class?

Answer

- The Dictionary class is an abstract class.


- Classes like Hashtable which map keys to values inherit from this class. 


- An object can be looked for if a dictionary and a key is provided.


- Any non-null object can be used as a key and as a value.

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

What is the Set interface ?

Answer

- The Set interface provides methods for accessing the elements of a finite mathematical set


- Sets do not allow duplicate elements


- Contains no methods other than those inherited from Collection


- It adds the restriction that duplicate elements are prohibited


- Two Set objects are equal if they contain the same elements

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

How do you decide when to use ArrayList and When to use LinkedList?

Answer

If you need to support random access, without inserting or removing elements from any place other than the end, then ArrayList offers the optimal collection. If, however, you need to frequently add and remove elements from the middle of the list and only access the list elements sequentially, then LinkedList offers the better implementation.

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

How do you decide when to use HashMap and when to use TreeMap ?

Answer

For inserting, deleting, and locating elements in a Map, the HashMap offers the best alternative. If, however, you need to traverse the keys in a sorted order, then TreeMap is your better alternative. Depending upon the size of your collection, it may be faster to add elements to a HashMap, then convert the map to a TreeMap for sorted key traversal.


 

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

How do you traverse through a collection using its Iterator?

Answer

To use an iterator to traverse through the contents of a collection, follow these steps:


- Obtain an iterator to the start of the collection by calling the collections iterator() method.


- Set up a loop that makes a call to hasNext(). Have the loop iterate as long as hasNext() returns true.


- Within the loop, obtain each element by calling next().

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java

Q:

How are this() and super() used with constructors?

Answer

Constructors use this to refer to another constructor in the same class with a different parameter list.


Constructors use super to invoke the superclass's constructor. If a constructor uses super, it must use it in the first line; otherwise, the compiler will complain.

Report Error

View answer Workspace Report Error Discuss

Subject: Java