Hi I am interested in learning web page design and web coding how is the opportunity of earning as free lancer in this things.
About Web page Design and Web Coding?
Opportunity as a freelancer grows when you can give satisfaction to your customers. As a freelancer, referral is one of the best resource you can have.
http://www.pointpinas.com
http://www.broadlinesolutions.net
http://www.altriontechnologies.com
http://www.southportclub.com
http://www.altrionmarine.com
http://www.theanonymous.uni.cc
http://www.lucille.uni.cc
http://www.altrionmarine.com/cars
Those are my sample works and also my portfolio. Remember, competition is always a must!
Reply:Do some samples of your work and advertise e.g.
http://geocities.com/darwin916
graphics cards
Monday, May 24, 2010
What is the candy coded pop corn recipe?
In Hawaii, they have candy coded popcorn. It was green and Red. What is the receipe for that? Sources?
What is the candy coded pop corn recipe?
*Fiddle Faddle %26amp; Screaming Yellow Zonkers
-Fiddle Faddle (butter toffee with almonds)
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
1/2 cup corn syrup
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/3 bags plain or natural-flavored microwave popcorn
1/2 cup roasted almonds
-Zonkers
1 cup granulated sugar
4 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup corn syrup
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/3 bags butter-flavored microwave popcorn
1. For either recipe, combine sugar, butter, corn syrup, water
and salt in a large saucepan over medium heat. You're going to bring the candy to 265-275 degrees, or what is known as the hard ball stage. For this it's best to use a candy thermometer. If you don't have one, don't worry. Drip the candy into a small glass of cold water. If the candy forms a very hard, yet slightly pliable ball, bingo, you're there. Watch your mixture closely so that it doesn't boil over.
2. While candy cooks, pop both bags of popcorn and spread about 2 quarts or 1 1/3 bags of popcorn (plus almonds for Fiddle Faddle) on one large or two small cookie sheets. Put the popcorn in your oven set on its lowest temperature. This will keep the popcorn hot so that the candy will coat better.
3. When your candy has reached the hard ball stage, add the vanilla.
4. Pull the popcorn from the oven and, working quickly, pour the candy over the popcorn in thin streams. Mix the popcorn so that each kernel is coated with candy, put the popcorn back into the oven for five more minutes, then stir once again. This will help to coat each kernel. You can repeat this step once more if necessary to get all of the popcorn coated. Pour popcorn onto a large sheet of wax paper to cool. Spread the popcorn out, but be careful...it's hot.
5. When popcorn is cool, break it up and immediately put it into a tightly sealed container, such as Tupperware. This will ensure that it stays fresh. This stuff gets stale very quickly in moist climates if left out.
Makes about 4 quarts.
*Pop-Up Popcorn Stand
1 pound of white chocolate, cut into small chunks
3 tablespoons of butter
1/2 cup of heavy cream
2 tablespoons peppermint extract
4 candy canes, crushed in a mortar and pestle, or by hand
2 cups Sweet Riot cacao nibs
2-3 bags of buttered microwave popcorn
Prepare microwave popcorn as directed on package
On low, melt butter and white chocolate
stirring constantly with a whisk.
When melted, add cream and peppermint extract, continue to whisk until the chocolate mixture is completely smooth.
Slowly mix the white chocolate peppermint in with the popped popcorn, spreading evenly. It's best to do it in batches, with a large bowl, so the popcorn doesn't fly every where.
Add in crushed candy canes, reserving some for garnish right before serving
Mix in cacao nibs
Serve with crushed(now pink)candy canes, and serve with lots of napkins.
*Candy Coated Popcorn
4 quarts popped corn
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup light corn syrup
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon lorann gourmet flavoring (any flavor, flavor amount can be increased as desired)
lorann liquid food coloring (as desired)
Keep freshly-popped corn warm in large baking pan in 200°F oven.
Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter, salt and cream of tartar in medium saucepan. Bring to boil, stirring constantly. Cook to 250°F without stirring.
Remove from heat. After boiling action ceases, add flavoring and color. Add soda and stir in quickly but thoroughly. Pour at once while foamy over warm popcorn; mix gently to coat corn. Shape into balls or spread onto cookie sheet and break into pieces when cool.
