#flyweight pattern js
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
What is Flyweight design pattern? | Complete Tutorial with Java Examples
Full Video Link https://youtu.be/w2JitxSYMhc Hello friends, a new #video on #flyweight #design #pattern with #Java #example is published on #codeonedigest #youtube channel. Ultimate guide to flyweight #java design pattern. #flyweightdesignpattern #javade
What is Flyweight Design Pattern? Flyweight pattern provides a mechanism by which you can avoid creating a large number of ‘expensive’ objects and instead reuse existing instances to represent new ones. Flyweight pattern is useful in optimising the creation of too many objects by reusing the common data. Flyweight pattern reduce the creation of objects by sharing data, decrease memory footprint…
View On WordPress
#flyweight design pattern#flyweight design pattern example#flyweight design pattern in hindi#flyweight design pattern in java#flyweight design pattern javascript#flyweight pattern#flyweight pattern explained#flyweight pattern in design patterns#flyweight pattern in uml#flyweight pattern java#flyweight pattern java example#flyweight pattern javascript#flyweight pattern js#flyweight pattern python#flyweight pattern real world example#flyweight pattern vs singleton#Java design patterns#Software Design Pattern#trending#viral
0 notes
Text
Juan Francisco Estrada Stops Dewayne Beamon in Mexico
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
By Hector Franco | Senior Writer and Editor
Follow @MrHector_Franco !function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id))(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs'); Follow @Frontproofmedia!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id))(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');
Published: August 25, 2019
HERMOSILLO, MEXICO – In front of a sellout crowd of 12,000 fans at the Centro de Usos Multiples arena in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, Juan Francisco Estrada (40-3, 27 KOs) further cemented his status as one of the best fighters in the world pound-for-pound.
Estrada made the first defense of his WBC Super Flyweight championship against North Carolina’s Dewayne Beamon (16-2-1, 11 KOs).
Beamon, 34, began boxing at the age of 26 and only turned professional in 2015. The North Carolina fighter would be fighting his seventh straight fight in Mexico when he stepped in the ring with Estrada as a considerable underdog.
The fight started quickly in Estrada’s favor as he scored two knockdowns in the second round as a result of left hooks during exchanges. Beamon was not seriously hurt from the knockdowns, but put himself in a position of needing a knockout to win.
The third round was all Estrada who landed a large volume of body punches on Beamon, leaving the impression that the fight was close to being over.
Beamon responded with two good rounds in the fifth and sixth. Beamon was able to outwork Estrada in those rounds as he acted uncharacteristically by taunting the North Carolina native.
Estrada made a comeback of his own in the seventh round landing numerous counter punches and leaving Beamon on unsteady legs.
The eighth and ninth rounds followed the same pattern as the seventh round leading to the fight being stopped as Estrada kept landing a barrage of punches with Beamon on the ropes.
The fight was stopped at the 0.51 mark of the ninth round.
Now that Estrada was successful in a hometown title defense of his WBC Super Flyweight championship, fans will look forward to seeing him back in the ring against elite competition.
(Featured Photo: Ed Mulholland/Matchroom Boxing)
0 notes
Text
80% off #From 0 to 1: Design Patterns – 24 That Matter – In Java – $10
An intensely practical, deeply thoughtful and quirky look at 24 Design Patterns. Instructors are ex-Google, Stanford.
All Levels, – Video: 11.5 hours, 63 lectures
Average rating 4.4/5 (4.4)
Course requirements:
There are no pre-requisites other than curiosity – about Design, about Patterns, about Life
Course description:
Prerequisites: Basic understanding of Java Taught by a Stanford-educated, ex-Googler, husband-wife team More than 50 real-world examples
This is an intensely practical, deeply thoughtful, and quirky take on 24 Design Patterns that matter.
Let’s parse that.
The course is intensely practical, bursting with examples – the more important patterns have 3-6 examples each. More than 50 real-world Java examples in total. The course is deeply thoughtful, and it will coax and cajole you into thinking about the irreducible core of an idea – in the context of other patterns, overall programming idioms and evolution in usage. The course is also quirky. The examples are irreverent. Lots of little touches: repetition, zooming out so we remember the big picture, active learning with plenty of quizzes. There’s also a peppy soundtrack, and art – all shown by studies to improve cognition and recall. Lastly, the patterns matter because each of these 24 is a canonical solution to recurring problems.
What’s Covered:
Decorator, Factory, Abstract Factory, Strategy, Singleton, Adapter, Facade, Template, Iterator, MVC, Observer, Command, Composite, Builder, Chain of Responsibility, Memento, Visitor, State, Flyweight, Bridge, Mediator, Prototype, Proxy, Double-Checked Locking and Dependency Injection. The only GoF pattern not covered is the Interpreter pattern, which we felt was too specialized and too far from today’s programming idiom; instead we include an increasingly important non-GoF pattern, Dependency Injection. Examples: Java Filestreams, Reflection, XML specification of UIs, Database handlers, Comparators, Document Auto-summarization, Python Iterator classes, Tables and Charts, Threading, Media players, Lambda functions, Menus, Undo/Redo functionality, Animations, SQL Query Builders, Exception handling, Activity Logging, Immutability of Strings, Remote Method Invocation, Serializable and Cloneable, networking. Dependency Inversion, Demeter’s Law, the Open-Closed Principle, loose and tight coupling, the differences between frameworks, libraries and design patterns.
