I'm trying to make Solr search phone numbers which are stored like this +79876543210 using a query like these:
+79876543210
79876543210
89876543210 <-- '+7' is replaced with region specific code '8'
9876543210 <-- '+7' entirely removed
This is just an example. Another one is wired line phone numbers:
+78662123456 <-- '+78662' is a specific region code
78662123456
88662123456
8662123456
123456 <-- region code entirely removed
One way I could manage this is using a separate field which is filled with these variants and used solely during search.
But this has issues with highlighting (it returns <em>123456</em> to be highlighted whereas the real value shown to user is +78662123456).
I thought that maybe it's best to make these indices using just Solr, but how?
First thought was to use managed synonyms filter and pass them along with each added record. But the docs explicitly states:
Changes made to managed resources via this REST API are not applied to the active Solr components until the Solr collection (or Solr core in single server mode) is reloaded.
So reloading a core every time after adding a record is not the way to go.
Other issues involve keeping these synonyms up to date with records.
Could there be another way to solve this?
Thanks to this comment (by MatsLindh) I've managed to assemble a simple filter based on bult-in EdgeNGramTokenFilter:
package com.step4;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.TokenFilter;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.TokenStream;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.tokenattributes.CharTermAttribute;
import org.apache.lucene.analysis.tokenattributes.PositionIncrementAttribute;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.util.regex.Matcher;
import java.util.regex.Pattern;
public class ReverseCustomFilter extends TokenFilter {
private static final PatternReplacementPair[] phonePatterns = {
new PatternReplacementPair("\\+7", "7"),
new PatternReplacementPair("\\+7", "8"),
new PatternReplacementPair("\\+7", ""),
new PatternReplacementPair("\\+78662", ""),
new PatternReplacementPair("\\+78663", ""),
};
private final CharTermAttribute termAtt = addAttribute(CharTermAttribute.class);
private final PositionIncrementAttribute posIncrAtt = addAttribute(PositionIncrementAttribute.class);
private int curPatternIndex;
private int curPosIncr;
private State curState;
public ReverseCustomFilter(TokenStream input) {
super(input);
}
#Override
public final boolean incrementToken() throws IOException {
while (true) {
if (curPatternIndex == 0) {
if (!input.incrementToken()) {
return false;
}
curState = captureState();
curPosIncr += posIncrAtt.getPositionIncrement();
curPatternIndex = 1;
}
if (curPatternIndex <= phonePatterns.length) {
PatternReplacementPair replacementPair = phonePatterns[curPatternIndex - 1];
curPatternIndex++;
restoreState(curState);
Matcher matcher = replacementPair.getPattern().matcher(termAtt);
if (matcher.find()) {
posIncrAtt.setPositionIncrement(curPosIncr);
curPosIncr = 0;
String replaced = matcher.replaceFirst(replacementPair.getReplacement());
termAtt.setEmpty().append(replaced);
return true;
}
}
else {
restoreState(curState);
posIncrAtt.setPositionIncrement(0);
curPatternIndex = 0;
return true;
}
}
}
#Override
public void reset() throws IOException {
super.reset();
curPatternIndex = 0;
curPosIncr = 0;
}
#Override
public void end() throws IOException {
super.end();
posIncrAtt.setPositionIncrement(curPosIncr);
}
private static class PatternReplacementPair {
private final Pattern pattern;
private final String replacement;
public PatternReplacementPair(String pattern, String replacement) {
this.pattern = Pattern.compile(pattern);
this.replacement = replacement;
}
public Pattern getPattern() {
return pattern;
}
public String getReplacement() {
return replacement;
}
}
}
How do I successfully call setPreferredSize in a method? I'm calling setPreferredSize twice. If I remove the call inside the constructor, the panel doesn't appear at all, whereas it had earlier appeared with the undesired size (500,300). This demonstrates that setPreferredSize is being executed in the constructor, but not in the method of the same class. Note that this is the only issue (as far as I have tested) with my code; there's no unexpected interference outside the code below.
...
public abstract class XYGrapher extends JPanel{
...
JFrame frame;
JPanel contentPane;
...
public XYGrapher() {
frame = new JFrame("Grapher");
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
contentPane = new JPanel();
contentPane.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(500, 300));
contentPane.setLayout(new SpringLayout());
this.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(500, 300));
frame.setContentPane(contentPane);
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible(true);
contentPane.add(this);
}
//
public void drawGraph(int xPixelStart, int yPixelStart, int pixelsWide, int pixelsHigh) {
...
contentPane.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(pixelsWide, pixelsHigh));
this.setPreferredSize(new Dimension(pixelsWide, pixelsHigh));
...