*Try these links
http://www.recipegoldmine.com/popcornswe...
http://www.recipestogo.com/popcorn/popco...
http://oldrecipebook.com/popcornandsnack...
ENJOY :-)
Reply:Candy Coated Popcorn
# 4 quarts popped corn
# 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
# 1/2 cup light corn syrup
# 2 tablespoons butter
# 1/2 teaspoon salt
# 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
# 1 teaspoon baking soda
# 1 teaspoon lorann gourmet flavoring (any flavor, flavor amount can be increased as desired)
# lorann liquid food coloring (as desired)
Keep freshly-popped corn warm in large baking pan in 200°F oven.
Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter, salt and cream of tartar in medium saucepan. Bring to boil, stirring constantly. Cook to 250°F without stirring.
Remove from heat. After boiling action ceases, add flavoring and color. Add soda and stir in quickly but thoroughly. Pour at once while foamy over warm popcorn; mix gently to coat corn. Shape into balls or spread onto cookie sheet and break into pieces when cool.
Reply:...Just have to add this in to the mixture here! :)
Do you know how to make popcorn in the microwave? Take some popcorn, put it in ANY kind of regular paper bag, fold the open edge over a few times to keep the popped corn in, put it in the micro and microwave it for the usual time (till pops are heard more than 4 sec apart). YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY THE EXPENSIVE Microwave Popcorn!!!
So, to this very simple recipe, I'd start experimenting w/sugars.
HTH.
Reply:is it like cracker jack? you can make that yourself and use food coloring to make it any colors your like. You could also do the same with popcorn balls. very festive in red and green
What is the candy coded pop corn recipe?
*Fiddle Faddle %26amp; Screaming Yellow Zonkers
-Fiddle Faddle (butter toffee with almonds)
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
1/2 cup corn syrup
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/3 bags plain or natural-flavored microwave popcorn
1/2 cup roasted almonds
-Zonkers
1 cup granulated sugar
4 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup corn syrup
1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/3 bags butter-flavored microwave popcorn
1. For either recipe, combine sugar, butter, corn syrup, water
and salt in a large saucepan over medium heat. You're going to bring the candy to 265-275 degrees, or what is known as the hard ball stage. For this it's best to use a candy thermometer. If you don't have one, don't worry. Drip the candy into a small glass of cold water. If the candy forms a very hard, yet slightly pliable ball, bingo, you're there. Watch your mixture closely so that it doesn't boil over.
2. While candy cooks, pop both bags of popcorn and spread about 2 quarts or 1 1/3 bags of popcorn (plus almonds for Fiddle Faddle) on one large or two small cookie sheets. Put the popcorn in your oven set on its lowest temperature. This will keep the popcorn hot so that the candy will coat better.
3. When your candy has reached the hard ball stage, add the vanilla.
4. Pull the popcorn from the oven and, working quickly, pour the candy over the popcorn in thin streams. Mix the popcorn so that each kernel is coated with candy, put the popcorn back into the oven for five more minutes, then stir once again. This will help to coat each kernel. You can repeat this step once more if necessary to get all of the popcorn coated. Pour popcorn onto a large sheet of wax paper to cool. Spread the popcorn out, but be careful...it's hot.
5. When popcorn is cool, break it up and immediately put it into a tightly sealed container, such as Tupperware. This will ensure that it stays fresh. This stuff gets stale very quickly in moist climates if left out.
Makes about 4 quarts.
*Pop-Up Popcorn Stand
1 pound of white chocolate, cut into small chunks
3 tablespoons of butter
1/2 cup of heavy cream
2 tablespoons peppermint extract
4 candy canes, crushed in a mortar and pestle, or by hand
2 cups Sweet Riot cacao nibs
2-3 bags of buttered microwave popcorn
Prepare microwave popcorn as directed on package
On low, melt butter and white chocolate
stirring constantly with a whisk.
When melted, add cream and peppermint extract, continue to whisk until the chocolate mixture is completely smooth.
Slowly mix the white chocolate peppermint in with the popped popcorn, spreading evenly. It's best to do it in batches, with a large bowl, so the popcorn doesn't fly every where.
Add in crushed candy canes, reserving some for garnish right before serving
Mix in cacao nibs
Serve with crushed(now pink)candy canes, and serve with lots of napkins.
