Then you can provide the code via some other appropriate means. For example, you can put it in a Github repository. Then you can more usefully quote excerpts in email, because the people who want to help you will be able to retrieve the necessary context.
--- A. Soroka The University of Virginia Library > On Sep 30, 2016, at 9:19 AM, neha gupta <neha.bang...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Actually their are many call from other classes thats why it is useless to > copy all the code and paste here. > I tried to type the code so that you understand it. I am sorry for any > inconvenience. > > > On Fri, Sep 30, 2016 at 5:06 AM, Chris Dollin <chris.dol...@epimorphics.com> > wrote: > >> On 30/09/16 12:08, neha gupta wrote: >> >>> Hello this does not sum the newly entered goals with the one already saved >>> in my owl file. Every time I enter new goal (integer value), new data is >>> saved and does not added(sum) with previously entered values. >>> >> >> You are not showing us the code you are using. >> >> Really, you're not. >> >>> >>> * int goalsss = soln.getLiteral("goal").getInt() ; //return integer >> value* >>> *int totalgoals=goalsss+totalgoals; // total goals initial value is 0* >>> >>> *Literal p = model.createTypedLiteral(totalgoals);* >>> * team.setPropertyValue(goals, p);// here goals is property name* >>> >> >> There are these asterisks, which you probably meant as >> highlighting. Don't do that. We want to be able to paste >> the code you wrote, which should be the same as the code you >> sent, into our local editors/IDEs, and tinker with it. >> The line >> >> *int totalgoals=goalsss+totalgoals; // total goals initial value >> is 0* >> >> isn't legal even if you drop the * and pretend it's in the middle >> of a function, and >> >> team.setPropertyValue(goals, p);// here goals is property name* >> >> isn't legal because `team` isn't declared yet. >> >> So if we can't see the code you wrote, we can't tell >> whether it's right or not. >> >> team.setPropertyValue(goals, p);// here goals is property name >> >> setPropertyValue is /documented/ as deleting any previous value >> for that property and, if it didn't do that, all sorts of other >> things wouldn't work. I think it's more likely that you're >> not applying it to the right object -- but since you /don't >> show your code/ and /don't show your data/, how are we to tell? >> >> Chris >> >> >> >>