|
The URL of the site is:
https://www.lowes.com/pd/7-16-CAT-PS2-10-OSB-Sheathing-Application-as-4-x-8/50382768[^]
The information that I am trying to obtain is the price. Using Chrome's Inspect view, I was able to drill down to the price element in question. The Xpath of that element looks like:
/html/body/div[3]/section/div/div[7]/div[1]/div[2]/div[1]/span/div[1] I really wanted to see that in some "tree" form, so I walked the HTML backward from that element back to the top. That looks like:
<html>
<body>
<div id="app">
<section role="main" id="main" class="app__Container-PDP__sc-9tcy1n-0 bglOQr">
<div class="style__ProductDetailsWrapper-PDP__sc-4buzay-0 fwCYaB">
<div class="style__Wrapper-PDP__sc-1a0l1ro-1 hiRMxh product-info">
<div class="style__ProductDescDeskWrapper-PDP__sc-1a0l1ro-6 fpGRzR">
<div class="style__ProductTitleWrapper-PDP__sc-1a0l1ro-11 fUmbqY">
<div tabindex="0" class="styles__PriceWrapper-sc-1c3t51u-0 ZQLLV priceWrapper">
<span class="finalPrice">
<div class="sc-hGPBjI eomYbK">$30.65 </div> I was able to throw some Java code together (read: ugly) to drill down to that level but got stopped at the next-to-last DIV element.
...
Elements elements = element.getElementsByAttributeValue("class", "style__ProductTitleWrapper-PDP__sc-1a0l1ro-11 fUmbqY"); This returns a 1-item collection as it should. If I then follow that with:
Element element = elements.get(0);
elements = element.getElementsByAttributeValue("class", "styles__PriceWrapper-sc-1c3t51u-0 ZQLLV priceWrapper"); It returns an empty collection. I assume this is because no such class could be found. However I can plainly see that DIV element in the Inspect view.
I can get the sibling elements to the one in question. I even tried searching for getElementsByAttributeValue("tabindex", "0") , and while it correctly found 2 elements, neither are the one I want.
Any idea(s) as to what I'm missing (or not understanding)?
Thanks.
DC
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him." - James D. Miles
modified 20-Jan-22 16:23pm.
|
|
|
|
|
Did you try to skip the random in the middle?
Go straight for “class”, “finalPrice”
The extract the nested text node to skip the last div
|
|
|
|
|
Make a program that takes n numbers and computes the sum of
positive numbers. If the entered number is 0, the program will
terminate
|
|
|
|
|
Sorry, this site does not provide code to order. If you do not understand how to write a simple Java sample then take a look at Java Tutorials Learning Paths[^].
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are many excellent books that you could use to learn Java. Alternatively, you could look at courses and training videos on places like Pluralsight, Udemy and so on.
|
|
|
|
|
Use the link in my message above yours. It is a well presented tutorial which takes you from the basics right through to many of the advanced concepts.
|
|
|
|
|
import java.io.*;
public class SumOfPositive{
public static void main(String args[])throws Exception{
int sum=0;
System.out.println("Enter how many you need to add");
BufferedReader br=new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
int n=br.readLine();
for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
{
if(a[i])="=0)
" system.exit(0);
="" if(a[i]="">0)
sum=sum+a[i];
}
System.out.println("Sum of positive numbers:"+sum);
}
}
|
|
|
|
|
i am using apache tomcat and am having trouble connecting my external style sheet to my jsp page.
i have tried google,stack overflow and can't find a solution to my problem.
my repository URL:<a href="https://github.com/jonathanIckovich/divina-popina.git">GitHub - jonathanIckovich/divina-popina</a>[<a href="https://github.com/jonathanIckovich/divina-popina.git" target="_blank" title="New Window">^</a>]
|
|
|
|
|
import java.util.Scanner;
public class Main
{
public static void main(String[] args) {
Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("Enter the size of the array");
int n = sc.nextInt();
int arr[]=new int[n];
System.out.println("Enter the elements of the array");
for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
{
arr[i]=sc.nextInt();
}
DivArray(arr,0,arr.length-1);
for(int z:arr)
{
System.out.print(z+" ");
}
}
static void DivArray(int arr[],int low,int high)
{
if(low<high)
{
int mid=(low+high)/2;
DivArray(arr,low,mid);
DivArray(arr,mid+1,high);
MergeSort(arr,low,mid,high);
}
}
static void MergeSort(int arr[],int low,int mid,int high)
{
int i = low;
int k = low;
int j = mid+1;
int dummy[]=new int[arr.length];
while(i<=mid && j<=high)
{
if(arr[i]<arr[j])
{
dummy[k]=arr[i];
k++;
i++;
}else{
dummy[k]=arr[j];
k++;
j++;
}
}
while(i<=mid)
{
dummy[k]=arr[i];
k++;
i++;
}
while(j<=high)
{
dummy[k]=arr[j];
k++;
j++;
}
for(int q=0;q<arr.length;q++)
{
arr[q]=dummy[q];
}
}
}
OUTPUT:
Enter the size of the array
8
Enter the elements of the array
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
|
|
|
|
|
You need to use the debugger to find out exactly what is happening to your array in the DivArray and MergeSort methods.