*Candy Coated Popcorn
4 quarts popped corn
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup light corn syrup
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon lorann gourmet flavoring (any flavor, flavor amount can be increased as desired)
lorann liquid food coloring (as desired)
Keep freshly-popped corn warm in large baking pan in 200°F oven.
Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter, salt and cream of tartar in medium saucepan. Bring to boil, stirring constantly. Cook to 250°F without stirring.
Remove from heat. After boiling action ceases, add flavoring and color. Add soda and stir in quickly but thoroughly. Pour at once while foamy over warm popcorn; mix gently to coat corn. Shape into balls or spread onto cookie sheet and break into pieces when cool.
*Try these links
http://www.recipegoldmine.com/popcornswe...
http://www.recipestogo.com/popcorn/popco...
http://oldrecipebook.com/popcornandsnack...
ENJOY :-)
Reply:Candy Coated Popcorn
# 4 quarts popped corn
# 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
# 1/2 cup light corn syrup
# 2 tablespoons butter
# 1/2 teaspoon salt
# 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
# 1 teaspoon baking soda
# 1 teaspoon lorann gourmet flavoring (any flavor, flavor amount can be increased as desired)
# lorann liquid food coloring (as desired)
Keep freshly-popped corn warm in large baking pan in 200°F oven.
Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter, salt and cream of tartar in medium saucepan. Bring to boil, stirring constantly. Cook to 250°F without stirring.
Remove from heat. After boiling action ceases, add flavoring and color. Add soda and stir in quickly but thoroughly. Pour at once while foamy over warm popcorn; mix gently to coat corn. Shape into balls or spread onto cookie sheet and break into pieces when cool.
Reply:...Just have to add this in to the mixture here! :)
Do you know how to make popcorn in the microwave? Take some popcorn, put it in ANY kind of regular paper bag, fold the open edge over a few times to keep the popped corn in, put it in the micro and microwave it for the usual time (till pops are heard more than 4 sec apart). YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY THE EXPENSIVE Microwave Popcorn!!!
So, to this very simple recipe, I'd start experimenting w/sugars.
HTH.
Reply:is it like cracker jack? you can make that yourself and use food coloring to make it any colors your like. You could also do the same with popcorn balls. very festive in red and green
How much do time do you spend programming at work?
I just wanted to roughly know how much other people spend their time programming at work if you are a developer. I am a Java developer and I spend about 98% of the time coding. I was just wondering because a professor I had in college said that developers only spend about 25% of their time actually coding. One reason I may spend a lot of time coding is that the work is usually assigned to individuals rather than teams. Here are some questions to get a feel of how other companies work: How much time do you spend coding? What are other activities that take a large percentage of your time? What is the size of the company you work for? Do you feel like you work on projects as a team or individually? Feel free to leave any other comments that pertain from your experience.
How much do time do you spend programming at work?
I dont think your professor was 100% correct. If you just got the job then you will most likely spend the majority of the time coding and as you get more experienced and familiar with the companys system you may end up doing more analytical work such as developing a database, analysing data, meetings etc.. After some time you start to think that even a trained monkey can program so they usually give those tasks to less experienced people so the more you move up the less programming you are likely to do. Also, it sometimes takes longer to test your work than it takes to program it.
Reply:There is a difference between "coding" and "programming". Most programmers are really programmer / analysts. They should spend a lot of time analyzing. They also test, debug, test again, train users, write help screens, meet with users, watch business processes, read professional journals, goof off answering YA posts on the corporate T-100 line and so forth. If you are devoting 98% of your 40 hours a week to grinding out Java code, you must be a regular coding machine. Do you have others who set the requirements, design the systems, test, debug and so forth? Or did you count that as "coding"?
25% seems about right if your professor meant to distinguish between tasks, as I did.
Reply:It really depends on the nature of the company and how the company works.
I work in an environment where no body really cares rats @@$$$ about computers... but without computers or internal programs... all hell will break loose.
We do have a team of IT guys here.. but not enough for 300 users. So I go here and there to support the IT guys.. which makes me 60:40 on develop/maintaining:IT Troubleshoot...
...not considering all the meetings and paper works and overtimes...
As to my friend.. who works in a strict development environment...
Most of time he spend his time coding... other time studies the languages.
Sounded like 80% coding, 15% studying, and 5% meetings.