Talk to us!
Mail us about anything – anything! – and we will always reply
Full details Identify situations that call for the use of a Design Pattern Understand each of 24 Design Patterns – when, how, why and why not to use them Distill the principles that lie behind the Design Patterns, and apply these in coding and in life, whether or not a Design Pattern is needed Spot programming idioms that are actually built on Design Patterns, but that are now hiding in plain sight
Full details Yep! Engineers – from street-smart coders to wise architects – ought to take this course. After this class, you’ll look at software design with a new pair of eyes. Yep! Product Managers ought to take this course – you will learn to understand the ‘how’ of Software Design without being constrained by it. Yep! Technology executives and investors who don’t write code ought to take this course – after this you will always have an intelligent point-of-view on software, and won’t find your eyes glazing over when its time to talk nitty-gritty Computer Science majors (undergrad or grad) – if you are among the folks that make ‘real world example Observer Pattern’ such a common search phrase on Google, this is precisely the place for you. Yep! Journalists, Wall Street types or IP lawyers seeking to understand recurring patterns of problems and solutions in technology. Yep! If you are prepping hard for software engineering interviews Nope! This course is not right for you if you are looking for a Programming 101 course. That’s not because there are pre-requisites, but simply because a Programming 101 course focuses on syntax, and on doing, while this course focuses on design, and on thinking.
Full details
Reviews:
“Awesome pictorial view and explanation of concepts” (Sanika joshi)
“I liked the way of explanation. It is very clear to me, it starts from the very basics, which is how I want to learn.” (Aswini Ayyagari)
“Same noisy music all the time and too much text to read in every slide.” (Phaneendra N)
About Instructor:
Loony Corn
Loonycorn is us, Janani Ravi, Vitthal Srinivasan, Swetha Kolalapudi and Navdeep Singh. Between the four of us, we have studied at Stanford, IIM Ahmedabad, the IITs and have spent years (decades, actually) working in tech, in the Bay Area, New York, Singapore and Bangalore. Janani: 7 years at Google (New York, Singapore); Studied at Stanford; also worked at Flipkart and Microsoft Vitthal: Also Google (Singapore) and studied at Stanford; Flipkart, Credit Suisse and INSEAD too Swetha: Early Flipkart employee, IIM Ahmedabad and IIT Madras alum Navdeep: longtime Flipkart employee too, and IIT Guwahati alum We think we might have hit upon a neat way of teaching complicated tech courses in a funny, practical, engaging way, which is why we are so excited to be here on Udemy! We hope you will try our offerings, and think you’ll like them
Instructor Other Courses:
Learn By Example: jQuery Learn By Example: Angular JS Learn By Example: Scala …………………………………………………………… Loony Corn coupons Development course coupon Udemy Development course coupon Software Engineering course coupon Udemy Software Engineering course coupon From 0 to 1: Design Patterns – 24 That Matter – In Java From 0 to 1: Design Patterns – 24 That Matter – In Java course coupon From 0 to 1: Design Patterns – 24 That Matter – In Java coupon coupons
The post 80% off #From 0 to 1: Design Patterns – 24 That Matter – In Java – $10 appeared first on Udemy Cupón.
from Udemy Cupón http://www.xpresslearn.com/udemy/coupon/80-off-from-0-to-1-design-patterns-24-that-matter-in-java-10/
from https://xpresslearn.wordpress.com/2017/03/14/80-off-from-0-to-1-design-patterns-24-that-matter-in-java-10/
0 notes
Text
What is Flyweight design pattern? | Complete Tutorial with Java Examples
Hello friends, a new #video on #flyweight #design #pattern with #Java #example is published on #codeonedigest #youtube channel. Ultimate guide to flyweight #java design pattern. #flyweightdesignpattern #javadesignpatterns #flyweightdesignpatterninjava
What is Flyweight Design Pattern? Flyweight pattern provides a mechanism by which you can avoid creating a large number of ‘expensive’ objects and instead reuse existing instances to represent new ones. Flyweight pattern is useful in optimising the creation of too many objects by reusing the common data. Flyweight pattern reduce the creation of objects by sharing data, decrease memory footprint…
View On WordPress
#flyweight design pattern#flyweight design pattern example#flyweight design pattern in hindi#flyweight design pattern in java#flyweight design pattern javascript#flyweight pattern#flyweight pattern explained#flyweight pattern in design patterns#flyweight pattern in uml#flyweight pattern java#flyweight pattern java example#flyweight pattern javascript#flyweight pattern js#flyweight pattern python#flyweight pattern real world example#flyweight pattern vs singleton#Java design patterns#Software Design Pattern#trending#viral
0 notes