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From: Arne Vajhøj on 17 Mar 2010 19:47 On 17-03-2010 14:53, Roedy Green wrote: > On Wed, 17 Mar 2010 13:37:51 -0400, Tony Yan<noreply(a)example.net> > wrote, quoted or indirectly quoted someone who said : >> So when do people start using EDT to refer to >> "Event_dispatching_thread"? > > I think the term came into common use when Swing first came out. AWT > attempted to be thread safe without programmer awareness. EDT is an AWT concept. Arne
From: Arne Vajhøj on 17 Mar 2010 19:47 On 17-03-2010 19:45, Arne Vajh�j wrote: > On 17-03-2010 13:37, Tony Yan wrote: >> On 3/17/2010 2:02 AM, Roedy Green wrote: >>> On Tue, 16 Mar 2010 18:20:07 -0400, Tony Yan<noreply(a)example.net> >>> wrote, quoted or indirectly quoted someone who said : >>> >>>> Knute, what is EDT? >>> >>> Oh dear. You absolutely have to understand the EDT to use Swing. >>> >>> See http://mindprod.com/jgloss/swing.html >>> and follow the links about threads. >> >> So when do people start using EDT to refer to >> "Event_dispatching_thread"? > > Probably around 1995. > >> And also SSH for "Spring, Struct, Hibernate"? > > Not yet. And most likely never ! Arne
From: Tony Yan on 17 Mar 2010 19:50 > First, it's Event Dispatch Thread, with no under-bars. As in three > normal English words in a normal English language sentence. People who > write English don't_normally_go_around_putting_a_lot_of_under-bars in > their sentences. Sorry about that. It's like that because I copied it directly from the wiki link. > Second, it's been called the EDT by Sun for a long time, so I guess you > haven't been paying attention. For example here's some release notes by > Sun for JDK 1.5 that use the acronym EDT. Note these release notes are > three years old: > > http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/ReleaseNotes.html Oh, I didn't read documents like release notes. So what part of such documents do you think most useful? Thanks! Tony
From: Tony Yan on 17 Mar 2010 19:53 > >> And also SSH for "Spring, Struct, Hibernate"? > > Not yet. Really? I've seen that use before, at least at some forums in Chinese. Tony
From: Lew on 17 Mar 2010 23:33 markspace wrote: > For example here's some release notes by > Sun for JDK 1.5 that use the acronym EDT. Note these release notes are > three years old: > > http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/ReleaseNotes.html That site contains release notes for all subreleases of Java 5. Java 5 first appeared in September of '04. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_version_history> There's no reason to prefer Java 5 over Java 6, though as a practical matter many (usually expensive) platforms are still not up to the most recent Java. If forced back to Java 5, there's no real reason to lament the lack of Java 6 either. Now to have to go back to 1.4, that's a different story! It's hard to know when the acronym "EDT" first became widely used, but I'd guess about five minutes after the term "event dispatch thread" was promulgated. -- Lew
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