I am developing a java web application in Netbeans and I would like to know how to get the path of the following file, which I need to read. In the following image I indicate which is the route that I want to know.
I'm using PrimeFaces 6.
Thanks!
Related
Currently I am using a java class to create and download a file. But now I need to let the user to select a path and send the path to relevant java class and download the created file there.
I think this can be done using angularjs. As I have developed my front end using angularjs and html.
But I couldn't find a proper way to do this as I am new to angularjs.
If someone could suggest me a tutorial or an idea, it'll be a big help.
Thank you.
I'm creating a dynamic web project in eclipse using jsps and java servlets, however I want to add some external files to be edited using the app. Where do I put them such that I can open them from my app and save an edited version - and finally provide a link for a download of the edited file?
Thanks
Where do I put them
Nobody cares. Really. As long as it's not in the deploy folder, of course.
If your concrete problem is avoiding to hardcode the exact external location in Java source code, just provide it as VM argument, environment variable, properties file setting, or whatever externally configurable. For detail, see also Recommended way to save uploaded files in a servlet application.
And/or if your concrete problem is serving those files back to the web, just either tell the server to publish the external location into the web as well, or create a servlet which reads from the external location and writes to the response. For detail, see also Load images from outside of webapps / webcontext / deploy folder using <h:graphicImage> or <img> tag.
I have a set of help files for my SWT application that I have open in-application using the Browser control. Navigation through the help files is done through hyperlinks of relative pathnames (i.e: <a href="aboutUs.htm">, so only one html file is actually opened by java code, helpHome.htm. I am opening this using String homeURL = this.getClass().getResource("/help/helpHome.htm").toString(); and browser.setURL(homeURL); This works beautifully when I'm just debugging it in Eclipse. Unfortunately, when I move the project into a .jar, the browser gives the standard "can't find this webpage" error. I've tried using the browser.setText(String); function as described in this link, which works for helpHome.htm, but when I click a hyperlink, it brings me to a blank page displaying the relative pathname. Is there a way to convince browser to open an html file from an executable jar using the setURL(String) method? If not, are there any suggested workarounds for me to achieve similar results?
Thanks in advance!!
You have to start an internal Server as explained here on any available port on your application start up and make your html files available as static resources to the server.
Then set the browser.setURL(homeURL). All the subsequent hyperlinks will now point to the server, which knows how to serve the requested resources.
The hyperlinks are resolved to File System Path (Ex. file://C:\workspace....) while you are running or debugging your application in eclipse and things were working fine then. But that is not the case when you run your app from a runnable jar.
i have a java based web application, i have the source code as well as the war file, the application uses mySql and need some web server like tomcat all to be added to some package that can be directly installed on window and linux machines directly..
i need to setup DB, WebServer, and app in one go. Would be great if it can create services for all as well.
is it possible???
i mean the user should just give the location to store and everything should get stored in one go, is it feasible? and if yes please guide me how to do so...
In short: Yes, it is.
Projects like XAMPP are already following that approach. All relevant software components are inside a single ZIP file which you can extract to an arbitrary location on the user's harddisk. All configuration then uses relative paths when referencing files.
So essentially, you will have to put in a little effort in advance to make the "installation" as easy as possible. Maybe you can simply build upon a project like XAMPP and use the infrastructure already provided?
I'm new to Java. I'm simply trying to build a .jar file of my applet so I can run it from my browser. This is what my directory structure looks like:
C:\java\pacman\src
contains all of the .java class files.
C:\java\pacman\assets
contains about 4-5 images and audio files.
If I try to use the following code:
Image someFile=getCodeBase().toString() + "file.png";
The result of getCodeBase() is
file:/C:/java/pacman/bin/
However the following code fails to load:
img=new ImgHelper(getCodeBase().toString() + "assets/");
ImageIO.read(new File(img.getPath("pacman.png")));
Moving my 'assets' folder to the 'bin' folder didn't fix this either. It tries loading:
file:/C:/java/pacman/bin/assets/pacman.png
saying:
Can't read input file!
But the url it gave opens fine if I paste it into run and hit enter:
So to avoid myself a lot of headache i commented out the code in my ImgHelper class and did this:
public ImgHelper(String dir)
{
//this.imgDir=dir;
imgDir="C:\\java\\pacman\\assets\\";
}
Which works perfectly. But I want to put this on a web server, and I have no idea how/what I should do to make all the images and sounds work. Any ideas?
Thanks...
Why not put it all in a JAR file and then call Class.getResourceAsStream?
A JAR file is better as it is a single HTTP connection rather than one HTTP connection per file. It is also much more flexible to use a Stream than a File.
getResourceAsStream will work when the files are not in a JAR as well, they need to be relative to the class file.
EDIT:
Another thing, the File method won't work if the applet is on a server as it will be trying to open the file from the local machine (I think, I haven't tried it) rather then from the server. Even if it tried to create a file path to the server that won't work.
I agree with tofubeer about the JAR, but if you want to put the image on your server, see the tutorial on Applet images here. The codebase will be whatever location your applet is on the server, and you can put images relative to that on the server as well. Use a media tracker along with the Applet.getImage() method to retrive the url. From the example:
my_gif = getImage(getDocumentBase(),"imageExample.gif");
There are two possible solutions that would work:
The images could be present outside the applet JAR. The applet could then be initialized with the location of the directory where the images are present. Once you have that information you could then load images from the server. The Sun Java tutorial provides an example usage of the applet parameter to pass the image source directory.
The applet class loader could be utilized to load the images from the applet's JAR, using the getResourceAsStream() method.
PS: It would be helpful if you referred to the section in the Java tutorials to load icons for your application. The same section discusses a lot of the points brought forth by TofuBeer and John.
EDIT : The usage of the File API is not recommended because it ends up reading off the local file system. That is unacceptable for most users on the internet.