Helpful trick I thought I'd share on this old thread.
You can see how much memory is being used and adjust things accordingly using the Show memory indicator
setting.
It shows up in the lower right of the window.
I once have this problem too. My solution is to work around this problem by kill the application which is using the port. Here is a article to teach us how to check which application is using which port, find it and kill/close it.
Use Maven and use the maven-compiler-plugin to explicitly call the actual correct version JDK javac.exe command, because Maven could be running any version; this also catches the really stupid long standing bug in javac that does not spot runtime breaking class version jars and missing classes/methods/properties when compiling for earlier java versions! This later part could have easily been fixed in Java 1.5+ by adding versioning attributes to new classes, methods, and properties, or separate compiler versioning data, so is a quite stupid oversight by Sun and Oracle.
I'm on Windows 7 64 bit and couldn't understand if I can manually enable JRE8 64 bit for Chrome. Turned out that my problem was that Java plugin DLL is 64 bit which wouldn't work in 32 bit Chrome. Therefore you need to install x86 version of JRE. Below are Windows registry settings you need to create
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2]
"Description"="Oracle® Next Generation Java™ Plug-In"
"GeckoVersion"="1.9"
"Path"="C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Java\\jre8\\bin\\plugin2\\npjp2.dll"
"ProductName"="Oracle® Java™ Plug-In"
"Vendor"="Oracle Corp."
"Version"="1.8.0"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes]
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;jpi-version=1.8.0]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.1]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.1]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.2]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.1.3]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.2]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.2.1]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.3]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.3.1]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.4]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.1]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.4.2]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.5]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.6]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.7]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-applet;version=1.8]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-vm]
"Description"="Java™ Virtual Machine"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin,version=11.0.2\MimeTypes\application/x-java-vm-npruntime]
"Description"="Java™ Applet"
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Wow6432Node\MozillaPlugins\@java.com/JavaPlugin]
"Description"="Oracle® Next Generation Java™ Plug-In"
"GeckoVersion"="1.9"
"ProductName"="Oracle® Java™ Plug-In"
"Vendor"="Oracle Corp."
"Version"="160_29"
"Path"="C:\\Program Files\\Java\\jre8\\bin\\plugin2\\npjp2.dll"
Try using this command : (this will stop tomcat servlet this really helps)
sudo service tomcat7 stop
or
sudo tomcat7 restart (if you need a restart)
I must question whether you need, specifically, an editor capable of handling HTML5. It's still HTML. There are changes, yes, but not all that much if you are already comfortable with HTML4. I suspect that most any editor capable of handling HTML should be able to handle HTML5 as well.
Console.ReadLine();
or
Console.ReadKey();
ReadLine()
waits for ?, ReadKey()
waits for any key (except for modifier keys).
Edit: stole the key symbol from Darin.
With Bootstrap 3, you can use the 'text-center' styling attribute.
<div class="col-md-3 text-center">
<button id="button" name="button" class="btn btn-primary">Press Me!</button>
</div>
@angular/material
has changed its folder structure. Now you need to use all the modules from their respective folders instead of just material
folder
For example:
import { MatDialogModule } from "@angular/material";
has now changed to
import { MatDialogModule } from "@angular/material/dialog";
You can check the following to find the correct path for your module
https://material.angular.io/components/categories
Just navigate to the API tab of required module and find the correct path like this
Try Array filter method for filter the array of objects
with property
.
var jsObjects = [
{a: 1, b: 2},
{a: 3, b: 4},
{a: 5, b: 6},
{a: 7, b: 8}
];
using array filter method:
var filterObj = jsObjects.filter(function(e) {
return e.b == 6;
});
using for in loop :
for (var i in jsObjects) {
if (jsObjects[i].b == 6) {
console.log(jsObjects[i]); // {a: 5, b: 6}
}
}
Working fiddle : https://jsfiddle.net/uq9n9g77/
You can use Theme.applyStyle to modify your theme at runtime by applying another style to it.
Let's say you have these style definitions:
<style name="DefaultTheme" parent="Theme.AppCompat.Light">
<item name="colorPrimary">@color/md_lime_500</item>
<item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/md_lime_700</item>
<item name="colorAccent">@color/md_amber_A400</item>
</style>
<style name="OverlayPrimaryColorRed">
<item name="colorPrimary">@color/md_red_500</item>
<item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/md_red_700</item>
</style>
<style name="OverlayPrimaryColorGreen">
<item name="colorPrimary">@color/md_green_500</item>
<item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/md_green_700</item>
</style>
<style name="OverlayPrimaryColorBlue">
<item name="colorPrimary">@color/md_blue_500</item>
<item name="colorPrimaryDark">@color/md_blue_700</item>
</style>
Now you can patch your theme at runtime like so:
getTheme().applyStyle(R.style.OverlayPrimaryColorGreen, true);
The method applyStyle
has to be called before the layout gets inflated! So unless you load the view manually you should apply styles to the theme before calling setContentView
in your activity.
Of course this cannot be used to specify an arbitrary color, i.e. one out of 16 million (2563) colors. But if you write a small program that generates the style definitions and the Java code for you then something like one out of 512 (83) should be possible.
What makes this interesting is that you can use different style overlays for different aspects of your theme. Just add a few overlay definitions for colorAccent
for example. Now you can combine different values for primary color and accent color almost arbitrarily.
You should make sure that your overlay theme definitions don't accidentally inherit a bunch of style definitions from a parent style definition. For example a style called AppTheme.OverlayRed
implicitly inherits all styles defined in AppTheme
and all these definitions will also be applied when you patch the master theme. So either avoid dots in the overlay theme names or use something like Overlay.Red
and define Overlay
as an empty style.
Something like Rob W's answer, but allowing different a different ssh key, and works with older git versions (which don't have e.g. a core.sshCommand config).
I created the file ~/bin/git_poweruser
, with executable permission, and in the PATH:
#!/bin/bash
TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d)
trap 'rm -rf "$TMPDIR"' EXIT
cat > $TMPDIR/ssh << 'EOF'
#!/bin/bash
ssh -i $HOME/.ssh/poweruserprivatekey $@
EOF
chmod +x $TMPDIR/ssh
export GIT_SSH=$TMPDIR/ssh
git -c user.name="Power User name" -c user.email="[email protected]" $@
Whenever I want to commit or push something as "Power User", I use git_poweruser
instead of git
. It should work on any directory, and does not require changes in .gitconfig
or .ssh/config
, at least not in mine.
I improved Niels's solution
class Array
def except(*values)
self - values
end
end
Now you can use
[1, 2, 3, 4].except(3, 4) # return [1, 2]
[1, 2, 3, 4].except(4) # return [1, 2, 3]
That particular package does not include assemblies for dotnet core, at least not at present. You may be able to build it for core yourself with a few tweaks to the project file, but I can't say for sure without diving into the source myself.
You can try as below to hide/show dynamically runtime
Hide :
fnSetColumnVis( 1, false, false );
Example: oTable.fnSetColumnVis(item, false,false);
Show :
fnSetColumnVis( 1, true, false );
Example: oTable.fnSetColumnVis(item, false,false);
Here, oTable is object of Datatable.
Just for reference, a for
loop can be used after getting the first row to get the rest of the file:
with open('file.csv', newline='') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
row1 = next(reader) # gets the first line
for row in reader:
print(row) # prints rows 2 and onward
If you need form
inside tr
and input
s in every td
, you can add form
in td
tag, and add attribute 'form' that contains id of form
tag to outside input
s.
Something like this:
<tr>
<td>
<form id='f1'>
<input type="text">
</form>
</td>
<td>
<input form='f1' type="text">
</td>
</tr>
You also can use Gnuplot
which is also available from gretl
. Put your x y z data on a text file an insert the following
splot 'test.txt' using 1:2:3 with points palette pointsize 3 pointtype 7
Then you can set labels, etc. using
set xlabel "xxx" rotate parallel
set ylabel "yyy" rotate parallel
set zlabel "zzz" rotate parallel
set grid
show grid
unset key
Despite much effort, I have not found a built-in or plugin-assisted way to do what you're trying to do. I completely agree that it should be possible, as the program can distinguish foo
from buffoon
when you first highlight it, but no one seems to know a way of doing it.
However, here are some useful key combos for selecting words in Sublime Text 2:
Ctrl?G - selects all occurrences of the current word (AltF3 on Windows/Linux)
?D - selects the next instance of the current word (CtrlD)
?E, ?H - uses the current selection as the "Find" field in Find and Replace (CtrlE,CtrlH)
check your cpanels space.remove unused file or error.log file & then try to login your application(This work for me);
If you want to do it via javascript rather than CSS you can use:
var link = document.getElementById('nav-ask');
link.style.display = 'none'; //or
link.style.visibility = 'hidden';
depending on what you want to do.
NumPy is slower because it casts the input to boolean values (so None and 0 becomes False and everything else becomes True).
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
s = pd.Series([True, None, False, True])
np.logical_not(s)
gives you
0 False
1 True
2 True
3 False
dtype: object
whereas ~s would crash. In most cases tilde would be a safer choice than NumPy.
Pandas 0.25, NumPy 1.17
Here is a simpler solution to list all files in a directory and to download it.
In your index.php file
<?php
$dir = "./";
$allFiles = scandir($dir);
$files = array_diff($allFiles, array('.', '..')); // To remove . and ..
foreach($files as $file){
echo "<a href='download.php?file=".$file."'>".$file."</a><br>";
}
The scandir() function list all files and directories inside the specified path. It works with both PHP 5 and PHP 7.
Now in the download.php
<?php
$filename = basename($_GET['file']);
// Specify file path.
$path = ''; // '/uplods/'
$download_file = $path.$filename;
if(!empty($filename)){
// Check file is exists on given path.
if(file_exists($download_file))
{
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=' . $filename);
readfile($download_file);
exit;
}
else
{
echo 'File does not exists on given path';
}
}
You can also try out ctrl + alt + I even though you can also use l as well.
You have to convert input x and y into int like below.
x=int(x)
y=int(y)
use:
my_function({width:12});
Instead of:
my_function(width:12);
Open notepad and paste the code below into it. Change "YourApp" into your app's name. Save it to YourApp.reg and execute it by clicking on it in explorer. That's it! Cheers! Erwin Haantjes
REGEDIT4
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\YourApp]
@="URL:YourApp Protocol"
"URL Protocol"=""
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\YourApp\DefaultIcon]
@="\"C:\\Program Files\\YourApp\\YourApp.exe\""
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\YourApp\shell]
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\YourApp\shell\open]
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\YourApp\shell\open\command]
@="\"C:\\Program Files\\YourApp\\YourApp.exe\" \"%1\" \"%2\" \"%3\" \"%4\" \"%5\" \"%6\" \"%7\" \"%8\" \"%9\""
1.->
for accessing object member variables and methods via pointer
to object
Foo *foo = new Foo();
foo->member_var = 10;
foo->member_func();
2..
for accessing object member variables and methods via object instance
Foo foo;
foo.member_var = 10;
foo.member_func();
3.::
for accessing static variables and methods of a class/struct
or namespace
. It can also be used to access variables and functions from another scope (actually class, struct, namespace are scopes in that case)
int some_val = Foo::static_var;
Foo::static_method();
int max_int = std::numeric_limits<int>::max();
The Chapter object should have reference to the book it came from so I would suggest something like chapter.getBook().getTitle();
Your database table structure should have a books table and a chapters table with columns like:
books
chapters
Then to reduce the number of queries use a join table in your search query.
from django.contrib import admin
from django.urls import path
urlpatterns = [
path('admin/', admin.site.urls),
]
output.path
Local disk directory to store all your output files (Absolute path).
Example: path.join(__dirname, "build/")
Webpack will output everything into localdisk/path-to-your-project/build/
output.publicPath
Where you uploaded your bundled files. (absolute path, or relative to main HTML file)
Example: /assets/
Assumed you deployed the app at server root http://server/
.
By using /assets/
, the app will find webpack assets at: http://server/assets/
. Under the hood, every urls that webpack encounters will be re-written to begin with "/assets/
".
src="picture.jpg"
Re-writes ?src="/assets/picture.jpg"
Accessed by: (
http://server/assets/picture.jpg
)
src="/img/picture.jpg"
Re-writes ?src="/assets/img/picture.jpg"
Accessed by: (
http://server/assets/img/picture.jpg
)
Try this
<xs:element name="description" type="xs:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1" />
if you want 0 or 1 "description" elements, Or
<xs:element name="description" type="xs:string" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded" />
if you want 0 to infinity number of "description" elements.
Ruby(1.9+)
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
Dir["*"].each do |file|
h=Hash.new(0)
open(file).each do |row|
row.chomp.split("\t").each do |w|
h[ w ] += 1
end
end
h.sort{|a,b| b[1]<=>a[1] }.each{|x,y| print "#{x}:#{y}\n" }
end
Just want to throw something in to help people still having this problem. (for me at least) the css is showing that it puts default classes of level1, level2, and level3 on each piece of the menu(level 1 being the menu, level2 being the first dropdown, level3 being the third popout). Setting the padding in css
.level2
{
padding: 2px 2px 2px 2px;
}
does work for adding the padding to each li in the first dropdown.
