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  1. Microsoft Excel and Java

    For those who are looking for a Java library which can read/write to Microsoft's spreadsheet formats (.xls, and the newer .xlsx), I recently stumbled upon a library called the Apache POI Project. It's not particularly a new project, but it is still under active development and maintained. As an added bonus, Apache POI also supports word documents, power point presentations, and other document formats.

    To me, one of the main benefits of Apache POI is the support for Microsoft Office ...

    Updated June 24th, 2011 at 12:40 AM by helloworld922

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  2. The Groovy in Java

    Although scripting languages seem like dime a dozen, there is always that learning curve to become familiar (let alone an expert) with a new language. For those who are more familiar with java - enter groovy. Groovy is a powerful higher level language based upon java, making certain tasks trivial to accomplish relative to the low level java equivalent. The power of groovy comes into play in its ability to plug-into java, and be plugged into from java. Groovy can access class files and libraries, ...

    Updated June 23rd, 2011 at 09:07 AM by copeg

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    Scripting
  3. Minitip #2: Determining if a key is being pressed [WINDOWS SPECIFIC]

    Sometimes it's valuable to determine if a certain key is being pressed. This is especially valuable if you have multiple Swing components and you don't want to mess with keeping track of boolean flags across different objects, but is absolutely necessary if you're trying to get keypresses which are not received by any of your Swing components.

    In the forums, I've recommended writing JNI code which would allow the Java code to poll the hardware for key states, but never actually got ...

    Updated June 4th, 2011 at 02:08 AM by helloworld922

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