}
//*/
}
For reference, this is how XYGrapher eventually gets used:
public class GrapherTester extends XYGrapher{
...
public static void main(String[] args) {
GrapherTester g = new GrapherTester();
g.drawGraph(0,0,100,100);
}
}
I have managed to fix the issue in the meantime. Simply add
frame.pack();
to the method.
I want to use RazorEngine to generate some html files. It's easy to generate strings first, then write them to files. But if the generated strings are too large, that will cause memory issues.
So I wonder is there a non-cached way to use RazorEngine, like using StreamWriter as its output rather than a string.
I google this for a while, but with no luck.
I think use a custom base template should be the right way, but the documents are so few(even out of date) on the offcial homepage of RazorEngine.
Any hint will be helpful!
OK. I figured it out.
Create a class that inherits TemplateBase<T>, and take a TextWrite parameter in the constructor.
public class TextWriterTemplate<T> : TemplateBase<T>
{
private readonly TextWriter _tw;
public TextWriterTemplate(TextWriter tw)
{
_tw = tw;
}
// override Write and WriteLiteral methods, write text using the TextWriter.
public override void Write(object value)
{
_tw.Write(value);
}
public override void WriteLiteral(string literal)
{
_tw.Write(literal);
}
}
Then use the template as this:
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (var sw = new StreamWriter(#"output.txt"))
{
var config = new FluentTemplateServiceConfiguration(c =>
c.WithBaseTemplateType(typeof(TextWriterTemplate<>))
.ActivateUsing(context => (ITemplate)Activator.CreateInstance(context.TemplateType, sw))
);
using (var service = new TemplateService(config))
{
service.Parse("Hello #Model.Name", new {Name = "Waku"}, null, null);
}
}
}
The content of output.txt should be Hello WAKU.
I have the following shape XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<shape xmlns:a="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
a:shape="ring"
a:innerRadiusRatio="3"
a:thicknessRatio="8"
a:useLevel="false">
<!-- some other stuff goes here -->
</gradient>
</shape>
I would like to use code instead to create this shape, since some things need to be calculated on the fly before I do it, so static pre-defined layout doesn't cut it.
I'm new to Android and can't quite figure out how XML translates to code, and there's no RingShape class inheriting from Shape.
In addition to answering just this question, if there's a guide somewhere that details relation between XML and Java code and how XML gets processed in order to end up on the screen I would appreciate a link too. Thanks.
Reuben already pointed out most the most useful observations, so I'll just focus on the implementation side of the story. There's multiple approaches using reflection that'll probably give you what you're looking for.
First one is to (ab)use the private GradientDrawable constructor that takes a GradientState reference. Unfortunately the latter is a final subclass with package visibility, so you can't easily get access to it. In order to use it, you would need to dive further in using reflection or mimic its functionality into your own code.
Second approach is to use reflection to get the private member variable mGradientState, which fortunately has a getter in the form of getConstantState(). This'll give you the ConstantState, which at runtime is really a GradientState and hence we can use reflection to access its members and change them at runtime.
In order to support above statements, here's a somewhat basic implementation to create a ring-shaped drawable from code:
RingDrawable.java
public class RingDrawable extends GradientDrawable {
private Class<?> mGradientState;
public RingDrawable() {
this(Orientation.TOP_BOTTOM, null);
}
public RingDrawable(int innerRadius, int thickness, float innerRadiusRatio, float thicknessRatio) {
this(Orientation.TOP_BOTTOM, null, innerRadius, thickness, innerRadiusRatio, thicknessRatio);
}
public RingDrawable(GradientDrawable.Orientation orientation, int[] colors) {
super(orientation, colors);
setShape(RING);
}
public RingDrawable(GradientDrawable.Orientation orientation, int[] colors, int innerRadius, int thickness, float innerRadiusRatio, float thicknessRatio) {
this(orientation, colors);
try {
setInnerRadius(innerRadius);
setThickness(thickness);
setInnerRadiusRatio(innerRadiusRatio);
setThicknessRatio(thicknessRatio);
} catch (Exception e) {
// fail silently - change to your own liking
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
public void setInnerRadius(int radius) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException, IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
if (mGradientState == null) mGradientState = resolveGradientState();
Field innerRadius = resolveField(mGradientState, "mInnerRadius");
innerRadius.setInt(getConstantState(), radius);
}
public void setThickness(int thicknessValue) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException, IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
if (mGradientState == null) mGradientState = resolveGradientState();
Field thickness = resolveField(mGradientState, "mThickness");
thickness.setInt(getConstantState(), thicknessValue);
}
public void setInnerRadiusRatio(float ratio) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException, IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
if (mGradientState == null) mGradientState = resolveGradientState();
Field innerRadiusRatio = resolveField(mGradientState, "mInnerRadiusRatio");
innerRadiusRatio.setFloat(getConstantState(), ratio);
}
public void setThicknessRatio(float ratio) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException, IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
if (mGradientState == null) mGradientState = resolveGradientState();
Field thicknessRatio = resolveField(mGradientState, "mThicknessRatio");
thicknessRatio.setFloat(getConstantState(), ratio);
}
private Class<?> resolveGradientState() {
Class<?>[] classes = GradientDrawable.class.getDeclaredClasses();
for (Class<?> singleClass : classes) {
if (singleClass.getSimpleName().equals("GradientState")) return singleClass;
}
throw new RuntimeException("GradientState could not be found in current GradientDrawable implementation");
}
private Field resolveField(Class<?> source, String fieldName) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException {
Field field = source.getDeclaredField(fieldName);
field.setAccessible(true);
return field;
}
}
Above can be used as follows to create a RingDrawable from code and display it in a standard ImageView.