|
|
|
|
|
import java.util.Scanner;
public class Main
{
public static void main(String[] args) {
Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.println("Enter the size of the array");
int n = sc.nextInt();
int arr[]=new int[n];
System.out.println("Enter the elements of the array");
for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
{
arr[i]=sc.nextInt();
}
DivArray(arr,0,arr.length-1);
for(int z:arr)
{
System.out.print(z+" ");
}
}
static void DivArray(int arr[],int low,int high)
{
if(low<high)
{
int mid=(low+high)/2;
DivArray(arr,low,mid);
DivArray(arr,mid+1,high);
MergeSort(arr,low,mid,high);
}
}
static void MergeSort(int arr[],int low,int mid,int high)
{
int i = low;
int k = low;
int j = mid+1;
int dummy[]=new int[arr.length];
while(i<=mid && j<=high)
{
if(arr[i]<arr[j])
{
dummy[k]=arr[i];
k++;
i++;
}else{
dummy[k]=arr[j];
k++;
j++;
}
}
while(i<=mid)
{
dummy[k]=arr[i];
k++;
i++;
}
while(j<=high)
{
dummy[k]=arr[j];
k++;
j++;
}
for(int q=0;q<arr.length;q++)
{
arr[q]=dummy[q];
}
}
}
OUTPUT:
Enter the size of the array
8
Enter the elements of the array
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
modified 3-Dec-21 4:28am.
|
|
|
|
|
Move the code the displays the sorted array out of the MergeSort method, and into your Main method, after the call to DivArray .
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
|
|
|
|
|
I am trying to extract date from a String (Line), to do a Date conversion, but my String concatenation (#1) gives incorrect result.
Adding a blank ("") at the start (#2) gives the correct result.
Why is this? Where does the "105" come from?
System.out.println("Line= " + Line);
char ch1 = Line.charAt(0), ch2 = Line.charAt(1);
char ch4 = Line.charAt(3), ch5 = Line.charAt(4);
char ch7 = Line.charAt(6), ch8 = Line.charAt(7),
ch9 = Line.charAt(8), ch10 = Line.charAt(9) ;
System.out.println("Text date= " + ch1 + ch2 + '/' + ch4 + ch5 + '/' +
ch7+ ch8+ch9+ch10);
String sDate1= ch1 + ch2 + "/" + ch4 + ch5 + '/' +
ch7+ ch8+ch9+ch10;
System.out.println("Not correct: sDate1= " + sDate1);
String sDate2= "" + ch1 + ch2 + "/" + ch4 + ch5 + '/' +
ch7+ ch8+ch9+ch10;
System.out.println("Correct: sDate2= " + sDate2);
Output:
Line= 09/12/2021
Text date= 09/12/2021
Not correct: sDate1= 105/12/2021
Correct: sDate2= 09/12/2021
|
|
|
|
|
It "thinks" you're doing "addition", then string concatenation in the first instance (0x30 + 0x39 == 105 == char(0) + char(9)); and all string concats in the second; due to the leading quote.
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
|
|
|
|
|
Er, what exactly are you trying to do?
|
|
|
|
|
Im trying to extract the date from the string, then do a date conversion, but Im not able to extract the date correctly.
UPDATE:
Ok, I resolved this myself using the java substring function instead of trying to extract one character at a time:
String sTest = "09/21/2021 and other junk on the line";
System.out.println("sTest= " + sTest);
String sDate = sTest.substring(0, 10);
System.out.println("sDate= " + sDate);
Date date1=new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy").parse(sDate);
System.out.println(sDate +"\t"+date1);
now gives the expected result:
sTest= 09/21/2021 and other junk on the line
sDate= 09/21/2021
09/21/2021 Tue Sep 21 00:00:00 EDT 2021
modified 28-Nov-21 19:11pm.
|
|
|
|
|
Can someone help with this task?