This prints the pairs and avoids duplicates using bitwise manipulation.
public static void findSumHashMap(int[] arr, int key) {
Map<Integer, Integer> valMap = new HashMap<Integer, Integer>();
for(int i=0;i<arr.length;i++)
valMap.put(arr[i], i);
int indicesVisited = 0;
for(int i=0;i<arr.length;i++) {
if(valMap.containsKey(key - arr[i]) && valMap.get(key - arr[i]) != i) {
if(!((indicesVisited & ((1<<i) | (1<<valMap.get(key - arr[i])))) > 0)) {
int diff = key-arr[i];
System.out.println(arr[i] + " " +diff);
indicesVisited = indicesVisited | (1<<i) | (1<<valMap.get(key - arr[i]));
}
}
}
}
Here is my solution to this issue:
SQL> Startup mount
ORA-01081: cannot start already-running ORACLE - shut it down first
SQL> shutdown abort
ORACLE instance shut down.
SQL>
SQL> startup mount
ORACLE instance started.
Total System Global Area 1904054272 bytes
Fixed Size 2404024 bytes
Variable Size 570425672 bytes
Database Buffers 1325400064 bytes
Redo Buffers 5824512 bytes
Database mounted.
SQL> Show parameter control_files
NAME TYPE VALUE
------------------------------------ ----------- ------------------------------
control_files string C:\APP\USER\ORADATA\ORACLEDB\C
ONTROL01.CTL, C:\APP\USER\FAST
_RECOVERY_AREA\ORACLEDB\CONTRO
L02.CTL
SQL> select a.member,a.group#,b.status from v$logfile a ,v$log b where a.group#=
b.group# and b.status='CURRENT'
2
SQL> select a.member,a.group#,b.status from v$logfile a ,v$log b where a.group#=
b.group# and b.status='CURRENT';
MEMBER
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GROUP# STATUS
---------- ----------------
C:\APP\USER\ORADATA\ORACLEDB\REDO03.LOG
3 CURRENT
SQL> shutdown abort
ORACLE instance shut down.
SQL> startup mount
ORACLE instance started.
Total System Global Area 1904054272 bytes
Fixed Size 2404024 bytes
Variable Size 570425672 bytes
Database Buffers 1325400064 bytes
Redo Buffers 5824512 bytes
Database mounted.
SQL> recover database using backup controlfile until cancel;
ORA-00279: change 4234808 generated at 01/21/2014 18:31:05 needed for thread 1
ORA-00289: suggestion :
C:\APP\USER\FAST_RECOVERY_AREA\ORACLEDB\ARCHIVELOG\2014_01_22\O1_MF_1_108_%U_.AR
C
ORA-00280: change 4234808 for thread 1 is in sequence #108
Specify log: {<RET>=suggested | filename | AUTO | CANCEL}
C:\APP\USER\ORADATA\ORACLEDB\REDO03.LOG
Log applied.
Media recovery complete.
SQL> alter database open resetlogs;
Database altered.
And it worked:
Make it simply use: PDO::lastInsertId
Regarding tables names, case, etc, the prevalent convention is:
UPPER CASE
lower_case_with_underscores
UPDATE my_table SET name = 5;
This is not written in stone, but the bit about identifiers in lower case is highly recommended, IMO. Postgresql treats identifiers case insensitively when not quoted (it actually folds them to lowercase internally), and case sensitively when quoted; many people are not aware of this idiosyncrasy. Using always lowercase you are safe. Anyway, it's acceptable to use camelCase
or PascalCase
(or UPPER_CASE
), as long as you are consistent: either quote identifiers always or never (and this includes the schema creation!).
I am not aware of many more conventions or style guides. Surrogate keys are normally made from a sequence (usually with the serial
macro), it would be convenient to stick to that naming for those sequences if you create them by hand (tablename_colname_seq
).
See also some discussion here, here and (for general SQL) here, all with several related links.
Note: Postgresql 10 introduced identity
columns as an SQL-compliant replacement for serial.
TypeScript does something similar to what less or sass does for CSS. They are super sets of it, which means that every JS code you write is valid TypeScript code. Plus you can use the other goodies that it adds to the language, and the transpiled code will be valid js. You can even set the JS version that you want your resulting code on.
Currently TypeScript is a super set of ES2015, so might be a good choice to start learning the new js features and transpile to the needed standard for your project.
Use this code to get Registration ID using GCM
String regId = "", msg = "";
public void getRegisterationID() {
new AsyncTask() {
@Override
protected Object doInBackground(Object...params) {
String msg = "";
try {
if (gcm == null) {
gcm = GoogleCloudMessaging.getInstance(Login.this);
}
regId = gcm.register(YOUR_SENDER_ID);
Log.d("in async task", regId);
// try
msg = "Device registered, registration ID=" + regId;
} catch (IOException ex) {
msg = "Error :" + ex.getMessage();
}
return msg;
}
}.execute(null, null, null);
}
and don't forget to write permissions in manifest...
I hope it helps!
File names are case sensitive - please check your file name. it should be in same case in view folder
If you don't have any server side code, you security depends on the security of the access to your JavaScript code on the client side (ie everybody who has the code could upload something).
So I would recommend, to simply create a special S3 bucket which is public writeable (but not readable), so you don't need any signed components on the client side.
The bucket name (a GUID eg) will be your only defense against malicious uploads (but a potential attacker could not use your bucket to transfer data, because it is write only to him)
Just an easy answer for the future which I found easy to use as a starter:
Similar to using end=''
to avoid a new line, you can use sep=''
to avoid the white spaces...for this question here, it would look like this:
print('Value is "', value, '"', sep = '')
May it help someone in the future.
You should check API
for these questions.
You can use remove methods.
a.remove(1);
OR
a.remove("acbd");
Install from the "Unofficial Windows Binaries for Python Extension Packages"
http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#python-dateutil
Pretty much has every package you would need.
Background image is not supported in Outlook. You have to use an image and position it behind the text using position relative or absolute.
You do want to avoid explicit loops as much as possible when doing array computing, as that reduces the speed gain from that form of computing. There are multiple ways to initialize a numpy array. If you want it filled with zeros, do as katrielalex said:
big_array = numpy.zeros((10,4))
EDIT: What sort of sequence is it you're making? You should check out the different numpy functions that create arrays, like numpy.linspace(start, stop, size)
(equally spaced number), or numpy.arange(start, stop, inc)
. Where possible, these functions will make arrays substantially faster than doing the same work in explicit loops
<div>
with some proportions
div {
position: relative;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
<img>
's with their own proportions
img {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
bottom: 0;
right: 0;
width: auto; /* to keep proportions */
height: auto; /* to keep proportions */
max-width: 100%; /* not to stand out from div */
max-height: 100%; /* not to stand out from div */
margin: auto auto 0; /* position to bottom and center */
}
In the context of AngularJS, the $
prefix is used only for identifiers in the framework's code. Users of the framework are instructed not to use it in their own identifiers:
Angular Namespaces
$
and$$
To prevent accidental name collisions with your code, Angular prefixes names of public objects with
$
and names of private objects with$$
. Please do not use the$
or$$
prefix in your code.
Source: https://docs.angularjs.org/api
select
(select count(*) from foo) as foo
, (select count(*) from bar) as bar
, ...
The CSS styles for text input controls such as TextField for JavaFX 8 are defined in the modena.css stylesheet as below. Create a custom CSS stylesheet and modify the colors as you wish. Use the CSS reference guide if you need help understanding the syntax and available attributes and values.
.text-input {
-fx-text-fill: -fx-text-inner-color;
-fx-highlight-fill: derive(-fx-control-inner-background,-20%);
-fx-highlight-text-fill: -fx-text-inner-color;
-fx-prompt-text-fill: derive(-fx-control-inner-background,-30%);
-fx-background-color: linear-gradient(to bottom, derive(-fx-text-box-border, -10%), -fx-text-box-border),
linear-gradient(from 0px 0px to 0px 5px, derive(-fx-control-inner-background, -9%), -fx-control-inner-background);
-fx-background-insets: 0, 1;
-fx-background-radius: 3, 2;
-fx-cursor: text;
-fx-padding: 0.333333em 0.583em 0.333333em 0.583em; /* 4 7 4 7 */
}
.text-input:focused {
-fx-highlight-fill: -fx-accent;
-fx-highlight-text-fill: white;
-fx-background-color:
-fx-focus-color,
-fx-control-inner-background,
-fx-faint-focus-color,
linear-gradient(from 0px 0px to 0px 5px, derive(-fx-control-inner-background, -9%), -fx-control-inner-background);
-fx-background-insets: -0.2, 1, -1.4, 3;
-fx-background-radius: 3, 2, 4, 0;
-fx-prompt-text-fill: transparent;
}
Although using an external stylesheet is a preferred way to do the styling, you can style inline, using something like below:
textField.setStyle("-fx-text-inner-color: red;");
$('#yourdropddownid').val('fg');
Optionally,
$('select>option:eq(3)').attr('selected', true);
where 3
is the index of the option you want.
OK, let's give you this concept first before answering your question, in JavaScript Functions are Object, also null, Object, Arrays and even Date, so as you see there is not a simple way like typeof obj === 'object', so everything mentioned above will return true, but there are ways to check it with writing a function or using JavaScript frameworks, OK:
Now, imagine you have this object that's a real object (not null or function or array):
var obj = {obj1: 'obj1', obj2: 'obj2'};
Pure JavaScript:
//that's how it gets checked in angular framework
function isObject(obj) {
return obj !== null && typeof obj === 'object';
}
or
//make sure the second object is capitalised
function isObject(obj) {
return Object.prototype.toString.call(obj) === '[object Object]';
}
or
function isObject(obj) {
return obj.constructor.toString().indexOf("Object") > -1;
}
or
function isObject(obj) {
return obj instanceof Object;
}
You can simply use one of these functions as above in your code by calling them and it will return true if it's an object:
isObject(obj);
If you are using a JavaScript framework, they usually have prepared these kind of functions for you, these are few of them:
jQuery:
//It returns 'object' if real Object;
jQuery.type(obj);
Angular:
angular.isObject(obj);
Underscore and Lodash:
//(NOTE: in Underscore and Lodash, functions, arrays return true as well but not null)
_.isObject(obj);
In my circumstance I had just started using VS Code and had followed a tutorial using Sequelize. In the end I had a bin/www file that had the listen() in there. I didn't know about this and I was running my app by running node app.js, when it didn't work I then added in the express server stuff with .listen() (which worked fine).
But when starting to use nodemon and VSCode it was pointed at bin/www and that required my app.js.
Long story short I had added .listen() to my app.js and was running app.js directly when I should have not added that and run bin/www.
To concat files in command prompt it would be
type file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt > files.txt
PowerShell converts the type
command to Get-Content
, which means you will get an error when using the type
command in PowerShell because the Get-Content
command requires a comma separating the files. The same command in PowerShell would be
Get-Content file1.txt,file2.txt,file3.txt | Set-Content files.txt
Here you can benchmark all supported hashes on your hardware, supported by your version of node.js. Some are cryptographic, and some is just for a checksum. Its calculating "Hello World" 1 million times for each algorithm. It may take around 1-15 seconds for each algorithm (Tested on the Standard Google Computing Engine with Node.js 4.2.2).
for(var i1=0;i1<crypto.getHashes().length;i1++){
var Algh=crypto.getHashes()[i1];
console.time(Algh);
for(var i2=0;i2<1000000;i2++){
crypto.createHash(Algh).update("Hello World").digest("hex");
}
console.timeEnd(Algh);
}
Result:
DSA: 1992ms
DSA-SHA: 1960ms
DSA-SHA1: 2062ms
DSA-SHA1-old: 2124ms
RSA-MD4: 1893ms
RSA-MD5: 1982ms
RSA-MDC2: 2797ms
RSA-RIPEMD160: 2101ms
RSA-SHA: 1948ms
RSA-SHA1: 1908ms
RSA-SHA1-2: 2042ms
RSA-SHA224: 2176ms
RSA-SHA256: 2158ms
RSA-SHA384: 2290ms
RSA-SHA512: 2357ms
dsaEncryption: 1936ms
dsaWithSHA: 1910ms
dsaWithSHA1: 1926ms
dss1: 1928ms
ecdsa-with-SHA1: 1880ms
md4: 1833ms
md4WithRSAEncryption: 1925ms
md5: 1863ms
md5WithRSAEncryption: 1923ms
mdc2: 2729ms
mdc2WithRSA: 2890ms
ripemd: 2101ms
ripemd160: 2153ms
ripemd160WithRSA: 2210ms
rmd160: 2146ms
sha: 1929ms
sha1: 1880ms
sha1WithRSAEncryption: 1957ms
sha224: 2121ms
sha224WithRSAEncryption: 2290ms
sha256: 2134ms
sha256WithRSAEncryption: 2190ms
sha384: 2181ms
sha384WithRSAEncryption: 2343ms
sha512: 2371ms
sha512WithRSAEncryption: 2434ms
shaWithRSAEncryption: 1966ms
ssl2-md5: 1853ms
ssl3-md5: 1868ms
ssl3-sha1: 1971ms
whirlpool: 2578ms
You only need to delete one folder it is throwing error for. Just go to your M2 repo and org/apache/maven/plugins/maven-compiler-plugins and delete the folder 2.3.2
You can tweak the Registry if you want to make changes only to your own system. If you have IE10 and lots of web sites you visit don't render properly in IE10, then you can tweak your registry to force IE to open in IE9 mode.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Main\FeatureControl\FEATURE_BROWSER_EMULATION
Create a DWORD as iexplore.exe
and give value 9999
. Restart your IE and it will open in IE9 mode :)
Thanks to my colleague Sreejith D :)
I believe I had a similar quandary recently
function parentCtrl() {
var pc = this; // pc stands for parent control
pc.foobar = 'SomeVal';
}
function childCtrl($scope) {
// now how do I get the parent control 'foobar' variable?
