Welcome to the Nanowar Of Steel's first GitHub project, and first ever example of a source-code song. The aim of this project is to support and enforce "True metal programming", that basically means: "write code so badly that only you can sing it".
You can find the source-code video in the link below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yup8gIXxWDU
Here is the Nanowar Of Steel official website.
Here is the Nanowar Of Steel Youtube Channel.
Some important notes:
- Beware of
Joey De Caio
, if set to null It may suddenly cancel the program execution with a NullPointerException. metal
variable is very important! If it is set to "false", it may trigger the Joey De Caio variable mentioned above.tizio
andfoo
are very close friends.pippo
isn'ttizio
's friend, but he's been flirting withfoo
.- In the comments "manage" should be renamed as "handle" (we all wish "manage" was the right word, but it's not).
- The constructor argument is used to control the number of executions. However, It may be completely useless if the execution is canceled by
Joey De Caio
. - "Write once, run anywhere" means lityerally anywhere (e.g. Hellfest).
songRefrain()
identifies itself as a void method.
Below you will find a super detailed guide to the program, of course written with ChatGPT.
This project contains a simple Java application that demonstrates the basic usage of loops, conditionals, and handling null-pointer exceptions. The main functionality includes printing "Hello World!" multiple times based on a user-defined parameter and intentionally introducing a bug to highlight error handling.
The HelloWorldMainLauncherClass
performs the following tasks:
- Initialization: Accepts an integer parameter (
foo
) that controls how many times "Hello World!" will be printed. - Song Refrain: Prints "Hello World!" twice—first using a
for
loop and then using awhile
loop. - Exception Handling: Contains a method
falseMethod()
that introduces aNullPointerException
by callinglength()
on anull
string to simulate error handling.
- Hello World printing: Outputs the message "Hello World!" a number of times based on the provided parameter.
- Loops: Demonstrates basic usage of
for
andwhile
loops in Java. - Exception simulation: Introduces a
NullPointerException
for demonstration purposes. - Basic Java structure: Showcases constructor usage, instance variables, and method definitions.
- Java Development Kit (JDK) 8 or higher.
- A Java IDE (like IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse, or NetBeans) or a command-line environment to compile and run the Java program.
To set up and run this project locally, follow these steps:
-
Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/NanowarOfSteel/HelloWorld.git
-
Navigate into the project directory:
cd HelloWorld
-
Compile the Java file:
javac HelloWorldMainLauncherClass.java
-
Run the program:
java HelloWorldMainLauncherClass
Once you run the program, you will see the following output:
Hello World Programmer Start
Hello World!
Hello World!
Hello World!
Hello World!
Program Finished!
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "String.length()" because "joeyDeCaio" is null
at HelloWorldMainLauncherClass.falseMethod(HelloWorldMainLauncherClass.java:35)
at HelloWorldMainLauncherClass.main(HelloWorldMainLauncherClass.java:27)
The number of times "Hello World!" is printed can be controlled by changing the parameter passed to the constructor of HelloWorldMainLauncherClass
. For example:
HelloWorldMainLauncherClass tizio = new HelloWorldMainLauncherClass(3);
This will print "Hello World!" three times.
-
Constructor: The constructor takes an integer
foo
that determines how many times the message will be printed.public HelloWorldMainLauncherClass(int foo) { super(); this.foo = foo; }
-
songRefrain() Method: The method contains two loops—
for
andwhile
—both of which print "Hello World!" the number of times specified byfoo
.public void songRefrain() { for (int i = 0; i < foo; i++) { System.out.println("Hello World!"); } int pippo = 0; while (pippo < foo) { System.out.println("Hello World!"); pippo++; } }
-
falseMethod() Method: This method deliberately introduces a bug by attempting to call
length()
on anull
string.public void falseMethod() { boolean metal = false; if (metal == false) { String joeyDeCaio = null; joeyDeCaio.length(); } }
-
Bug introduction: The purpose of
falseMethod()
is to demonstrate a scenario where an exception is thrown. TheNullPointerException
is handled by the JVM, but no explicit exception handling is implemented in this case. -
Extending the Program: You can extend the program by adding more features like exception handling, more complex message outputs, or additional loops and conditionals.
This repository contains a Dockerfile that automates the process of building and running a Java application using Maven. The Docker image is built in two stages: the first stage builds the application with Maven, and the second stage runs the application with a minimal OpenJDK 17 image.
Before building and running the Docker image, make sure you have the following installed:
- Docker: Install Docker
- Maven: (Optional) Maven is only needed locally for building the project if you're not using the Docker build.
First, clone the repository containing the project and the Dockerfile to your local machine:
git clone <your-repository-url>
cd <your-repository-directory>
You can build the Docker image using the following command. Make sure you're in the root directory of the project, where the Dockerfile is located:
docker build -t my-java-app .
This command will:
- Use an official Maven image to build the application.
- Package the application into a JAR file.
- Use a slim OpenJDK 17 image to run the resulting application.
After the build is complete, you can run the Docker container using:
docker run -p 8080:8080 my-java-app
This will start the application and expose it on port 8080
. You can adjust the port if necessary.
Once the container is running, the application should be available at http://localhost:8080
. This assumes your application is set to listen on port 8080
. You can modify the port mapping as needed.
If the application requires specific environment variables or configuration, you can pass them at runtime like so:
docker run -p 8080:8080 -e ENV_VAR_NAME=value my-java-app
To stop the running container, you can use:
docker ps # Find the container ID
docker stop <container_id>
You can also remove the container and image once you're done:
docker rm <container_id> # Remove the container
docker rmi my-java-app # Remove the image
- Multi-stage build: The Dockerfile uses a multi-stage build to ensure the final image is small and optimized for running the application. The first stage uses the Maven image to build the application, and the second stage uses a slim JDK image to run it.
- JAR file location: The final JAR file is copied from the
/target
directory in the Maven build stage to the working directory in the runtime stage (/app
).
-
Issue: The application isn't starting or doesn't work as expected.
- Solution: Check the logs for any error messages by running:
docker logs <container_id>
- Solution: Check the logs for any error messages by running:
-
Issue: Docker build fails due to missing dependencies.
- Solution: Make sure all necessary dependencies are listed in your
pom.xml
file, and try runningmvn clean install
locally to check for issues before attempting the Docker build.
- Solution: Make sure all necessary dependencies are listed in your
This project is licensed under the IronAvantgarde Publishing & Napalm Records License - see the Napalm Records Website for more details.
Feel free to fork this repository, submit issues, or open pull requests if you'd like to improve this code. Contributions are always welcome!
Do you want some buggy, personalized and singable code by Nanowar Of Steel? Please contact us here.