Reuse the included class CA in order to provide graphical interface: instead of printing X's and blanks on the screen, black and white cells are drawn on the canvas depending on the CA's state. Your SwingCA class should accept a single argument representing a Wolfram's rule (handle exceptions!) and generate 600 generations each of size 400. For example, if you run java SwingCA 30 the image you get should resemble:
https://media.cheggcdn.com/media/59e/59e3b9d6-7ede-413d-a953-78cbb74e925b/phpYbnEbr[^]
REUSE THIS CLASS:
-----------------------------------------
public class CA {
// Data Members
private boolean[] cell;
private int size;
private int rule;
private boolean[] ttable;
// Constructor
public CA(int size, int rule) {
this.rule = rule;
this.size = size;
// Initialize Truth Table
ttable = new boolean[8];
for (int i = 0; i < ttable.length; i++) {
ttable[i] = (rule & 0x1) == 1? true: false;
rule >>= 1;
}
// Create Cells
cell = new boolean[size];
// Set Middle Cell To 1
cell[size / 2] = true;
}
// Compute And Return Next State
public boolean[] getState() {
// Array To Hold New State
boolean[] newCell = new boolean[size];
for (int i = 1; i < size - 1; i++) {
// Get Left Current And Right Values
int left = cell[i - 1]? 1 : 0;
int cur = cell[i] ? 1 : 0;
int right = cell[i + 1]? 1 : 0;
// Convert It To Decimal And Use It As Index For Rule Array
int ruleIdx = 4 * left + 2 * cur + 1 * right;
// Set New Cell Value To Rule TT Value
newCell[i] = ttable[ruleIdx];
}
// Update Cell Array
cell = newCell;
// Return New State
return cell;
}
}
|
|
|
|
|
Suave65 wrote: Can someone help with this task? Help in what way?
|
|
|
|
|
Can you send a BufferedImage thought a socket by changing it somehow because it is not Serializable , and then on client side using WritableImage to show it inside a ImageView ? I am not trying to send an image file but a screenshot made using the following code which I can in the end use it inside ImageView :
Robot robot = new Robot();
BufferedImage imageB = robot.createScreenCapture(screenRectangle);
WritableImage imageW = SwingFXUtils.toFXImage(imageB, null);
ImageView.setImage(imageW);
|
|
|
|
|
Valentinor wrote: Can you send a BufferedImage thought a socket
No.
That class has a specific purpose and what you are doing has nothing to do with that.
The class is used to create (and manipulate) an image. The image, not the class is what you will be sending.
And as a suggestion if you have never used sockets before then I suggest that you experiment with something besides an image for the first time. Like a simple string.
|
|
|
|
|
jschell wrote: And as a suggestion if you have never used sockets before then I suggest that you experiment with something besides an image for the first time. Like a simple string.
What is with that suggestion and the relation with what I asked?
jschell wrote: That class has a specific purpose and what you are doing has nothing to do with that.
I did said the following, I wasn't trying to send it straight, because I knew you can't... by changing it somehow because it is not Serializable
Your comment wasn't useful in the least, it was actually the opposite, it didn't contained anything useful, only a comment to try and look smart and make the other person feel stupid. Nowhere did I said I didn't worked with sockets before, yet you added that last part... You should have left it at "No." and it would have been better, and yet still wrong because you can do something there and change it into bytes and you can still send it, not that is fast, but you can do it. And why didn't you quoted the whole think I said and stopped at that? It's like those manipulations where you get only that you need, not the whole truth.
Yeah this is a harsh reply but in the future a more constructive answer is better if not none at all is even better, we want to learn from one another not to just make ourself look smart and not truly help other, or help them with a riddle that it is going to take them even farther from the solution.
|
|
|
|
|
Valentinor wrote: Your comment wasn't useful in the least, it was actually the opposite,
You specifically said the following
"Can you send a BufferedImage thought a socket by changing it somehow because it is not Serializable,"
Questions like this have been asked for decades and answered by me when the person doesn't actually understand what a socket is doing. Note that I am not saying that someone hasn't used a socket but rather than they do not know what it is doing.
If you had said "how do I send an image" then that would have been different. But you specifically mentioned that class and that it is Serializable. So I answered that specific question.
Valentinor wrote: and you can still send it, not that is fast,
I didn't say anything at all about performance.
Valentinor wrote: Yeah this is a harsh reply but in the future a more constructive answer is better
You asked a specific question by making a specific statement. I quoted exactly that and addressed specifically that. Perhaps you can ask a more general question in the future. I will note that the following in google seems to address your general question however.
example java send image by socket
Valentinor wrote: or help them with a riddle that it is going to take them even farther from the solution.
The forum is intended to provide answers to people that ask technical questions. It is not a forum on teaching people how to ask questions on forums.
|
|
|
|
|
Both BufferedImage and WriteableImage utilize (internal) pixel arrays. You "unload" the BufferedImage to a pixel array, transmit it as a stream, then load it into the WriteableImage.
There are no explicit "serialize / deserialize" methods; you do it yourself.
The "interface" is pixel arrays (in one form or another); that's what you have to remember.
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
|
|
|
|
|
BufferedImage already "unpacked" an image for display/usage usage: the raster of pixels, the color model and such. The only simple serialization is to write the image to some buffer/file, and send those (generally much smaller and faster) bytes.
To stress the point: serializing for every image type, indexed color or not, packed RGB and so on, is some effort, requiring some unit tests checking internals of BufferedImage.
|
|
|
|