ImageView target = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.imageview);
RingDrawable ring = new RingDrawable(10, 20, 0, 0);
ring.setColor(Color.BLUE);
target.setImageDrawable(ring);
This will show a simple, opaque blue ring in the ImageView (10 units inner radius, 20 units thick). You'll need to make sure to not set the ImageView's width and height to wrap_content, unless you add ring.setSize(width, height) to above code in order for it to show up.
Hope this helps you out in any way.
Ring and other shapes are GradientDrawables.
If you look at the source code for GradientDrawable, you'll see it looks like certain properties (like innerRadius) can only be defined through XML... they are not exposed through accessor methods. The relevant state is also unhelpfully private to the class, so subclassing is no help either.
You can do something like this:
private ShapeDrawable newRingShapeDrawable(int color) {
ShapeDrawable drawable = new ShapeDrawable(new OvalShape());
drawable.getPaint().setColor(color);
drawable.getPaint().setStrokeWidth(2);
drawable.getPaint().setStyle(Paint.Style.STROKE);
return drawable;
}
It is possible to do it from code:
int r = dipToPixels(DEFAULT_CORNER_RADIUS_DIP); // this can be used to make it circle
float[] outerR = new float[]{r, r, r, r, r, r, r, r};
int border = dipToPixels(2); // border of circle
RectF rect = new RectF(border, border, border, border);
RoundRectShape rr = new RoundRectShape(outerR, rect, outerR);// must checkout this constructor
ShapeDrawable drawable = new ShapeDrawable(rr);
drawable.getPaint().setColor(badgeColor);// change color of border
// use drawble now
For me it works as follow: (also for Android version > lollipop)
ImageView target = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.imageview);
GradientDrawable shapeRing = new GradientDrawable();
shapeRing.setShape(GradientDrawable.OVAL);
shapeRing.setColor(centerColor); // transparent
shapeRing.setStroke(stroke, strokeColor);
shapeRing.setSize(width, width);
target.setImageDrawable(ring);
From this example http://www.smartclient.com/smartgwt/showcase/#tree_databinding_local , I started to implement my own tree structure dynamically (TreeGrid). When I try to render it, I get this error (title).
public class ProjectTreeGridScreen extends Screen {
Tree tree;
#Override
protected void onLoad() {
super.onLoad();
TreeGrid treeGrid = new TreeGrid();
setPageTitle(Util.C.projectListTitle());
treeGrid.setWidth(600);
treeGrid.setHeight(400);
TreeGridField projectTree = new TreeGridField("ProjectName", "Project Tree");
TreeGridField projectPath = new TreeGridField("ProjectPath", "Complete path");
TreeGridField projectDescription = new TreeGridField("ProjectDescription", "Description");
TreeGridField projectInfo = new TreeGridField("ProjectInfo", "Information");
treeGrid.setFields(projectTree, projectPath, projectDescription, projectInfo);
treeGrid.setData(tree);
add(treeGrid);
}
#Override
protected void onInitUI() {
super.onInitUI();
tree = new Tree();
tree.setModelType(TreeModelType.PARENT);
tree.setNameProperty("ProjectName");
tree.setIdField("ProjectItem");
tree.setParentIdField("ProjectParent");
tree.setShowRoot(true);
populateProjects();
}
protected void populateProjects() {
Util.PROJECT_SVC.visibleProjects(
new ScreenLoadCallback<List<Project>>(this) {
#Override
public void preDisplay(final List<Project> result) {
tree.setData(ProjectTreeGridBuilder.fromRepositories(result));
}
});
}
}
what do you mean by "x"? Normally, If a component has been drawn on the window (implicit or explicit call to draw), you cannot change it's properties values. So the only possible solution is to recreate the object with the new X value each time it is changing.