// I used $scope.$parent
var parentFoobarVariableValue = $scope.$parent.pc.foobar;
// that did it
}
My setup was a little different, but the same thing should probably still work
Shiva's answer doesn't apply anymore. The API call "/users/{user-id}/follows" is not supported by Instagram for some time (it was disabled in 2016).
For a while you were able to get only your own followers/followings with "/users/self/follows" endpoint, but Instagram disabled that feature in April 2018 (with the Cambridge Analytica issue). You can read about it here.
As far as I know (at this moment) there isn't a service available (official or unofficial) where you can get the followers/followings of a user (even your own).
Removing any alignment like android:layout_alignParentStart="true" and adding centerInParent worked for me. If the "align" stays in, the centerInParent doesn't work
If you are starting IPython with the --pylab
option, you shouldn't need to call show()
or draw()
. Try this:
ipython --pylab=inline
The default configuration of most SMTP servers is not to relay from an untrusted source to outside domains. For example, imagine that you contact the SMTP server for foo.com and ask it to send a message to [email protected]. Because the SMTP server doesn't really know who you are, it will refuse to relay the message. If the server did do that for you, it would be considered an open relay, which is how spammers often do their thing.
If you contact the foo.com mail server and ask it to send mail to [email protected], it might let you do it. It depends on if they trust that you're who you say you are. Often, the server will try to do a reverse DNS lookup, and refuse to send mail if the IP you're sending from doesn't match the IP address of the MX record in DNS. So if you say that you're the bar.com mail server but your IP address doesn't match the MX record for bar.com, then it will refuse to deliver the message.
You'll need to talk to the administrator of that SMTP server to get the authentication information so that it will allow relay for you. You'll need to present those credentials when you contact the SMTP server. Usually it's either a user name/password, or it can use Windows permissions. Depends on the server and how it's configured.
See Unable to send emails to external domain using SMTP for an example of how to send the credentials.
Change control panel Java's option about proxy to "direct", change window's internet option to not use proxy and reboot. It worked for me.
In addition to @To-kra's answer. If someone doesn't like recurrence:
public static boolean isSubClassOf(Class<?> clazz, Class<?> superClass) {
if(Object.class.equals(superClass)) {
return true;
}
for(; !Object.class.equals(clazz); clazz = clazz.getSuperclass()) {
if(clazz.getSuperclass().equals(superClass)) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
NOTE: no null checking for clarity.
You can achieve that using DATE_FORMAT() (click the link for more other formats)
SELECT DATE_FORMAT(colName, '%Y-%m-%d') DATEONLY,
DATE_FORMAT(colName,'%H:%i:%s') TIMEONLY
function curPageName() {
return substr($_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"],strrpos($_SERVER["SCRIPT_NAME"],"/")+1);
}
echo "The current page is ".curPageName()."?".$_SERVER['QUERY_STRING'];
This will get you page name , it will get the string after the last slash
Well u have used Pojo Entity so u can do this. u need to get object of that and have to set data.
myList.get(3).setEmail("email");
that way u can do that. or u can set other param too.
Nope... just use a DL:
dl { overflow:hidden; }
dt {
float:left;
clear: left;
width:4em; /* adjust the width; make sure the total of both is 100% */
text-align: right
}
dd {
float:left;
width:50%; /* adjust the width; make sure the total of both is 100% */
margin: 0 0.5em;
}
This looks like a behavior difference in the handling of \s
between grep 2.5 and newer versions (a bug in old grep?). I confirm your result with grep 2.5.4, but all four of your greps do work when using grep 2.6.3 (Ubuntu 10.10).
Note:
GNU grep 2.5.4
echo "foo bar" | grep "\s"
(doesn't match)
whereas
GNU grep 2.6.3
echo "foo bar" | grep "\s"
foo bar
Probably less trouble (as \s
is not documented):
Both GNU greps
echo "foo bar" | grep "[[:space:]]"
foo bar
My advice is to avoid using \s
... use [ \t]*
or [[:space:]]
or something like it instead.
edlin or edit
plus there is Windows Services for Unix which comes with many unix tools for windows. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/interopmigration/bb380242.aspx
Update 12/7/12 In Windows 2003 R2, Windows 7 & Server 2008, etc. the above is replaced by the Subsystem for UNIX-Based Applications (SUA) as an add-on. But you have to download the utilities: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=2391
the easiest way is using command line. Just type in directory of your .xsd file:
xjc myFile.xsd.
So, the java will generate all Pojos.
I've come up with a single line of code to set at top of my every php script as to compensate:
<?php if(!$root) for($i=count(explode("/",$_SERVER["PHP_SELF"]));$i>2;$i--) $root .= "../"; ?>
By this building $root to bee "../" steps up in hierarchy from wherever the file is placed. Whenever I want to include with an absolut path the line will be:
<?php include($root."some/include/directory/file.php"); ?>
I don't really like it, seems as an awkward way to solve it, but it seem to work whatever system php runs on and wherever the file is placed, making it system independent.
To reach files outside the web directory add some more ../
after $root
, e.g. $root."../external/file.txt"
.
Bootstrap people use .hidden
class on <td>
.
simple solution
SELECT * FROM TBLNAME ORDER BY COLNAME ASC LIMIT (n - x), 1
Note: n = total number of records in column
x = value 2nd, 3rd, 4th highest etc
e.g
//to find employee with 7th highest salary
n = 100
x = 7
SELECT * FROM tbl_employee ORDER BY salary ASC LIMIT 93, 1
hope this helps
The output of the following command should be reasonably easy to send to script to add up the totals:
git log --author="<authorname>" --oneline --shortstat
This gives stats for all commits on the current HEAD. If you want to add up stats in other branches you will have to supply them as arguments to git log
.
For passing to a script, removing even the "oneline" format can be done with an empty log format, and as commented by Jakub Narebski, --numstat
is another alternative. It generates per-file rather than per-line statistics but is even easier to parse.
git log --author="<authorname>" --pretty=tformat: --numstat
If you wish to not show the button moving back and forth, you can put the original placement into your code then just check against those. Turn off screen updating when button is clicked, check to see if the the placement is different on the control, change it back, if needed, turn screen updating back on
DP
I am using IntelliJ Ultimate 2018.2.6 and found out, that the feature Reimport All Maven Project does not use the JDK, which is set in the Settings: Build, Execution, Deployment | Build Tools | Maven | Runner.
Instead it uses it's own JRE in IntelliJ_HOME/jre64/
by default. You can configure the JDK for the Importer in Build, Execution, Deployment | Build Tools | Maven | Importing.
In my specific problem, an SSL certificate was missing in the JREs keystore. Unfortunately IDEA only logs this issue in it's own logfile. A little red box to inform about the RuntimeException had been really nice...
After trying the other suggestions to no avail I discovered that this issue was related to styling for me. I don't know a lot about the why but I found that my SVGs were not visible because they were not holding their place in the DOM.
In essence, the containers around my SVGs were at width: 0 and overflow: hidden.
I fixed this by setting a width on the containers but it is possible that there is a more direct solution to that particular issue.
It is possible to get this working in VS Code and have the Cmder terminal be integrated (not pop up).
To do so:
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "cmd.exe"
"terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": ["/k", "%CMDER_ROOT%\\vendor\\init.bat"]
You can pass this
to each block. See here: http://jsfiddle.net/yR7TZ/1/
{{#each this}}
<div class="row"></div>
{{/each}}
You have to escape the & character. Turn your
&
into
&
and you should be good.
You don't have to use Calendar. You can just play with timestamps :
Date d = initDate();//intialize your date to any date
Date dateBefore = new Date(d.getTime() - n * 24 * 3600 * 1000 l ); //Subtract n days
UPDATE DO NOT FORGET TO ADD "l" for long by the end of 1000.
Please consider the below WARNING:
Adding 1000*60*60*24
milliseconds to a java date will once in a great while add zero days or two days to the original date in the circumstances of leap seconds, daylight savings time and the like. If you need to be 100% certain only one day is added, this solution is not the one to use.
It is possible to center a video inside an element just like a cover
sized background-image
without JS using the object-fit
attribute or CSS Transforms
.
As pointed in the comments, it is possible to achieve the same result without CSS transform
, but using object-fit
, which I think it's an even better option for the same result:
.video-container {
height: 300px;
width: 300px;
position: relative;
}
.video-container video {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
position: absolute;
object-fit: cover;
z-index: 0;
}
/* Just styling the content of the div, the *magic* in the previous rules */
.video-container .caption {
z-index: 1;
position: relative;
text-align: center;
color: #dc0000;
padding: 10px;
}
_x000D_
<div class="video-container">
<video autoplay muted loop>
<source src="https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
</video>
<div class="caption">
<h2>Your caption here</h2>
</div>
</div>
_x000D_
You can set a video as a background to any HTML element easily thanks to transform
CSS property.
Note that you can use the transform
technique to center vertically and horizontally any HTML element.
.video-container {
height: 300px;
width: 300px;
overflow: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.video-container video {
min-width: 100%;
min-height: 100%;
position: absolute;
top: 50%;
left: 50%;
transform: translateX(-50%) translateY(-50%);
}
/* Just styling the content of the div, the *magic* in the previous rules */
.video-container .caption {
z-index: 1;
position: relative;
text-align: center;
color: #dc0000;
padding: 10px;
}
_x000D_
<div class="video-container">
<video autoplay muted loop>
<source src="https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
</video>
<div class="caption">
<h2>Your caption here</h2>
</div>
</div>
_x000D_
Append IDs at the class declaration
.aclass, #hashone, #hashtwo{ ...codes... }
document.getElementById( "hashone" ).style.visibility = "hidden";
Building further on Nick's answer:
$("#myDiv").css({'position':'absolute','visibility':'hidden', 'display':'block'});
optionHeight = $("#myDiv").height();
$("#myDiv").css({'position':'static','visibility':'visible', 'display':'none'});
I found it's better to do this:
$("#myDiv").css({'position':'absolute','visibility':'hidden', 'display':'block'});
optionHeight = $("#myDiv").height();
$("#myDiv").removeAttr('style');
Setting CSS attributes will insert them inline, which will overwrite any other attributes you have in your CSS file. By removing the style attribute on the HTML element, everything is back to normal and still hidden, since it was hidden in the first place.
For those willing to toggle whitespace characters using a keyboard shortcut, you can easily add a keybinding for that.
In the latest versions of Visual Studio Code there is now a user-friendly graphical interface (i.e. no need to type JSON data etc) for viewing and editing all the available keyboard shortcuts. It is still under
File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts (or use Ctrl+K Ctrl+S)
There is also a search field to help quickly find (and filter) the desired keybindings. So now both adding new and editing the existing keybindings is much easier:
Toggling whitespace characters has no default keybinding so feel free to add one. Just press the + sign on the left side of the related line (or press Enter, or double click anywhere on that line) and enter the desired combination in the pop-up window.
And if the keybinding you have chosen is already used for some other action(s) there will be a convenient warning which you can click and observe what action(s) already use your chosen keybinding:
As you can see, everything is very intuitive and convenient.
Good job, Microsoft!
For those willing to toggle whitespace characters using a keyboard shortcut, you can add a custom binding to the keybindings.json file (File > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts).
Example:
// Place your key bindings in this file to overwrite the defaults
[
{
"key": "ctrl+shift+i",
"command": "editor.action.toggleRenderWhitespace"
}
]
Here I have assigned a combination of Ctrl+Shift+i to toggle invisible characters, you may of course choose another combination.
