You must know how to sweet talk Google. It's rarely that forthcoming 
with me. I'm going to try to figure out how to increase the heap size 
and see if that works. But is there some way that a compiler can get 
into an infinite loop?

Chas.

Viktor Klang wrote:
> In my bag of knowledge :) (google)
> 
> Viktor,
> Rogue Software Architect
> 
> 20 mar 2009 kl. 20.24 "Charles F. Munat" <[email protected]> skrev:
> 
>> Ooooh. That's really good to know. Where did you find that?
>>
>> Chas.
>>
>> Viktor Klang wrote:
>>> If you need the Class:
>>>
>>> org.
>>> hibernate.
>>> proxy.HibernateProxyHelper.getClassWithoutInitializingProxy(obj)
>>>
>>> On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 12:08 PM, Timothy Perrett
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>    Chas,
>>>
>>>    If you want the object to tell you what it is can you not use some
>>>    form of reflection?
>>>
>>>    Tim
>>>
>>>
>>>    On 20/03/2009 11:03, "Viktor Klang" <[email protected]
>>>    <http://[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>        On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 11:43 AM, Charles F. Munat
>>>        <[email protected] <http://[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>            Not really. What I want to do is have the object tell me
>>>            what it is.
>>>            Unless I'm really misunderstanding isInstanceOf, I have to
>>>            iterate
>>>            through all the possibilities. Plus, my brain is probably
>>>            just fried,
>>>            but I'm not seeing how to use it in a match, so I'm having
>>>            to run
>>>            through a bunch of if statements. I know there's a better
>>>            way. Just
>>>            can't see it at 3:45 AM.
>>>
>>>
>>>        But you wrote: ". But then as I'm looping through them, I want
>>>        to find out
>>>        what type of event they really are."
>>>
>>>        so when you're looping through them, if you're doing
>>>        pattern-matching you could probably just:
>>>
>>>        case x : MySubEvent => blah(x)
>>>        case y : MyOtherSubEvent => blugh(y)
>>>        case _ => ohSnap()!
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>            Chas.
>>>
>>>            Viktor Klang wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Mar 20, 2009 at 9:37 AM, Charles F. Munat
>>>            <[email protected] <http://[email protected]>
>>>> <mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]%3e>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>     I have a BaseEvent object from which various other
>>>            events (e.g. Seminar)
>>>>     inherit. I want to pull them all out in a query, so
>>>            they come out as
>>>>     BaseEvents. But then as I'm looping through them, I
>>>            want to find out
>>>>     what type of event they really are. There is an
>>>            "event_type" column in
>>>>     the database, but I don't know how to get at that.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Don't fancy "isInstanceOf"?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>     Anyone know offhand how to get the class of the
>>>            objects? This is in Lift
>>>>     with JPA/Hibernate.
>>>>
>>>>     Thanks,
>>>>     Chas.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Viktor Klang
>>>> Senior Systems Analyst
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --  
>>> Viktor Klang
>>> Senior Systems Analyst
>>>
> 
> > 

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