Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
Are there javadocs available for MySQL JDBC connector? If so, where can I find them?
Googling around, I've come across links such as Class MysqlDataSource . But it is that official? I guess I'm looking for something that came from mysql.com or affiliates. Is there such thing?
The official documentation of Connector/J is here. It does not, as far as I know, contain any JavaDoc. The reason for this is that you should not need to directly refer to any of those classes. You should be able to use only the java.sql.* classes to access the DB.
Joachim is correct.
However, there are some issues left for vendor-specific implementation (for example, does Connection.close() while a transaction is open commits or rollback).
In such cases you can check out the MySQL JDBC API Implementation Notes or look at the Java docs and source in the MySQL source code
Related
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 2 years ago.
Improve this question
I am new to StackOverflow so please do correct me if I need to provide any more information.
I am trying to integrate an anomaly detection into the PostgreSQL database system by plugging into its backend.
I would like to know if there is any place where I can find extensive back-end coding or integration examples. I am looking at papers regarding this topic and, so far, I have found a few which talk about the methods that the queries are classified and used for anomaly detection.
If you do know about any websites which might help me, please do provide links to the sites.
Thanks!!
Look for "hooks" in the PostgreSQL source tree. Studying the source of the auto_explain and pg_stat_statements contrib modules, which track query execution, will show you the way.
The source is its own book: it is well-documented and interspersed with README files that explain the design.
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 4 years ago.
Improve this question
Details on the packages/types is in the Scala API documentation on scala-lang.org. But that's organised by class and I (as a Scala neophyte) find it difficult to locate the exact data type I need and work out what operation are supported on what (especially in the huge and powerful scala.collections.* tree).
Is there an online or dead-tree resource that either presents this reference information more usably, or guides the reader through the library?
Alternatively, maybe I just need to be informed how to use the existing Scala API doc website more effectively.
Any advice on effective use of the standard Scala library gratefully received!
For the collections in particular, there's a very good overview available here: http://www.scala-lang.org/docu/files/collections-api/collections.html
Written by Martin Odersky himself :)
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
Are the JavaDocs for clojure.lang, etc. available online? Do I need to build it myself from the Clojure source?
Thanks.
if you want descriptions for functions and even examples, visit ClojureDocs
you can even contribute ;)
Javadocs don't exist, per se. If you look at the Java source code, it's very sparsely documented. Certainly you could generate a skeleton yourself, but it probably wouldn't be all that useful anyway as much of the language is self-implemented (in clojure), using Java mostly for bootstrapping the core functionality. I don't think clojure.lang package is really intended to be used directly.
To learn about Clojure functions you can:
Use (doc) and (find-doc) from a repl
Use the API reference at clojure.org
See ClojureDocs, per #Belun's answer
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 2 years ago.
Locked. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.
I'd like a basic message passing/RPC system. I could use a serialisation system but I want some sort of verification to ensure both ends are synchronised. I've looked at Google Protocol Buffers, but I'm not too keen on code generation. What are other alternatives?
You can look at http://msgpack.org/
Maybe thrift would do.
http://thrift.apache.org/
Cap'n Proto, which is designed by Kenton Varda, who worked for Google as the primary author of Protocol Buffers version 2 (the open source one now everybody uses). It has a feature called "time travel" that worths looking (a feature that makes round trips for fetching dependent data to and from server into one trip).
http://kentonv.github.io/capnproto/
I really love Cap’n Proto!
Awesome serialization + RPC capabilities, open source, great schema language...
(Authored by Kenton Varda, the primary author of Protocol Buffers version 2)
Closed. This question does not meet Stack Overflow guidelines. It is not currently accepting answers.
We don’t allow questions seeking recommendations for books, tools, software libraries, and more. You can edit the question so it can be answered with facts and citations.
Closed 5 years ago.
Improve this question
Our company has a very large public Java API which is currently being released standalone and online using (of course) JavaDoc. It is surrounded by product documentation which links into the API.
We are moving our static documentation to DokuWiki - which works pretty good - and want to keep the links.
Now it would be good to have a method (or doclet) that exports the JavaDoc directly into DokuWiki - or a very near alternative.
Question: Is there something like this or do you know a method to do just that?
Here's a Doclet which writes to JSON.
https://bitbucket.org/ananelson/json-doclet/src/tip/src/it/dexy/jsondoclet/Doclet.java
It might help get you started writing a custom Doclet.
You need to write doclet yourself, its not hard - its just html generation from very nice meta-model.
this might help
P.S. doclet api is in lib/tools.jar of your sdk.