- Sort Score
- Result 10 results
- Languages All
Results 461 - 470 of 1,138 for lire (0.02 sec)
-
android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ForwardingListIterator.java
* default} methods. Specifically, it forwards calls only for methods that existed <a * href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/ListIterator.html">before {@code * default} methods were introduced</a>. For newer methods, like {@code forEachRemaining}, it * inherits their default implementations. When those implementations invoke methods, they invoke * methods on the {@code ForwardingListIterator}. * * @author Mike Bostock * @since 2.0 */
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Dec 22 03:38:46 UTC 2024 - 2.5K bytes - Viewed (0) -
futures/failureaccess/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/internal/InternalFutureFailureAccess.java
* <li>{@code get()} must not block, and it must throw an {@code ExecutionException} with the * return value of this method as its cause * </ul> * * <p>This method is {@code protected} so that classes like {@code * com.google.common.util.concurrent.SettableFuture} do not expose it to their users as an * instance method. In the unlikely event that you need to call this method, call {@link
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Jan 18 02:54:30 UTC 2025 - 2.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ForwardingConcurrentMap.java
* href="https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ConcurrentMap.html">before * {@code default} methods were introduced</a>. For newer methods, like {@code forEach}, it inherits * their default implementations. When those implementations invoke methods, they invoke methods on * the {@code ForwardingConcurrentMap}. * * @author Charles Fry * @since 2.0 */
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Tue Feb 18 16:58:16 UTC 2025 - 2.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/query-param-models.md
If a client tries to send some **extra** data in the **query parameters**, they will receive an **error** response. For example, if the client tries to send a `tool` query parameter with a value of `plumbus`, like: ```http https://example.com/items/?limit=10&tool=plumbus ``` They will receive an **error** response telling them that the query parameter `tool` is not allowed: ```json { "detail": [ {Registered: Sun Sep 07 07:19:17 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Aug 31 09:15:41 UTC 2025 - 2.2K bytes - Viewed (0) -
helm-releases/minio-3.0.0.tgz
here. storageClass: "" VolumeName: "" accessMode: ReadWriteOnce size: 500Gi ## If subPath is set mount a sub folder of a volume instead of the root of the volume. ## This is especially handy for volume plugins that don't natively support sub mounting (like glusterfs). ## subPath: "" ## Expose the MinIO service to be accessed from outside the cluster (LoadBalancer service). ## or access it from within the cluster (ClusterIP service). Set the service type and the port to serve it. ## ref: http://kuber...
Registered: Sun Sep 07 19:28:11 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Sep 02 01:47:43 UTC 2021 - 13.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/main/java/org/codelibs/fess/mylasta/direction/sponsor/FessUserTimeZoneProcessProvider.java
return OptionalObject.empty(); } @Override public TimeZone getRequestedTimeZone(final RequestManager requestManager) { // not null return centralTimeZone; // you can change it if you like } @Override public String toString() { final StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); sb.append(DfTypeUtil.toClassTitle(this));
Registered: Thu Sep 04 12:52:25 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Jul 17 08:28:31 UTC 2025 - 2.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/orchestration/kubernetes/README.md
MinIO is a high performance distributed object storage server, designed for large-scale private cloud infrastructure. MinIO is designed in a cloud-native manner to scale sustainably in multi-tenant environments. Orchestration platforms like Kubernetes provide perfect cloud-native environment to deploy and scale MinIO. ## MinIO Deployment on Kubernetes There are multiple options to deploy MinIO on Kubernetes:
Registered: Sun Sep 07 19:28:11 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Tue Aug 12 18:20:36 UTC 2025 - 1.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/Callback.kt
* response body is [closed][ResponseBody]. The recipient of the callback may consume the response * body on another thread. * * Note that transport-layer success (receiving a HTTP response code, headers and body) does not * necessarily indicate application-layer success: `response` may still indicate an unhappy HTTP * response code like 404 or 500. */
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 27 13:39:56 UTC 2024 - 1.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava-testlib/src/com/google/common/testing/SloppyTearDown.java
* should not fail a test when it does. (The behavior of a {@code TearDown} that throws an exception * varies; see its documentation for details.) Use it just like a {@code TearDown}, except override * {@link #sloppyTearDown()} instead. * * @author Luiz-Otavio Zorzella * @since 10.0 */ @GwtCompatible @NullMarked public abstract class SloppyTearDown implements TearDown {Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Dec 21 14:50:24 UTC 2024 - 1.6K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava-gwt/src/com/google/common/base/Base.gwt.xml
Java package; see https://groups.google.com/g/google-web-toolkit-contributors/c/CqYH59Dt_rQ/m/uVGW1QdUsXUJ for details. The summary is that it ignores one file in favor of the other. util.concurrent, like nearly all our packages, has two .gwt.xml files: one for prod and one for tests. However, unlike our other packages, as of this writing it has test supersource but no prod supersource.Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Jul 19 16:02:36 UTC 2024 - 1.4K bytes - Viewed (0)