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Top Forums Programming What is the standard way to instantiate a Java Bean? Post 302521341 by Anna Hussie on Wednesday 11th of May 2011 02:25:22 AM
Old 05-11-2011
What is the standard way to instantiate a Java Bean?

We can treat a Java Bean as a common Java object, and instantiate it by Java key word - new. But Java Bean is different from common Java object. So what is the standard way to instantiate a Java Bean?
 
jinfo(1)						      General Commands Manual							  jinfo(1)

NAME
jinfo - configuration info SYNOPSIS
jinfo [ option ] pid jinfo [ option ] executable core jinfo [ option ] [ server-id@ ] remote-hostname-or-IP PARAMETERS
Options are mutually exclusive. Option, if used, should follow immediately after the command name. See OPTIONS below. pid process id for which the configuration info is to be printed. The process must be a Java process. To get a list of Java pro- cesses running on a machine, jps many be used. executable Java executable from which the core dump was produced. core core file for which the configuration info is to be printed. remote-hostname-or-IP remote debug server's (see jsadebugd) hostname or IP address. server-id optional unique id, if multiple debug servers are running on the same remote host. DESCRIPTION
jinfo prints Java configuration information for a given Java process or core file or a remote debug server. Configuration information includes Java System properties and Java virtual machine command line flags. NOTE - This utility is unsupported and may or may not be available in future versions of the J2SE SDK. jinfo is not currently available on Windows platforms or on the Linux Itanium platform. OPTIONS
<no option> prints both command line flags as well as System properties name, value pairs -flags prints command line flags as name, value pairs -sysprops prints JavaSystem properties as name, value pairs -h prints a help message -help prints a help message SEE ALSO
jps(1) jsadebugd(1) 13 June 2004 jinfo(1)
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