Another friend who works in a QA environment...
According to him he spends 100% on coding 100% on meetings and 100% hearing the development team Biaatching in his ears 100% hearing his team Biaatching about the developers... which is a very team oriented environment.
Most* development environment is individual based...
because it's hard for multiple people to create portions of a code and expect everything to work perfectly once the code is put together.
Reply:I create web apps for my work,, i spend %26lt; 10% design and 90% programming (including debugging). I work for a university which has 500 employees. But as usual other things which distract you from your real job come inbetween. I work mostly individually
Reply:I am Sr. EAI Consultant in CMM5 Level company , working at Client site. We are sopenidng maximum time in Designing. Like Functional Designs and Technical design. If a Design is good then a Deveopelr can develop in few Hrs. We always propely document the Designs and then Send it to Developer to develop. So The way we work is
1%26gt; Functional Design : Collection Business Requirements
2%26gt; Technical Design : Converting Funcrtionalui in to Technical
3%26gt; Coding (Code)
4%26gt; Testing (UT , ST , AT , etc)
the first two parts always take 70% of time .
and about the coding in a day , when u r in job then Ur Team lead decideds or may be you decide ;-)
Reply:hmm ok i do about 70% coding and 30% design. other activities include graphics and animation, web design, and screwing around on yahoo answers - lol j/k - well not really... :)
the size of my company is pretty big, maybe a few hundred folks. we have project coordinators so i feel like i work as a team with them, but not really with the other designers because i work remotely and we kinda just do what we're all told.
that was a fun question, it was actually relevant to what i do! yay! back to "work"!
Reply:I'd say I spend between 35% and 60% of my time actually writing code (web applications,) depending upon the week and the time of the year. The rest is spent on design, testing, debugging, and managing the network here. I work for a small non-profit, and if it plugs into the wall, I am responsible for it...
Reply:I'm a Sr Java Developer for a medium sized company and I code about 50% of the time. But it's lopsided...maybe 12% one day and I have to stay late and code 100% another. Depends on the projects that are going on. My other time is spent doing research on technologies, going over documentation, meetings, or being just plain bored.
How much do time do you spend programming at work?
I dont think your professor was 100% correct. If you just got the job then you will most likely spend the majority of the time coding and as you get more experienced and familiar with the companys system you may end up doing more analytical work such as developing a database, analysing data, meetings etc.. After some time you start to think that even a trained monkey can program so they usually give those tasks to less experienced people so the more you move up the less programming you are likely to do. Also, it sometimes takes longer to test your work than it takes to program it.
Reply:There is a difference between "coding" and "programming". Most programmers are really programmer / analysts. They should spend a lot of time analyzing. They also test, debug, test again, train users, write help screens, meet with users, watch business processes, read professional journals, goof off answering YA posts on the corporate T-100 line and so forth. If you are devoting 98% of your 40 hours a week to grinding out Java code, you must be a regular coding machine. Do you have others who set the requirements, design the systems, test, debug and so forth? Or did you count that as "coding"?
25% seems about right if your professor meant to distinguish between tasks, as I did.
Reply:It really depends on the nature of the company and how the company works.
I work in an environment where no body really cares rats @@$$$ about computers... but without computers or internal programs... all hell will break loose.
We do have a team of IT guys here.. but not enough for 300 users. So I go here and there to support the IT guys.. which makes me 60:40 on develop/maintaining:IT Troubleshoot...
...not considering all the meetings and paper works and overtimes...
As to my friend.. who works in a strict development environment...
Most of time he spend his time coding... other time studies the languages.
Sounded like 80% coding, 15% studying, and 5% meetings.
Another friend who works in a QA environment...
According to him he spends 100% on coding 100% on meetings and 100% hearing the development team Biaatching in his ears 100% hearing his team Biaatching about the developers... which is a very team oriented environment.
Most* development environment is individual based...
because it's hard for multiple people to create portions of a code and expect everything to work perfectly once the code is put together.
