Date Parse





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9
Date Submitted Fri. May. 26th, 2006 11:16 AM
Revision 2
Coder mattrmiller
Tags "Email Address" | Java | String | Validate
Comments 2 comments
Fixed the regular expression to check for more strict requirements.
-5
Date Submitted Wed. May. 31st, 2006 3:19 AM
Revision 2
Beginner fazen
Tags Image | Java | servlet | Stream
Comments 1 comments
Servlet returning an image.
6
Date Submitted Sun. Jul. 23rd, 2006 5:39 PM
Revision 1
Helper rugi
Tags Array | Java | Random
Comments 0 comments
Method for get n random number's
8
Date Submitted Mon. Aug. 7th, 2006 4:48 PM
Revision 1
Scripter bertheymans
Tags Date | Java | Time
Comments 0 comments
If you only want to compare yyyy-mm-dd you can use the java.sql.Date class, the valueOf method does the trick. It's perfectly safe as the sql Date class is a subclass of the Date class.

Check out the docs here for more detail.

enjoy
6
Date Submitted Fri. Aug. 18th, 2006 11:01 AM
Revision 1
Scripter ASmith
Tags Date | python
Comments 0 comments
Computes the difference between two dates in seconds
6
Date Submitted Thu. Aug. 24th, 2006 1:58 PM
Revision 1
Beginner jamesstaylor
Tags Java
Comments 1 comments
This is a quick and easy class that will generate MD5 hashes from strings. I originally wrote it to insert into my Oracle database so I could generate MD5 hases for passwords from PL/SQL.

Example

String md5Hash = stringMD5("my password");
9
Date Submitted Mon. Sep. 4th, 2006 12:19 PM
Revision 1
Scripter sehrgut
Tags bash | Line | Parse
Comments 1 comments
Parsing newline-delimited data records in bash is simple, if you have this odd redirect up your sleeve. An annoying thing about bash is that it usually equates all whitespace characters, so the first block in the snippet won't let you use a file linewise, but will end up echoing each whitespace-delimited token on a separate line.

bash provides the "read" builtin which can be used to differentiate between newlines and spaces.
6
Date Submitted Wed. Sep. 13th, 2006 9:47 AM
Revision 1
Helper alambkin
Tags Exponentiation | Fast | Java
Comments 1 comments
A simple tool used for fast Exponentiation. Very useful if you are creating your own cryptograpgic methods.
7
Date Submitted Tue. Sep. 19th, 2006 8:22 AM
Revision 1
Helper alambkin
Tags Exponentiation | Fast | Java
Comments 2 comments
A simple tool used for fast Exponentiation. Very useful if you are creating your own cryptograpgic methods.
7
Date Submitted Tue. Sep. 26th, 2006 1:13 PM
Revision 1
Scripter sehrgut
Tags C | ltrim | Parse | rtrim | String | trim
Comments 1 comments
The modus operandi for this is similar to that taken by PHP's implementation of such functions. It's comparitively memory-intensive, but is much faster than running a whole bunch of tests.

Basically, you set a mask -- an array of 256 null bytes -- and set those that correspond to characters you wish to trim. Then, rather than having to test if a character is in the set of characters to trim(O(n), or linear time on *ws), you just test once (O(1), or unit time) to see if the byte in question is set.

And of course, to trim(), you just wrap trim() around both ltrim() and rtrim().

One point of caution: these functions trim in place, so copy strings before trimming them. (Of course, if you usually want access to both pre- and post-trimmed strings, you could always make these malloc() a new string and return a pointer to it . . . )