You need to use LogLevel rewrite:trace3
to your httpd.conf
in newer version
http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.4/mod/mod_rewrite.html#logging
This code will print a pyramid of dollars.
public static void main(String[] args) {
for(int i=0;i<5;i++) {
for(int j=0;j<5-i;j++) {
System.out.print(" ");
}
for(int k=0;k<=i;k++) {
System.out.print("$ ");
}
System.out.println();
}
}
OUPUT :
$
$ $
$ $ $
$ $ $ $
$ $ $ $ $
I saw in at least one other place that people don't realize Date-Time
takes in times as well, so I figured I'd share it here since it's really short to do so:
Get-Date # Following the OP's example, let's say it's Friday, March 12, 2010 9:00:00 AM
(Get-Date '22:00').AddDays(-1) # Thursday, March 11, 2010 10:00:00 PM
It's also the shortest way to strip time information and still use other parameters of Get-Date
. For instance you can get seconds since 1970 this way (Unix timestamp):
Get-Date '0:00' -u '%s' # 1268352000
Or you can get an ISO 8601 timestamp:
Get-Date '0:00' -f 's' # 2010-03-12T00:00:00
Then again if you reverse the operands, it gives you a little more freedom with formatting with any date object:
'The sortable timestamp: {0:s}Z{1}Vs measly human format: {0:D}' -f (Get-Date '0:00'), "`r`n"
# The sortable timestamp: 2010-03-12T00:00:00Z
# Vs measly human format: Friday, March 12, 2010
However if you wanted to both format a Unix timestamp (via -u
aka -UFormat
), you'll need to do it separately. Here's an example of that:
'ISO 8601: {0:s}Z{1}Unix: {2}' -f (Get-Date '0:00'), "`r`n", (Get-Date '0:00' -u '%s')
# ISO 8601: 2010-03-12T00:00:00Z
# Unix: 1268352000
Hope this helps!
In my case i did following thing. In the UserMaster userId is PK and in UserAccess userId is FK of UserMaster
UserAccess.belongsTo(UserMaster,{foreignKey: 'userId'});
UserMaster.hasMany(UserAccess,{foreignKey : 'userId'});
var userData = await UserMaster.findAll({include: [UserAccess]});
Have you considered using span
instead of div
? It is the in-line version of div
.
I am giving solution that's not in JAVA program (written in JavaScript), but it takes o(n/2) iteration to find the highest and second highest number.
Working fiddler link Fiddler link
var num=[1020215,2000,35,2,54546,456,2,2345,24,545,132,5469,25653,0,2315648978523];
var j=num.length-1;
var firstHighest=0,seoncdHighest=0;
num[0] >num[num.length-1]?(firstHighest=num[0],seoncdHighest=num[num.length-1]):(firstHighest=num[num.length-1], seoncdHighest=num[0]);
j--;
for(var i=1;i<=num.length/2;i++,j--)
{
if(num[i] < num[j] )
{
if(firstHighest < num[j]){
seoncdHighest=firstHighest;
firstHighest= num[j];
}
else if(seoncdHighest < num[j] ) {
seoncdHighest= num[j];
}
}
else {
if(firstHighest < num[i])
{
seoncdHighest=firstHighest;
firstHighest= num[i];
}
else if(seoncdHighest < num[i] ) {
seoncdHighest= num[i];
}
}
}
In my case, it was working fine in Chrome and IE was calling the .click()
twice. if that was your issue, then I fixed it by return false, after calling the .click()
event
$("#txtChat").keypress(function(event) {
if (event.which == 13) {
$('#btnChat').click();
$('#txtChat').val('');
return false;
}
});
In the same idea of Nick Riggs but I create a constructor, and a push a new object in the array by using it. It avoid the repetition of the keys of the class:
var arr = [];
var columnDefs = function(key, sortable, resizeable){
this.key = key;
this.sortable = sortable;
this.resizeable = resizeable;
};
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++) {
arr.push((new columnDefs(oFullResponse.results[i].label,true,true)));
}
Since Java 7 there is an easy way to handle character encoding of BufferedWriter and BufferedReaders. You can create a BufferedWriter directly by using the Files class instead of creating various instances of Writer. You can simply create a BufferedWriter, which considers character encoding, by calling:
Files.newBufferedWriter(file.toPath(), StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
You can find more about it in JavaDoc:
it should be :
$_SERVER['REQUEST_URI'];
Take a look at : Get the full URL in PHP
If you're running Python 3.3 or better, you can use the clear()
method of list
, which is parallel to clear()
of dict
, set
, deque
and other mutable container types:
alist.clear() # removes all items from alist (equivalent to del alist[:])
As per the linked documentation page, the same can also be achieved with alist *= 0
.
To sum up, there are four equivalent ways to clear a list in-place (quite contrary to the Zen of Python!):
alist.clear() # Python 3.3+
del alist[:]
alist[:] = []
alist *= 0
If you have a lot of binary data to read, you might want to consider the struct module. It is documented as converting "between C and Python types", but of course, bytes are bytes, and whether those were created as C types does not matter. For example, if your binary data contains two 2-byte integers and one 4-byte integer, you can read them as follows (example taken from struct
documentation):
>>> struct.unpack('hhl', b'\x00\x01\x00\x02\x00\x00\x00\x03')
(1, 2, 3)
You might find this more convenient, faster, or both, than explicitly looping over the content of a file.
You must create your template files in the correct location; in the templates
subdirectory next to the python module (== the module where you create your Flask app).
The error indicates that there is no home.html
file in the templates/
directory. Make sure you created that directory in the same directory as your python module, and that you did in fact put a home.html
file in that subdirectory. If your app is a package, the templates folder should be created inside the package.
myproject/
app.py
templates/
home.html
myproject/
mypackage/
__init__.py
templates/
home.html
Alternatively, if you named your templates folder something other than templates
and don't want to rename it to the default, you can tell Flask to use that other directory.
app = Flask(__name__, template_folder='template') # still relative to module
You can ask Flask to explain how it tried to find a given template, by setting the EXPLAIN_TEMPLATE_LOADING
option to True
. For every template loaded, you'll get a report logged to the Flask app.logger
, at level INFO
.
This is what it looks like when a search is successful; in this example the foo/bar.html
template extends the base.html
template, so there are two searches:
[2019-06-15 16:03:39,197] INFO in debughelpers: Locating template "foo/bar.html":
1: trying loader of application "flaskpackagename"
class: jinja2.loaders.FileSystemLoader
encoding: 'utf-8'
followlinks: False
searchpath:
- /.../project/flaskpackagename/templates
-> found ('/.../project/flaskpackagename/templates/foo/bar.html')
[2019-06-15 16:03:39,203] INFO in debughelpers: Locating template "base.html":
1: trying loader of application "flaskpackagename"
class: jinja2.loaders.FileSystemLoader
encoding: 'utf-8'
followlinks: False
searchpath:
- /.../project/flaskpackagename/templates
-> found ('/.../project/flaskpackagename/templates/base.html')
Blueprints can register their own template directories too, but this is not a requirement if you are using blueprints to make it easier to split a larger project across logical units. The main Flask app template directory is always searched first even when using additional paths per blueprint.
Try to sort items by creation time. Example below sorts files in a folder and gets first element which is latest.
import glob
import os
files_path = os.path.join(folder, '*')
files = sorted(
glob.iglob(files_path), key=os.path.getctime, reverse=True)
print files[0]
Public Class Form1
Private boxes(5) As TextBox
Private Sub Form1_Load(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
Dim newbox As TextBox
For i As Integer = 1 To 5 'Create a new textbox and set its properties26.27.
newbox = New TextBox
newbox.Size = New Drawing.Size(100, 20)
newbox.Location = New Point(10, 10 + 25 * (i - 1))
newbox.Name = "TextBox" & i
newbox.Text = newbox.Name 'Connect it to a handler, save a reference to the array & add it to the form control.
AddHandler newbox.TextChanged, AddressOf TextBox_TextChanged
boxes(i) = newbox
Me.Controls.Add(newbox)
Next
End Sub
Private Sub TextBox_TextChanged(sender As System.Object, e As System.EventArgs)
'When you modify the contents of any textbox, the name of that textbox
'and its current contents will be displayed in the title bar
Dim box As TextBox = DirectCast(sender, TextBox)
Me.Text = box.Name & ": " & box.Text
End Sub
End Class
clock() has a often a pretty lousy resolution. If you want to measure time at the millisecond level, one alternative is to use clock_gettime(), as explained in this question.
(Remember that you need to link with -lrt on Linux).
First, go to the following URL and download the mobile_detect.php file:
http://code.google.com/p/php-mobile-detect/
Insert the following code on your index or home page:
<?php
@include("Mobile_Detect.php");
$detect = new Mobile_Detect();
if ($detect->isMobile() && isset($_COOKIE['mobile']))
{
$detect = "false";
}
elseif ($detect->isMobile())
{
header("Location:http://www.yourmobiledirectory.com");
}
?>
You code should look like this:
public int getElement(int[] arrayOfInts, int index) {
return arrayOfInts[index];
}
Main points here are method return type, it should match with array elements type and if you are working from main()
- this method must be static also.
An Euler path is a path that passes through every edge exactly once. If it ends at the initial vertex then it is an Euler cycle.
A Hamiltonian path is a path that passes through every vertex exactly once (NOT every edge). If it ends at the initial vertex then it is a Hamiltonian cycle.
In an Euler path you might pass through a vertex more than once.
In a Hamiltonian path you may not pass through all edges.
* * * * * myjob.sh >> /var/log/myjob.log 2>&1
will log all output from the cron job to /var/log/myjob.log
You might use mail
to send emails. Most systems will send unhandled cron
job output by email to root or the corresponding user.
DateTime.Parse()
will try figure out the format of the given date, and it usually does a good job. If you can guarantee dates will always be in a given format then you can use ParseExact()
:
string s = "2011-03-21 13:26";
DateTime dt =
DateTime.ParseExact(s, "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
(But note that it is usually safer to use one of the TryParse methods in case a date is not in the expected format)
Make sure to check Custom Date and Time Format Strings when constructing format string, especially pay attention to number of letters and case (i.e. "MM" and "mm" mean very different things).
Another useful resource for C# format strings is String Formatting in C#
This is the best and easiest code:
public class test
{
public static void main(String str[])
{
String jsonString = "{\"stat\": { \"sdr\": \"aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff\", \"rcv\": \"aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff\", \"time\": \"UTC in millis\", \"type\": 1, \"subt\": 1, \"argv\": [{\"type\": 1, \"val\":\"stackoverflow\"}]}}";
JSONObject jsonObject = new JSONObject(jsonString);
JSONObject newJSON = jsonObject.getJSONObject("stat");
System.out.println(newJSON.toString());
jsonObject = new JSONObject(newJSON.toString());
System.out.println(jsonObject.getString("rcv"));
System.out.println(jsonObject.getJSONArray("argv"));
}
}
The library definition of the json files are given here. And it is not same libraries as posted here, i.e. posted by you. What you had posted was simple json library I have used this library.
You can download the zip. And then create a package
in your project with org.json as name. and paste all the downloaded codes there, and have fun.
I feel this to be the best and the most easiest JSON Decoding.
Make sure your element with the .date-picker
class does NOT already have a hasDatepicker
class. If it does, even an attempt to re-initialize with $myDatepicker.datepicker();
will fail! Instead you need to do...
$myDatepicker.removeClass('hasDatepicker').datepicker();
Here is the example:
var charCode = "a".charCodeAt(0);_x000D_
console.log(charCode);
_x000D_
Or if you have longer strings:
var string = "Some string";_x000D_
_x000D_
for (var i = 0; i < string.length; i++) {_x000D_
console.log(string.charCodeAt(i));_x000D_
}
_x000D_
String.charCodeAt(x)
method will return ASCII character code at a given position.
Give the div "runat="server"
and an id
and you can reference it in your code behind
.
<div runat="server" id="theDiv">
In code behind:
{
theDiv.Visible = false;
}
Look at my code, but be aware. I use async/await, because latest Chrome beta can read any es6 code, which gets by TypeScript with compilation. So, you must replace asyns/await by .then()
.