Reply:I create web apps for my work,, i spend %26lt; 10% design and 90% programming (including debugging). I work for a university which has 500 employees. But as usual other things which distract you from your real job come inbetween. I work mostly individually
Reply:I am Sr. EAI Consultant in CMM5 Level company , working at Client site. We are sopenidng maximum time in Designing. Like Functional Designs and Technical design. If a Design is good then a Deveopelr can develop in few Hrs. We always propely document the Designs and then Send it to Developer to develop. So The way we work is
1%26gt; Functional Design : Collection Business Requirements
2%26gt; Technical Design : Converting Funcrtionalui in to Technical
3%26gt; Coding (Code)
4%26gt; Testing (UT , ST , AT , etc)
the first two parts always take 70% of time .
and about the coding in a day , when u r in job then Ur Team lead decideds or may be you decide ;-)
Reply:hmm ok i do about 70% coding and 30% design. other activities include graphics and animation, web design, and screwing around on yahoo answers - lol j/k - well not really... :)
the size of my company is pretty big, maybe a few hundred folks. we have project coordinators so i feel like i work as a team with them, but not really with the other designers because i work remotely and we kinda just do what we're all told.
that was a fun question, it was actually relevant to what i do! yay! back to "work"!
Reply:I'd say I spend between 35% and 60% of my time actually writing code (web applications,) depending upon the week and the time of the year. The rest is spent on design, testing, debugging, and managing the network here. I work for a small non-profit, and if it plugs into the wall, I am responsible for it...
Reply:I'm a Sr Java Developer for a medium sized company and I code about 50% of the time. But it's lopsided...maybe 12% one day and I have to stay late and code 100% another. Depends on the projects that are going on. My other time is spent doing research on technologies, going over documentation, meetings, or being just plain bored.
What is the best "site address" for getting "c programing coding" or any sites is there refer me please?
There's a great tutorial on c programming here: http://www.cprogramming.com/tutorial/
What is the best "site address" for getting "c programing coding" or any sites is there refer me please?
www.programmersheaven.com
www.thecodeproject.com
What is the best "site address" for getting "c programing coding" or any sites is there refer me please?
www.programmersheaven.com
www.thecodeproject.com
How do you do HTML coding????
I need BIG help. I don't know how to do HTML coding and i need it for freewebs.com
Pleas help! Best answere well get a webkinz treat!
How do you do HTML coding????
PageFace - http://www.pageface.com/
PageFace offers easy to learn, in-depth and visually illustrated tutorials which is by far one of the best HTML tutorial web sites out there.
I hope this helps.
Reply:Here are a few HTML tutorial sites I recommend:
W3Schools - http://www.w3schools.com/
Good tutorials as well as online test for HTML certifications
EchoEcho - http://www.echoecho.com/
Excellent short tutorials on various subjects with quizzes.
HTML Code Tutorial - http://www.htmlcodetutorial.com/
Not as good at teaching, but excellent references on how specific elements should be written.
Reply:Go to this website-
http://www.web-source.net/html_codes_cha...
It's a pretty straightforward instructional site.
Reply:Try these websites. They have a lot of beginner stuff to get you started.
http://www.funky-chickens.com
http://www.lissaexplains.com
Reply:yes you can try any of those links in the other answers. the basic idea of HTML coding is this... you have to basically type out the code in between %26lt;"command"%26gt; and every tag that you open you must close with a %26lt;/"command"%26gt;.
the entire code can be written in any text editor like note pad or wordpad.
once you type out the entire code all you have to do is save the file with the .HTML or .HTML extension.
open the file in any Internet browser and tada! you have your website done.
unfortunately this is very tedious, and doesn't have a debugger. so I'd suggest the you should rather learn frontpage and stick to using it.
Reply:HTML coding can seem hard at first but it isn't so bad once you get the hang of things. W3schools has a lot of great information to help you get started. http://www.w3schools.com/html/
botanical garden
Pleas help! Best answere well get a webkinz treat!
How do you do HTML coding????
PageFace - http://www.pageface.com/
PageFace offers easy to learn, in-depth and visually illustrated tutorials which is by far one of the best HTML tutorial web sites out there.
I hope this helps.
Reply:Here are a few HTML tutorial sites I recommend:
W3Schools - http://www.w3schools.com/
Good tutorials as well as online test for HTML certifications
EchoEcho - http://www.echoecho.com/
Excellent short tutorials on various subjects with quizzes.
HTML Code Tutorial - http://www.htmlcodetutorial.com/
Not as good at teaching, but excellent references on how specific elements should be written.