Input change handler:
/**
* @param fileInput
*/
public psdTemplateSelectionHandler (fileInput: any){
let FileList: FileList = fileInput.target.files;
for (let i = 0, length = FileList.length; i < length; i++) {
this.psdTemplates.push(FileList.item(i));
}
this.progressBarVisibility = true;
}
Submit handler:
public async psdTemplateUploadHandler (): Promise<any> {
let result: any;
if (!this.psdTemplates.length) {
return;
}
this.isSubmitted = true;
this.fileUploadService.getObserver()
.subscribe(progress => {
this.uploadProgress = progress;
});
try {
result = await this.fileUploadService.upload(this.uploadRoute, this.psdTemplates);
} catch (error) {
document.write(error)
}
if (!result['images']) {
return;
}
this.saveUploadedTemplatesData(result['images']);
this.redirectService.redirect(this.redirectRoute);
}
FileUploadService. That service also stored uploading progress in progress$ property, and in other places, you can subscribe on it and get new value every 500ms.
import { Component } from 'angular2/core';
import { Injectable } from 'angular2/core';
import { Observable } from 'rxjs/Observable';
import 'rxjs/add/operator/share';
@Injectable()
export class FileUploadService {
/**
* @param Observable<number>
*/
private progress$: Observable<number>;
/**
* @type {number}
*/
private progress: number = 0;
private progressObserver: any;
constructor () {
this.progress$ = new Observable(observer => {
this.progressObserver = observer
});
}
/**
* @returns {Observable<number>}
*/
public getObserver (): Observable<number> {
return this.progress$;
}
/**
* Upload files through XMLHttpRequest
*
* @param url
* @param files
* @returns {Promise<T>}
*/
public upload (url: string, files: File[]): Promise<any> {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
let formData: FormData = new FormData(),
xhr: XMLHttpRequest = new XMLHttpRequest();
for (let i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
formData.append("uploads[]", files[i], files[i].name);
}
xhr.onreadystatechange = () => {
if (xhr.readyState === 4) {
if (xhr.status === 200) {
resolve(JSON.parse(xhr.response));
} else {
reject(xhr.response);
}
}
};
FileUploadService.setUploadUpdateInterval(500);
xhr.upload.onprogress = (event) => {
this.progress = Math.round(event.loaded / event.total * 100);
this.progressObserver.next(this.progress);
};
xhr.open('POST', url, true);
xhr.send(formData);
});
}
/**
* Set interval for frequency with which Observable inside Promise will share data with subscribers.
*
* @param interval
*/
private static setUploadUpdateInterval (interval: number): void {
setInterval(() => {}, interval);
}
}
UPDATE: THIS ANSWER IS SERIOUSLY OUTDATED. Please use the recommendations from the https://stackoverflow.com/a/10402129/251311 instead.
You can either use
var md5 = new MD5CryptoServiceProvider();
var md5data = md5.ComputeHash(data);
or
var sha1 = new SHA1CryptoServiceProvider();
var sha1data = sha1.ComputeHash(data);
To get data
as byte array you could use
var data = Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(password);
and to get back string from md5data
or sha1data
var hashedPassword = ASCIIEncoding.GetString(md5data);
For impatient:
Without passing argument, persist()
and cache()
are the same, with default settings:
RDD
: MEMORY_ONLYDataset
: MEMORY_AND_DISKUnlike cache()
, persist()
allows you to pass argument inside the bracket, in order to specify the level:
persist(MEMORY_ONLY)
persist(MEMORY_ONLY_SER)
persist(MEMORY_AND_DISK)
persist(MEMORY_AND_DISK_SER )
persist(DISK_ONLY )
Voilà!
You should acquire `rssh', the restricted shell
You can follow the restriction guides mentioned above, they're all rather self-explanatory, and simple to follow. Understand the terms `chroot jail', and how to effectively implement sshd/terminal configurations, and so on.
Being as most of your users access your terminals via sshd, you should also probably look into sshd_conifg, the SSH daemon configuration file, to apply certain restrictions via SSH. Be careful, however. Understand properly what you try to implement, for the ramifications of incorrect configurations are probably rather dire.
You can solve any equation including adding with this code:
@echo off
title Richie's Calculator 3.0
:main
echo Welcome to Richie's Calculator 3.0
echo Press any key to begin calculating...
pause>nul
echo Enter An Equation
echo Example: 1+1
set /p
set /a sum=%equation%
echo.
echo The Answer Is:
echo %sum%
echo.
echo Press any key to return to the main menu
pause>nul
cls
goto main
Note that each of the code samples below may throw IOException
. Try/catch/finally blocks have been omitted for brevity. See this tutorial for information about exception handling.
Note that each of the code samples below will overwrite the file if it already exists
Creating a text file:
PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter("the-file-name.txt", "UTF-8");
writer.println("The first line");
writer.println("The second line");
writer.close();
Creating a binary file:
byte data[] = ...
FileOutputStream out = new FileOutputStream("the-file-name");
out.write(data);
out.close();
Java 7+ users can use the Files
class to write to files:
Creating a text file:
List<String> lines = Arrays.asList("The first line", "The second line");
Path file = Paths.get("the-file-name.txt");
Files.write(file, lines, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
//Files.write(file, lines, StandardCharsets.UTF_8, StandardOpenOption.APPEND);
Creating a binary file:
byte data[] = ...
Path file = Paths.get("the-file-name");
Files.write(file, data);
//Files.write(file, data, StandardOpenOption.APPEND);
In my case, I had to select the "src/main/java" and select the "Run As" menu Just like this, so that "Spring Boot App" would be displayed as here.
You will need to first, examine the class, next, examine the bytecode for functions, then, copy the bytecode, and finally, use the __code__.co_varnames
. This is tricky because some classes create their methods using constructors like those in the types
module. I will provide code for it on GitHub.
If you are doing it from command line,
try -
python -m pip install selenium
or (for Python3 and above)
python3 -m pip install selenium
document.getElementsByClassName
returns an array of elements. so may be you want to target a specific index of them: var comment = document.getElementsByClassName('button')[0];
should get you what you want.
Update #1:
var comments = document.getElementsByClassName('button');
var numComments = comments.length;
function showComment() {
var place = document.getElementById('textfield');
var commentBox = document.createElement('textarea');
place.appendChild(commentBox);
}
for (var i = 0; i < numComments; i++) {
comments[i].addEventListener('click', showComment, false);
}
Update #2: (with removeEventListener
incorporated as well)
var comments = document.getElementsByClassName('button');
var numComments = comments.length;
function showComment(e) {
var place = document.getElementById('textfield');
var commentBox = document.createElement('textarea');
place.appendChild(commentBox);
for (var i = 0; i < numComments; i++) {
comments[i].removeEventListener('click', showComment, false);
}
}
for (var i = 0; i < numComments; i++) {
comments[i].addEventListener('click', showComment, false);
}
textBlock.Foreground = new SolidColorBrush(Colors.White);
Add which colors you want to colors
and then set colorByPoint
to true
.
colors: [
'#4572A7',
'#AA4643',
'#89A54E',
'#80699B',
'#3D96AE',
'#DB843D',
'#92A8CD',
'#A47D7C',
'#B5CA92'
],
plotOptions: {
column: {
colorByPoint: true
}
}
Reference:
Yeah, you'd need to have a javascript function triggered by an onclick that does an AJAX load of a page and then returns false, that way they won't be redirected in the browser. You could use the following in jQuery, if that's acceptable for your project:
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
function doSomething() {
$.get("somepage.php");
return false;
}
</script>
<a href="#" onclick="doSomething();">Click Me!</a>
You could also do a post-back if you need to use form values (use the $.post() method).
When a dictionary is enumerated, it will yield KeyValuePair<TKey,TValue>
objects... so you just need to specify "Value" and "Key" for DataTextField
and DataValueField
respectively, to select the Value/Key properties.
Thanks to Joe's comment, I reread the question to get these the right way round. Normally I'd expect the "key" in the dictionary to be the text that's displayed, and the "value" to be the value fetched. Your sample code uses them the other way round though. Unless you really need them to be this way, you might want to consider writing your code as:
list.Add(cul.DisplayName, cod);
(And then changing the binding to use "Key" for DataTextField
and "Value" for DataValueField
, of course.)
In fact, I'd suggest that as it seems you really do want a list rather than a dictionary, you might want to reconsider using a dictionary in the first place. You could just use a List<KeyValuePair<string, string>>
:
string[] languageCodsList = service.LanguagesAvailable();
var list = new List<KeyValuePair<string, string>>();
foreach (string cod in languageCodsList)
{
CultureInfo cul = new CultureInfo(cod);
list.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>(cul.DisplayName, cod));
}
Alternatively, use a list of plain CultureInfo
values. LINQ makes this really easy:
var cultures = service.LanguagesAvailable()
.Select(language => new CultureInfo(language));
languageList.DataTextField = "DisplayName";
languageList.DataValueField = "Name";
languageList.DataSource = cultures;
languageList.DataBind();
If you're not using LINQ, you can still use a normal foreach loop:
List<CultureInfo> cultures = new List<CultureInfo>();
foreach (string cod in service.LanguagesAvailable())
{
cultures.Add(new CultureInfo(cod));
}
languageList.DataTextField = "DisplayName";
languageList.DataValueField = "Name";
languageList.DataSource = cultures;
languageList.DataBind();
Don't know if this is an option, but it would work very similar to Zend's pdf library, but you don't need to load a bunch of extra code (the zend framework). It just extends FPDF.
http://www.setasign.de/products/pdf-php-solutions/fpdi/
Here you can basically do the same thing. Load the PDF, write over top of it, and then save to a new PDF. In FPDI you basically insert the PDF as an image so you can put whatever you want over it.
But again, this uses FPDF, so if you don't want to use that, then it won't work.
A very simple solution:
df <- read.csv("df.csv",sep=",",head=T)
x <- cbind(df$Xax,df$Xax,df$Xax,df$Xax)
y <- cbind(df$A,df$B,df$C,df$D)
matplot(x,y,type="p")
please note it just plots the data and it does not plot any regression line.
Testing this Javascript:
var arr = [1234563995.721, 12345691212.718, 1234568421.5891, 12345677093.49284];
var sum = 0;
for( var i = 0; i < arr.length; i++ ) {
sum += arr[i];
}
alert( "fMath(sum) = " + Math.round( sum * 1e12 ) / 1e12 );
alert( "fFixed(sum) = " + sum.toFixed( 5 ) );
Dont use Math.round( (## + ## + ... + ##) * 1e12) / 1e12
Instead, use ( ## + ## + ... + ##).toFixed(5) )
In IE 9, toFixed
works very well.
ps x | grep SCREEN
to see what is that screen running in case you used the command
screen -A -m -d php make_something.php
The SOLabel works for me.
This version has been updated from the original to allow support for RTL languages:
public class VerticalAlignLabel: UILabel {
enum VerticalAlignment {
case top
case middle
case bottom
}
var verticalAlignment : VerticalAlignment = .top {
didSet {
setNeedsDisplay()
}
}
override public func textRect(forBounds bounds: CGRect, limitedToNumberOfLines: Int) -> CGRect {
let rect = super.textRect(forBounds: bounds, limitedToNumberOfLines: limitedToNumberOfLines)
if UIView.userInterfaceLayoutDirection(for: .unspecified) == .rightToLeft {
switch verticalAlignment {
case .top:
return CGRect(x: self.bounds.size.width - rect.size.width, y: bounds.origin.y, width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
case .middle:
return CGRect(x: self.bounds.size.width - rect.size.width, y: bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height) / 2, width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
case .bottom:
return CGRect(x: self.bounds.size.width - rect.size.width, y: bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height), width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
}
} else {
switch verticalAlignment {
case .top:
return CGRect(x: bounds.origin.x, y: bounds.origin.y, width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
case .middle:
return CGRect(x: bounds.origin.x, y: bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height) / 2, width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
case .bottom:
return CGRect(x: bounds.origin.x, y: bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height), width: rect.size.width, height: rect.size.height)
}
}
}
override public func drawText(in rect: CGRect) {
let r = self.textRect(forBounds: rect, limitedToNumberOfLines: self.numberOfLines)
super.drawText(in: r)
}
}
class UIVerticalAlignLabel: UILabel {
enum VerticalAlignment : Int {
case VerticalAlignmentTop = 0
case VerticalAlignmentMiddle = 1
case VerticalAlignmentBottom = 2
}
var verticalAlignment : VerticalAlignment = .VerticalAlignmentTop {
didSet {
setNeedsDisplay()
}
}
required init(coder aDecoder: NSCoder){
super.init(coder: aDecoder)
}
override func textRectForBounds(bounds: CGRect, limitedToNumberOfLines: Int) -> CGRect {
let rect = super.textRectForBounds(bounds, limitedToNumberOfLines: limitedToNumberOfLines)
switch(verticalAlignment) {
case .VerticalAlignmentTop:
return CGRectMake(bounds.origin.x, bounds.origin.y, rect.size.width, rect.size.height)
case .VerticalAlignmentMiddle:
return CGRectMake(bounds.origin.x, bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height) / 2, rect.size.width, rect.size.height)
case .VerticalAlignmentBottom:
return CGRectMake(bounds.origin.x, bounds.origin.y + (bounds.size.height - rect.size.height), rect.size.width, rect.size.height)
default:
return bounds
}
}
override func drawTextInRect(rect: CGRect) {
let r = self.textRectForBounds(rect, limitedToNumberOfLines: self.numberOfLines)
super.drawTextInRect(r)
}
}
I used the below solution and it worked for me.
if (window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob) {_x000D_
var blob = new Blob([decodeURIComponent(encodeURI(result.data))], {_x000D_
type: "text/csv;charset=utf-8;"_x000D_
});_x000D_
navigator.msSaveBlob(blob, 'filename.csv');_x000D_
} else {_x000D_
var a = document.createElement('a');_x000D_
a.href = 'data:attachment/csv;charset=utf-8,' + encodeURI(result.data);_x000D_
a.target = '_blank';_x000D_
a.download = 'filename.csv';_x000D_
document.body.appendChild(a);_x000D_
a.click();_x000D_
}
_x000D_
going along with @binz-nakama, here's an update on his jsfiddle with a very small amount of javascript. also incoporates this very good article on css navigation
Array.from(document.querySelectorAll("a"))
.map(x => x.addEventListener("click",
function(e){
Array.from(document.querySelectorAll("a"))
.map(x => x.classList.remove("active"));
e.target.classList.add("active");
}
));
Your script is right. But by default is of None type. So it considers true of any other value other than None is assigned to args.argument_name variable.
I would suggest you to add a action="store_true". This would make the True/False type of flag. If used its True else False.
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser('parser-name')
parser.add_argument("-f","--flag",action="store_true",help="just a flag argument")
usage
$ python3 script.py -f
After parsing when checked with args.f it returns true,
args = parser.parse_args()
print(args.f)
>>>true
If you want to skip every other row and every other column, then you can do it with basic slicing:
In [49]: x=np.arange(16).reshape((4,4))
In [50]: x[1:4:2,1:4:2]
Out[50]:
array([[ 5, 7],
[13, 15]])
This returns a view, not a copy of your array.
In [51]: y=x[1:4:2,1:4:2]
In [52]: y[0,0]=100
In [53]: x # <---- Notice x[1,1] has changed
Out[53]:
array([[ 0, 1, 2, 3],
[ 4, 100, 6, 7],
[ 8, 9, 10, 11],
[ 12, 13, 14, 15]])
while z=x[(1,3),:][:,(1,3)]
uses advanced indexing and thus returns a copy:
In [58]: x=np.arange(16).reshape((4,4))
In [59]: z=x[(1,3),:][:,(1,3)]
In [60]: z
Out[60]:
array([[ 5, 7],
[13, 15]])
In [61]: z[0,0]=0
Note that x
is unchanged:
In [62]: x
Out[62]:
array([[ 0, 1, 2, 3],
[ 4, 5, 6, 7],
[ 8, 9, 10, 11],
[12, 13, 14, 15]])
If you wish to select arbitrary rows and columns, then you can't use basic slicing. You'll have to use advanced indexing, using something like x[rows,:][:,columns]
, where rows
and columns
are sequences. This of course is going to give you a copy, not a view, of your original array. This is as one should expect, since a numpy array uses contiguous memory (with constant strides), and there would be no way to generate a view with arbitrary rows and columns (since that would require non-constant strides).
This is what worked for our particular situation.
Notes are from Wikipedia on Basic Auth from the Client Side. Thank you to @briantist's answer for the help!
Combine the username and password into a single string username:password
$user = "shaunluttin"
$pass = "super-strong-alpha-numeric-symbolic-long-password"
$pair = "${user}:${pass}"
Encode the string to the RFC2045-MIME variant of Base64, except not limited to 76 char/line.
$bytes = [System.Text.Encoding]::ASCII.GetBytes($pair)
$base64 = [System.Convert]::ToBase64String($bytes)
Create the Auth value as the method, a space, and then the encoded pair Method Base64String
$basicAuthValue = "Basic $base64"
Create the header Authorization: Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ==
$headers = @{ Authorization = $basicAuthValue }
Invoke the web-request
Invoke-WebRequest -uri "https://api.github.com/user" -Headers $headers
The PowerShell version of this is more verbose than the cURL version is. Why is that? @briantist pointed out that GitHub is breaking the RFC and PowerShell is sticking to it. Does that mean that cURL is also breaking with the standard?
You probably are going to want to use the following declaration:
height: 100%;
This will set the div's height to 100% of its containers height, which will make it fill the parent div.
PHP has the new nice filter_input functions now, that for instance liberate you from finding 'the ultimate e-mail regex' now that there is a built-in FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL type
My own filter class (uses JavaScript to highlight faulty fields) can be initiated by either an ajax request or normal form post. (see the example below)
/**
* Pork.FormValidator
* Validates arrays or properties by setting up simple arrays.
* Note that some of the regexes are for dutch input!
* Example:
*
* $validations = array('name' => 'anything','email' => 'email','alias' => 'anything','pwd'=>'anything','gsm' => 'phone','birthdate' => 'date');
* $required = array('name', 'email', 'alias', 'pwd');
* $sanitize = array('alias');
*
* $validator = new FormValidator($validations, $required, $sanitize);
*
* if($validator->validate($_POST))
* {
* $_POST = $validator->sanitize($_POST);
* // now do your saving, $_POST has been sanitized.
* die($validator->getScript()."<script type='text/javascript'>alert('saved changes');</script>");
* }
* else
* {
* die($validator->getScript());
* }
*
* To validate just one element:
* $validated = new FormValidator()->validate('blah@bla.', 'email');
*
* To sanitize just one element:
* $sanitized = new FormValidator()->sanitize('<b>blah</b>', 'string');
*
* @package pork
* @author SchizoDuckie
* @copyright SchizoDuckie 2008
* @version 1.0
* @access public
*/
class FormValidator
{
public static $regexes = Array(
'date' => "^[0-9]{1,2}[-/][0-9]{1,2}[-/][0-9]{4}\$",
'amount' => "^[-]?[0-9]+\$",
'number' => "^[-]?[0-9,]+\$",
'alfanum' => "^[0-9a-zA-Z ,.-_\\s\?\!]+\$",
'not_empty' => "[a-z0-9A-Z]+",
'words' => "^[A-Za-z]+[A-Za-z \\s]*\$",
'phone' => "^[0-9]{10,11}\$",
'zipcode' => "^[1-9][0-9]{3}[a-zA-Z]{2}\$",
'plate' => "^([0-9a-zA-Z]{2}[-]){2}[0-9a-zA-Z]{2}\$",
'price' => "^[0-9.,]*(([.,][-])|([.,][0-9]{2}))?\$",
'2digitopt' => "^\d+(\,\d{2})?\$",
'2digitforce' => "^\d+\,\d\d\$",
'anything' => "^[\d\D]{1,}\$"
);
private $validations, $sanatations, $mandatories, $errors, $corrects, $fields;
public function __construct($validations=array(), $mandatories = array(), $sanatations = array())
{
$this->validations = $validations;
$this->sanitations = $sanitations;
$this->mandatories = $mandatories;
$this->errors = array();
$this->corrects = array();
}
/**
* Validates an array of items (if needed) and returns true or false
*
*/
public function validate($items)
{
$this->fields = $items;
$havefailures = false;
foreach($items as $key=>$val)
{
if((strlen($val) == 0 || array_search($key, $this->validations) === false) && array_search($key, $this->mandatories) === false)
{
$this->corrects[] = $key;
continue;
}
$result = self::validateItem($val, $this->validations[$key]);
if($result === false) {
$havefailures = true;
$this->addError($key, $this->validations[$key]);
}
else
{
$this->corrects[] = $key;
}
}
return(!$havefailures);
}
/**
*
* Adds unvalidated class to thos elements that are not validated. Removes them from classes that are.
*/
public function getScript() {
if(!empty($this->errors))
{
$errors = array();
foreach($this->errors as $key=>$val) { $errors[] = "'INPUT[name={$key}]'"; }
$output = '$$('.implode(',', $errors).').addClass("unvalidated");';
$output .= "new FormValidator().showMessage();";
}
if(!empty($this->corrects))
{
$corrects = array();
foreach($this->corrects as $key) { $corrects[] = "'INPUT[name={$key}]'"; }
$output .= '$$('.implode(',', $corrects).').removeClass("unvalidated");';
}
$output = "<script type='text/javascript'>{$output} </script>";
return($output);
}
/**
*
* Sanitizes an array of items according to the $this->sanitations
* sanitations will be standard of type string, but can also be specified.
* For ease of use, this syntax is accepted:
* $sanitations = array('fieldname', 'otherfieldname'=>'float');
*/
public function sanitize($items)
{
foreach($items as $key=>$val)
{
if(array_search($key, $this->sanitations) === false && !array_key_exists($key, $this->sanitations)) continue;
$items[$key] = self::sanitizeItem($val, $this->validations[$key]);
}
return($items);
}
/**
*
* Adds an error to the errors array.
*/
private function addError($field, $type='string')
{
$this->errors[$field] = $type;
}
/**
*
* Sanitize a single var according to $type.
* Allows for static calling to allow simple sanitization
*/
public static function sanitizeItem($var, $type)
{
$flags = NULL;
switch($type)
{
case 'url':
$filter = FILTER_SANITIZE_URL;
break;
case 'int':
$filter = FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_INT;
break;
case 'float':
$filter = FILTER_SANITIZE_NUMBER_FLOAT;
$flags = FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_FRACTION | FILTER_FLAG_ALLOW_THOUSAND;
break;
case 'email':
$var = substr($var, 0, 254);
$filter = FILTER_SANITIZE_EMAIL;
break;
case 'string':
default:
$filter = FILTER_SANITIZE_STRING;
$flags = FILTER_FLAG_NO_ENCODE_QUOTES;
break;
}
$output = filter_var($var, $filter, $flags);
return($output);
}
/**
*
* Validates a single var according to $type.
* Allows for static calling to allow simple validation.
*
*/
public static function validateItem($var, $type)
{
if(array_key_exists($type, self::$regexes))
{
$returnval = filter_var($var, FILTER_VALIDATE_REGEXP, array("options"=> array("regexp"=>'!'.self::$regexes[$type].'!i'))) !== false;
return($returnval);
}
$filter = false;
switch($type)
{
case 'email':
$var = substr($var, 0, 254);
$filter = FILTER_VALIDATE_EMAIL;
break;
case 'int':
$filter = FILTER_VALIDATE_INT;
break;
case 'boolean':
$filter = FILTER_VALIDATE_BOOLEAN;
break;
case 'ip':
$filter = FILTER_VALIDATE_IP;
break;
case 'url':
$filter = FILTER_VALIDATE_URL;
break;
}
return ($filter === false) ? false : filter_var($var, $filter) !== false ? true : false;
}
}
Of course, keep in mind that you need to do your sql query escaping too depending on what type of db your are using (mysql_real_escape_string() is useless for an sql server for instance). You probably want to handle this automatically at your appropriate application layer like an ORM. Also, as mentioned above: for outputting to html use the other php dedicated functions like htmlspecialchars ;)
For really allowing HTML input with like stripped classes and/or tags depend on one of the dedicated xss validation packages. DO NOT WRITE YOUR OWN REGEXES TO PARSE HTML!
Google Docs can serve up PowerPoint (and PDF) documents in it's document viewer. You don't have to sign up for Google Docs, just upload it to your website, and call it from your page:
<iframe src="//docs.google.com/gview?url=https://www.yourwebsite.com/powerpoint.ppt&embedded=true" style="width:600px; height:500px;" frameborder="0"></iframe>
You must enable the library GD2.
Find your (proper) php.ini file
Find the line: ;extension=php_gd2.dll and remove the semicolon in the front.
The line should look like this:
extension=php_gd2.dll
Then restart apache and you should be good to go.
Code:
library(microbenchmark)
dflist <- vector(length=10,mode="list")
for(i in 1:100)
{
dflist[[i]] <- data.frame(a=runif(n=260),b=runif(n=260),
c=rep(LETTERS,10),d=rep(LETTERS,10))
}
mb <- microbenchmark(
plyr::rbind.fill(dflist),
dplyr::bind_rows(dflist),
data.table::rbindlist(dflist),
plyr::ldply(dflist,data.frame),
do.call("rbind",dflist),
times=1000)
ggplot2::autoplot(mb)
Session:
R version 3.3.0 (2016-05-03)
Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
Running under: Windows 7 x64 (build 7601) Service Pack 1
> packageVersion("plyr")
[1] ‘1.8.4’
> packageVersion("dplyr")
[1] ‘0.5.0’
> packageVersion("data.table")
[1] ‘1.9.6’
UPDATE: Rerun 31-Jan-2018. Ran on the same computer. New versions of packages. Added seed for seed lovers.
set.seed(21)
library(microbenchmark)
dflist <- vector(length=10,mode="list")
for(i in 1:100)
{
dflist[[i]] <- data.frame(a=runif(n=260),b=runif(n=260),
c=rep(LETTERS,10),d=rep(LETTERS,10))
}
mb <- microbenchmark(
plyr::rbind.fill(dflist),
dplyr::bind_rows(dflist),
data.table::rbindlist(dflist),
plyr::ldply(dflist,data.frame),
do.call("rbind",dflist),
times=1000)
ggplot2::autoplot(mb)+theme_bw()
R version 3.4.0 (2017-04-21)
Platform: x86_64-w64-mingw32/x64 (64-bit)
Running under: Windows 7 x64 (build 7601) Service Pack 1
> packageVersion("plyr")
[1] ‘1.8.4’
> packageVersion("dplyr")
[1] ‘0.7.2’
> packageVersion("data.table")
[1] ‘1.10.4’
UPDATE: Rerun 06-Aug-2019.
set.seed(21)
library(microbenchmark)
dflist <- vector(length=10,mode="list")
for(i in 1:100)
{
dflist[[i]] <- data.frame(a=runif(n=260),b=runif(n=260),
c=rep(LETTERS,10),d=rep(LETTERS,10))
}
mb <- microbenchmark(
plyr::rbind.fill(dflist),
dplyr::bind_rows(dflist),
data.table::rbindlist(dflist),
plyr::ldply(dflist,data.frame),
do.call("rbind",dflist),
purrr::map_df(dflist,dplyr::bind_rows),
times=1000)
ggplot2::autoplot(mb)+theme_bw()
R version 3.6.0 (2019-04-26)
Platform: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu (64-bit)
Running under: Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS
Matrix products: default
BLAS: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/openblas/libblas.so.3
LAPACK: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libopenblasp-r0.2.20.so
packageVersion("plyr")
packageVersion("dplyr")
packageVersion("data.table")
packageVersion("purrr")
>> packageVersion("plyr")
[1] ‘1.8.4’
>> packageVersion("dplyr")
[1] ‘0.8.3’
>> packageVersion("data.table")
[1] ‘1.12.2’
>> packageVersion("purrr")
[1] ‘0.3.2’
With jQuery you could use the .each
function to iterate through the links with the following code:
$(document).ready(function() {
$("[href]").each(function() {
if (this.href == window.location.href) {
$(this).addClass("active");
}
});
});
Depending on your page structure and used links, you may have to narrow down the selection of links like:
$("nav [href]").each ...