Reply:Go to this website-
http://www.web-source.net/html_codes_cha...
It's a pretty straightforward instructional site.
Reply:Try these websites. They have a lot of beginner stuff to get you started.
http://www.funky-chickens.com
http://www.lissaexplains.com
Reply:yes you can try any of those links in the other answers. the basic idea of HTML coding is this... you have to basically type out the code in between %26lt;"command"%26gt; and every tag that you open you must close with a %26lt;/"command"%26gt;.
the entire code can be written in any text editor like note pad or wordpad.
once you type out the entire code all you have to do is save the file with the .HTML or .HTML extension.
open the file in any Internet browser and tada! you have your website done.
unfortunately this is very tedious, and doesn't have a debugger. so I'd suggest the you should rather learn frontpage and stick to using it.
Reply:HTML coding can seem hard at first but it isn't so bad once you get the hang of things. W3schools has a lot of great information to help you get started. http://www.w3schools.com/html/
botanical garden
Who's good at Computer coding? [scraping?] I have a fun project I am thinking of.?
Whenever DrudgeReport gets a big story, they put a siren on the top of the web site like this: %26lt;IMG SRC="siren.gif"%26gt;. I like to look at the Drudge report fairly often beacuse he is usually one of the first people to get breaking news stories.
My coding is limited to HTML, but by copying and pasting scripts I can do most things I think of (like, for example, refresh a page every minute, etc. )
What scripts could I look into that would check for that code, and then play a WAV file (I thinking foghorn,,,aahoooogga!) whenever the siren comes up? :0)
I have heard of 'scraping' but I don't know how to work with PERL.
Who's good at Computer coding? [scraping?] I have a fun project I am thinking of.?
There aren't any specific scripts for something like this. It's more a less quick script that needs to be custom made. You might find certain tools on screen scraping ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screen_scra... ), but based on your description, it's not more than a few lines of code. So pretty much everyone would just program something in a high level language.
You simple need to connect to the webpage, read the data, then use a regular expression or some string searching method for the appropriate HTML tags that indicate a "siren". Then play the sound file if it happens.
Python, Ruby, Perl are all very useful languages for this, because it's easy to write out a fast script that does the above. It's possible to program something like that in C#, Java, C++, and so on, but it takes far less in the first three languages I mentioned.
Today might be the day to expand your knowledge.
My coding is limited to HTML, but by copying and pasting scripts I can do most things I think of (like, for example, refresh a page every minute, etc. )
What scripts could I look into that would check for that code, and then play a WAV file (I thinking foghorn,,,aahoooogga!) whenever the siren comes up? :0)
I have heard of 'scraping' but I don't know how to work with PERL.
Who's good at Computer coding? [scraping?] I have a fun project I am thinking of.?
There aren't any specific scripts for something like this. It's more a less quick script that needs to be custom made. You might find certain tools on screen scraping ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screen_scra... ), but based on your description, it's not more than a few lines of code. So pretty much everyone would just program something in a high level language.
You simple need to connect to the webpage, read the data, then use a regular expression or some string searching method for the appropriate HTML tags that indicate a "siren". Then play the sound file if it happens.
Python, Ruby, Perl are all very useful languages for this, because it's easy to write out a fast script that does the above. It's possible to program something like that in C#, Java, C++, and so on, but it takes far less in the first three languages I mentioned.
Today might be the day to expand your knowledge.
A String contain 821560888v.I want to validate this String every time a user enter a similar type-java coding?
that is 821560888 can be change.but i want to validate this 9 digits whether they are int not any other data type.i need java coding.
A String contain 821560888v.I want to validate this String every time a user enter a similar type-java coding?
To validate text input converted to a int try this:
try {
String s = new JTextField().getText(); // The user enters text in the text field
int value = Integer.parseInt(s);
}
catch(NumberFormatException ex) { // Invalid input, not a number
ex.printStackTrace();
}
Hope this helps
A String contain 821560888v.I want to validate this String every time a user enter a similar type-java coding?
To validate text input converted to a int try this:
try {
String s = new JTextField().getText(); // The user enters text in the text field
int value = Integer.parseInt(s);
}
catch(NumberFormatException ex) { // Invalid input, not a number
ex.printStackTrace();
}
Hope this helps
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)