If you are using URL parameters, it may be necessary to strip these:
if (this.href.split("?")[0] == window.location.href.split("?")[0]) ...
This way you don't have to edit each page.
In order to be able to display the information in the form you would like, you need to give those specific inputs of interest names. I'd recommend you do have:
<form #f="ngForm" (ngSubmit)="onSubmit(f)"> ...
<input **name="firstName" ngModel** placeholder="Enter your first name"> ...
That's no struts related problem but rather plain HMTL/CSS.
I'm not HTML or CSS expert, but I guess you could use a div with a border on the left or right side only.
Set the CSS position: relative;
on the box. This causes all absolute positions of objects inside to be relative to the corners of that box. Then set the following CSS on the "Bet 5 days ago" line:
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
right: 0;
If you need to space the text farther away from the edge, you could change 0
to 2px
or similar.
Bootstrap 3 with DataTables Example: Bootstrap Docs & DataTables Docs
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#example').DataTable();
});
_x000D_
<link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/twitter-bootstrap/3.4.1/css/bootstrap.min.css rel=stylesheet><link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/css/dataTables.bootstrap.min.css rel=stylesheet><div class=container><h1>Bootstrap 3 DataTables</h1><table cellspacing=0 class="table table-bordered table-hover table-striped"id=example width=100%><thead><tr><th>Name<th>Position<th>Office<th>Salary<tbody><tr><td>Tiger Nixon<td>System Architect<td>Edinburgh<td>$320,800<tr><td>Garrett Winters<td>Accountant<td>Tokyo<td>$170,750<tr><td>Ashton Cox<td>Junior Technical Author<td>San Francisco<td>$86,000<tr><td>Cedric Kelly<td>Senior Javascript Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>$433,060<tr><td>Airi Satou<td>Accountant<td>Tokyo<td>$162,700<tr><td>Brielle Williamson<td>Integration Specialist<td>New York<td>$372,000<tr><td>Herrod Chandler<td>Sales Assistant<td>San Francisco<td>$137,500<tr><td>Rhona Davidson<td>Integration Specialist<td>Tokyo<td>$327,900<tr><td>Colleen Hurst<td>Javascript Developer<td>San Francisco<td>$205,500<tr><td>Sonya Frost<td>Software Engineer<td>Edinburgh<td>$103,600<tr><td>Jena Gaines<td>Office Manager<td>London<td>$90,560<tr><td>Quinn Flynn<td>Support Lead<td>Edinburgh<td>$342,000<tr><td>Charde Marshall<td>Regional Director<td>San Francisco<td>$470,600<tr><td>Haley Kennedy<td>Senior Marketing Designer<td>London<td>$313,500<tr><td>Tatyana Fitzpatrick<td>Regional Director<td>London<td>$385,750<tr><td>Michael Silva<td>Marketing Designer<td>London<td>$198,500<tr><td>Paul Byrd<td>Chief Financial Officer (CFO)<td>New York<td>$725,000<tr><td>Gloria Little<td>Systems Administrator<td>New York<td>$237,500<tr><td>Bradley Greer<td>Software Engineer<td>London<td>$132,000<tr><td>Dai Rios<td>Personnel Lead<td>Edinburgh<td>$217,500<tr><td>Jenette Caldwell<td>Development Lead<td>New York<td>$345,000<tr><td>Yuri Berry<td>Chief Marketing Officer (CMO)<td>New York<td>$675,000<tr><td>Caesar Vance<td>Pre-Sales Support<td>New York<td>$106,450<tr><td>Doris Wilder<td>Sales Assistant<td>Sidney<td>$85,600<tr><td>Angelica Ramos<td>Chief Executive Officer (CEO)<td>London<td>$1,200,000<tr><td>Gavin Joyce<td>Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>$92,575<tr><td>Jennifer Chang<td>Regional Director<td>Singapore<td>$357,650<tr><td>Brenden Wagner<td>Software Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>$206,850<tr><td>Fiona Green<td>Chief Operating Officer (COO)<td>San Francisco<td>$850,000<tr><td>Shou Itou<td>Regional Marketing<td>Tokyo<td>$163,000<tr><td>Michelle House<td>Integration Specialist<td>Sidney<td>$95,400<tr><td>Suki Burks<td>Developer<td>London<td>$114,500<tr><td>Prescott Bartlett<td>Technical Author<td>London<td>$145,000<tr><td>Gavin Cortez<td>Team Leader<td>San Francisco<td>$235,500<tr><td>Martena Mccray<td>Post-Sales support<td>Edinburgh<td>$324,050<tr><td>Unity Butler<td>Marketing Designer<td>San Francisco<td>$85,675<tr><td>Howard Hatfield<td>Office Manager<td>San Francisco<td>$164,500<tr><td>Hope Fuentes<td>Secretary<td>San Francisco<td>$109,850<tr><td>Vivian Harrell<td>Financial Controller<td>San Francisco<td>$452,500<tr><td>Timothy Mooney<td>Office Manager<td>London<td>$136,200<tr><td>Jackson Bradshaw<td>Director<td>New York<td>$645,750<tr><td>Olivia Liang<td>Support Engineer<td>Singapore<td>$234,500<tr><td>Bruno Nash<td>Software Engineer<td>London<td>$163,500<tr><td>Sakura Yamamoto<td>Support Engineer<td>Tokyo<td>$139,575<tr><td>Thor Walton<td>Developer<td>New York<td>$98,540<tr><td>Finn Camacho<td>Support Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>$87,500<tr><td>Serge Baldwin<td>Data Coordinator<td>Singapore<td>$138,575<tr><td>Zenaida Frank<td>Software Engineer<td>New York<td>$125,250<tr><td>Zorita Serrano<td>Software Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>$115,000<tr><td>Jennifer Acosta<td>Junior Javascript Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>$75,650<tr><td>Cara Stevens<td>Sales Assistant<td>New York<td>$145,600<tr><td>Hermione Butler<td>Regional Director<td>London<td>$356,250<tr><td>Lael Greer<td>Systems Administrator<td>London<td>$103,500<tr><td>Jonas Alexander<td>Developer<td>San Francisco<td>$86,500<tr><td>Shad Decker<td>Regional Director<td>Edinburgh<td>$183,000<tr><td>Michael Bruce<td>Javascript Developer<td>Singapore<td>$183,000<tr><td>Donna Snider<td>Customer Support<td>New York<td>$112,000</table></div><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.5.1/jquery.min.js></script><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/js/jquery.dataTables.min.js></script><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/js/dataTables.bootstrap.min.js></script>
_x000D_
Bootstrap 4 with DataTables Example: Bootstrap Docs & DataTables Docs
$(document).ready(function() {
$('#example').DataTable();
});
_x000D_
<link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/twitter-bootstrap/4.5.0/css/bootstrap.min.css rel=stylesheet><link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/css/dataTables.bootstrap4.min.css rel=stylesheet><div class=container><h1>Bootstrap 4 DataTables</h1><table cellspacing=0 class="table table-bordered table-hover table-inverse table-striped"id=example width=100%><thead><tr><th>Name<th>Position<th>Office<th>Age<th>Start date<th>Salary<tfoot><tr><th>Name<th>Position<th>Office<th>Age<th>Start date<th>Salary<tbody><tr><td>Tiger Nixon<td>System Architect<td>Edinburgh<td>61<td>2011/04/25<td>$320,800<tr><td>Garrett Winters<td>Accountant<td>Tokyo<td>63<td>2011/07/25<td>$170,750<tr><td>Ashton Cox<td>Junior Technical Author<td>San Francisco<td>66<td>2009/01/12<td>$86,000<tr><td>Cedric Kelly<td>Senior Javascript Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>22<td>2012/03/29<td>$433,060<tr><td>Airi Satou<td>Accountant<td>Tokyo<td>33<td>2008/11/28<td>$162,700<tr><td>Brielle Williamson<td>Integration Specialist<td>New York<td>61<td>2012/12/02<td>$372,000<tr><td>Herrod Chandler<td>Sales Assistant<td>San Francisco<td>59<td>2012/08/06<td>$137,500<tr><td>Rhona Davidson<td>Integration Specialist<td>Tokyo<td>55<td>2010/10/14<td>$327,900<tr><td>Colleen Hurst<td>Javascript Developer<td>San Francisco<td>39<td>2009/09/15<td>$205,500<tr><td>Sonya Frost<td>Software Engineer<td>Edinburgh<td>23<td>2008/12/13<td>$103,600<tr><td>Jena Gaines<td>Office Manager<td>London<td>30<td>2008/12/19<td>$90,560<tr><td>Quinn Flynn<td>Support Lead<td>Edinburgh<td>22<td>2013/03/03<td>$342,000<tr><td>Charde Marshall<td>Regional Director<td>San Francisco<td>36<td>2008/10/16<td>$470,600<tr><td>Haley Kennedy<td>Senior Marketing Designer<td>London<td>43<td>2012/12/18<td>$313,500<tr><td>Tatyana Fitzpatrick<td>Regional Director<td>London<td>19<td>2010/03/17<td>$385,750<tr><td>Michael Silva<td>Marketing Designer<td>London<td>66<td>2012/11/27<td>$198,500<tr><td>Paul Byrd<td>Chief Financial Officer (CFO)<td>New York<td>64<td>2010/06/09<td>$725,000<tr><td>Gloria Little<td>Systems Administrator<td>New York<td>59<td>2009/04/10<td>$237,500<tr><td>Bradley Greer<td>Software Engineer<td>London<td>41<td>2012/10/13<td>$132,000<tr><td>Dai Rios<td>Personnel Lead<td>Edinburgh<td>35<td>2012/09/26<td>$217,500<tr><td>Jenette Caldwell<td>Development Lead<td>New York<td>30<td>2011/09/03<td>$345,000<tr><td>Yuri Berry<td>Chief Marketing Officer (CMO)<td>New York<td>40<td>2009/06/25<td>$675,000<tr><td>Caesar Vance<td>Pre-Sales Support<td>New York<td>21<td>2011/12/12<td>$106,450<tr><td>Doris Wilder<td>Sales Assistant<td>Sidney<td>23<td>2010/09/20<td>$85,600<tr><td>Angelica Ramos<td>Chief Executive Officer (CEO)<td>London<td>47<td>2009/10/09<td>$1,200,000<tr><td>Gavin Joyce<td>Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>42<td>2010/12/22<td>$92,575<tr><td>Jennifer Chang<td>Regional Director<td>Singapore<td>28<td>2010/11/14<td>$357,650<tr><td>Brenden Wagner<td>Software Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>28<td>2011/06/07<td>$206,850<tr><td>Fiona Green<td>Chief Operating Officer (COO)<td>San Francisco<td>48<td>2010/03/11<td>$850,000<tr><td>Shou Itou<td>Regional Marketing<td>Tokyo<td>20<td>2011/08/14<td>$163,000<tr><td>Michelle House<td>Integration Specialist<td>Sidney<td>37<td>2011/06/02<td>$95,400<tr><td>Suki Burks<td>Developer<td>London<td>53<td>2009/10/22<td>$114,500<tr><td>Prescott Bartlett<td>Technical Author<td>London<td>27<td>2011/05/07<td>$145,000<tr><td>Gavin Cortez<td>Team Leader<td>San Francisco<td>22<td>2008/10/26<td>$235,500<tr><td>Martena Mccray<td>Post-Sales support<td>Edinburgh<td>46<td>2011/03/09<td>$324,050<tr><td>Unity Butler<td>Marketing Designer<td>San Francisco<td>47<td>2009/12/09<td>$85,675<tr><td>Howard Hatfield<td>Office Manager<td>San Francisco<td>51<td>2008/12/16<td>$164,500<tr><td>Hope Fuentes<td>Secretary<td>San Francisco<td>41<td>2010/02/12<td>$109,850<tr><td>Vivian Harrell<td>Financial Controller<td>San Francisco<td>62<td>2009/02/14<td>$452,500<tr><td>Timothy Mooney<td>Office Manager<td>London<td>37<td>2008/12/11<td>$136,200<tr><td>Jackson Bradshaw<td>Director<td>New York<td>65<td>2008/09/26<td>$645,750<tr><td>Olivia Liang<td>Support Engineer<td>Singapore<td>64<td>2011/02/03<td>$234,500<tr><td>Bruno Nash<td>Software Engineer<td>London<td>38<td>2011/05/03<td>$163,500<tr><td>Sakura Yamamoto<td>Support Engineer<td>Tokyo<td>37<td>2009/08/19<td>$139,575<tr><td>Thor Walton<td>Developer<td>New York<td>61<td>2013/08/11<td>$98,540<tr><td>Finn Camacho<td>Support Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>47<td>2009/07/07<td>$87,500<tr><td>Serge Baldwin<td>Data Coordinator<td>Singapore<td>64<td>2012/04/09<td>$138,575<tr><td>Zenaida Frank<td>Software Engineer<td>New York<td>63<td>2010/01/04<td>$125,250<tr><td>Zorita Serrano<td>Software Engineer<td>San Francisco<td>56<td>2012/06/01<td>$115,000<tr><td>Jennifer Acosta<td>Junior Javascript Developer<td>Edinburgh<td>43<td>2013/02/01<td>$75,650<tr><td>Cara Stevens<td>Sales Assistant<td>New York<td>46<td>2011/12/06<td>$145,600<tr><td>Hermione Butler<td>Regional Director<td>London<td>47<td>2011/03/21<td>$356,250<tr><td>Lael Greer<td>Systems Administrator<td>London<td>21<td>2009/02/27<td>$103,500<tr><td>Jonas Alexander<td>Developer<td>San Francisco<td>30<td>2010/07/14<td>$86,500<tr><td>Shad Decker<td>Regional Director<td>Edinburgh<td>51<td>2008/11/13<td>$183,000<tr><td>Michael Bruce<td>Javascript Developer<td>Singapore<td>29<td>2011/06/27<td>$183,000<tr><td>Donna Snider<td>Customer Support<td>New York<td>27<td>2011/01/25<td>$112,000</table></div><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.5.1/jquery.min.js></script><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/js/jquery.dataTables.min.js></script><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/datatables/1.10.20/js/dataTables.bootstrap4.min.js></script>
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Bootstrap 3 with Bootstrap Table Example: Bootstrap Docs & Bootstrap Table Docs
<link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/twitter-bootstrap/3.4.1/css/bootstrap.min.css rel=stylesheet><link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/bootstrap-table/1.16.0/bootstrap-table.min.css rel=stylesheet><table data-sort-name=stargazers_count data-sort-order=desc data-toggle=table data-url="https://api.github.com/users/wenzhixin/repos?type=owner&sort=full_name&direction=asc&per_page=100&page=1"><thead><tr><th data-field=name data-sortable=true>Name<th data-field=stargazers_count data-sortable=true>Stars<th data-field=forks_count data-sortable=true>Forks<th data-field=description data-sortable=true>Description</thead></table><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.5.1/jquery.min.js></script><script src=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/bootstrap-table/1.16.0/bootstrap-table.min.js></script>
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Bootstrap 3 with Bootstrap Sortable Example: Bootstrap Docs & Bootstrap Sortable Docs
function randomDate(t,e){return new Date(t.getTime()+Math.random()*(e.getTime()-t.getTime()))}function randomName(){return["Jack","Peter","Frank","Steven"][Math.floor(4*Math.random())]+" "+["White","Jackson","Sinatra","Spielberg"][Math.floor(4*Math.random())]}function newTableRow(){var t=moment(randomDate(new Date(2e3,0,1),new Date)).format("D.M.YYYY"),e=Math.round(Math.random()*Math.random()*100*100)/100,a=Math.round(Math.random()*Math.random()*100*100)/100,r=Math.round(Math.random()*Math.random()*100*100)/100;return"<tr><td>"+randomName()+"</td><td>"+e+"</td><td>"+a+"</td><td>"+r+"</td><td>"+Math.round(100*(e+a+r))/100+"</td><td data-dateformat='D-M-YYYY'>"+t+"</td></tr>"}function customSort(){alert("Custom sort.")}!function(t,e){"use strict";"function"==typeof define&&define.amd?define("tinysort",function(){return e}):t.tinysort=e}(this,function(){"use strict";function t(t,e){for(var a,r=t.length,o=r;o--;)e(t[a=r-o-1],a)}function e(t,e,a){for(var o in e)(a||t[o]===r)&&(t[o]=e[o]);return t}function a(t,e,a){u.push({prepare:t,sort:e,sortBy:a})}var r,o=!1,n=null,s=window,d=s.document,i=parseFloat,l=/(-?\d+\.?\d*)\s*$/g,c=/(\d+\.?\d*)\s*$/g,u=[],f=0,h=0,p=String.fromCharCode(4095),m={selector:n,order:"asc",attr:n,data:n,useVal:o,place:"org",returns:o,cases:o,natural:o,forceStrings:o,ignoreDashes:o,sortFunction:n,useFlex:o,emptyEnd:o};return s.Element&&function(t){t.matchesSelector=t.matchesSelector||t.mozMatchesSelector||t.msMatchesSelector||t.oMatchesSelector||t.webkitMatchesSelector||function(t){for(var e=this,a=(e.parentNode||e.document).querySelectorAll(t),r=-1;a[++r]&&a[r]!=e;);return!!a[r]}}(Element.prototype),e(a,{loop:t}),e(function(a,s){function v(t){var a=!!t.selector,r=a&&":"===t.selector[0],o=e(t||{},m);E.push(e({hasSelector:a,hasAttr:!(o.attr===n||""===o.attr),hasData:o.data!==n,hasFilter:r,sortReturnNumber:"asc"===o.order?1:-1},o))}function b(t,e,a){for(var r=a(t.toString()),o=a(e.toString()),n=0;r[n]&&o[n];n++)if(r[n]!==o[n]){var s=Number(r[n]),d=Number(o[n]);return s==r[n]&&d==o[n]?s-d:r[n]>o[n]?1:-1}return r.length-o.length}function g(t){for(var e,a,r=[],o=0,n=-1,s=0;e=(a=t.charAt(o++)).charCodeAt(0);){var d=46==e||e>=48&&57>=e;d!==s&&(r[++n]="",s=d),r[n]+=a}return r}function w(){return Y.forEach(function(t){F.appendChild(t.elm)}),F}function S(t){var e=t.elm,a=d.createElement("div");return t.ghost=a,e.parentNode.insertBefore(a,e),t}function y(t,e){var a=t.ghost,r=a.parentNode;r.insertBefore(e,a),r.removeChild(a),delete t.ghost}function C(t,e){var a,r=t.elm;return e.selector&&(e.hasFilter?r.matchesSelector(e.selector)||(r=n):r=r.querySelector(e.selector)),e.hasAttr?a=r.getAttribute(e.attr):e.useVal?a=r.value||r.getAttribute("value"):e.hasData?a=r.getAttribute("data-"+e.data):r&&(a=r.textContent),M(a)&&(e.cases||(a=a.toLowerCase()),a=a.replace(/\s+/g," ")),null===a&&(a=p),a}function M(t){return"string"==typeof t}M(a)&&(a=d.querySelectorAll(a)),0===a.length&&console.warn("No elements to sort");var x,N,F=d.createDocumentFragment(),D=[],Y=[],$=[],E=[],k=!0,A=a.length&&a[0].parentNode,T=A.rootNode!==document,R=a.length&&(s===r||!1!==s.useFlex)&&!T&&-1!==getComputedStyle(A,null).display.indexOf("flex");return function(){0===arguments.length?v({}):t(arguments,function(t){v(M(t)?{selector:t}:t)}),f=E.length}.apply(n,Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments,1)),t(a,function(t,e){N?N!==t.parentNode&&(k=!1):N=t.parentNode;var a=E[0],r=a.hasFilter,o=a.selector,n=!o||r&&t.matchesSelector(o)||o&&t.querySelector(o)?Y:$,s={elm:t,pos:e,posn:n.length};D.push(s),n.push(s)}),x=Y.slice(0),Y.sort(function(e,a){var n=0;for(0!==h&&(h=0);0===n&&f>h;){var s=E[h],d=s.ignoreDashes?c:l;if(t(u,function(t){var e=t.prepare;e&&e(s)}),s.sortFunction)n=s.sortFunction(e,a);else if("rand"==s.order)n=Math.random()<.5?1:-1;else{var p=o,m=C(e,s),v=C(a,s),w=""===m||m===r,S=""===v||v===r;if(m===v)n=0;else if(s.emptyEnd&&(w||S))n=w&&S?0:w?1:-1;else{if(!s.forceStrings){var y=M(m)?m&&m.match(d):o,x=M(v)?v&&v.match(d):o;y&&x&&m.substr(0,m.length-y[0].length)==v.substr(0,v.length-x[0].length)&&(p=!o,m=i(y[0]),v=i(x[0]))}n=m===r||v===r?0:s.natural&&(isNaN(m)||isNaN(v))?b(m,v,g):v>m?-1:m>v?1:0}}t(u,function(t){var e=t.sort;e&&(n=e(s,p,m,v,n))}),0==(n*=s.sortReturnNumber)&&h++}return 0===n&&(n=e.pos>a.pos?1:-1),n}),function(){var t=Y.length===D.length;if(k&&t)R?Y.forEach(function(t,e){t.elm.style.order=e}):N?N.appendChild(w()):console.warn("parentNode has been removed");else{var e=E[0].place,a="start"===e,r="end"===e,o="first"===e,n="last"===e;if("org"===e)Y.forEach(S),Y.forEach(function(t,e){y(x[e],t.elm)});else if(a||r){var s=x[a?0:x.length-1],d=s&&s.elm.parentNode,i=d&&(a&&d.firstChild||d.lastChild);i&&(i!==s.elm&&(s={elm:i}),S(s),r&&d.appendChild(s.ghost),y(s,w()))}else(o||n)&&y(S(x[o?0:x.length-1]),w())}}(),Y.map(function(t){return t.elm})},{plugin:a,defaults:m})}()),function(t,e){"function"==typeof define&&define.amd?define(["jquery","tinysort","moment"],e):e(t.jQuery,t.tinysort,t.moment||void 0)}(this,function(t,e,a){var r,o,n,s=t(document);function d(e){var s=void 0!==a;r=e.sign?e.sign:"arrow","default"==e.customSort&&(e.customSort=c),o=e.customSort||o||c,n=e.emptyEnd,t("table.sortable").each(function(){var r=t(this),o=!0===e.applyLast;r.find("span.sign").remove(),r.find("> thead [colspan]").each(function(){for(var e=parseFloat(t(this).attr("colspan")),a=1;a<e;a++)t(this).after('<th class="colspan-compensate">')}),r.find("> thead [rowspan]").each(function(){for(var e=t(this),a=parseFloat(e.attr("rowspan")),r=1;r<a;r++){var o=e.parent("tr"),n=o.next("tr"),s=o.children().index(e);n.children().eq(s).before('<th class="rowspan-compensate">')}}),r.find("> thead tr").each(function(e){t(this).find("th").each(function(a){var r=t(this);r.addClass("nosort").removeClass("up down"),r.attr("data-sortcolumn",a),r.attr("data-sortkey",a+"-"+e)})}),r.find("> thead .rowspan-compensate, .colspan-compensate").remove(),r.find("th").each(function(){var e=t(this);if(void 0!==e.attr("data-dateformat")&&s){var o=parseFloat(e.attr("data-sortcolumn"));r.find("td:nth-child("+(o+1)+")").each(function(){var r=t(this);r.attr("data-value",a(r.text(),e.attr("data-dateformat")).format("YYYY/MM/DD/HH/mm/ss"))})}else if(void 0!==e.attr("data-valueprovider")){o=parseFloat(e.attr("data-sortcolumn"));r.find("td:nth-child("+(o+1)+")").each(function(){var a=t(this);a.attr("data-value",new RegExp(e.attr("data-valueprovider")).exec(a.text())[0])})}}),r.find("td").each(function(){var e=t(this);void 0!==e.attr("data-dateformat")&&s?e.attr("data-value",a(e.text(),e.attr("data-dateformat")).format("YYYY/MM/DD/HH/mm/ss")):void 0!==e.attr("data-valueprovider")?e.attr("data-value",new RegExp(e.attr("data-valueprovider")).exec(e.text())[0]):void 0===e.attr("data-value")&&e.attr("data-value",e.text())});var n=l(r),d=n.bsSort;r.find('> thead th[data-defaultsort!="disabled"]').each(function(e){var a=t(this),r=a.closest("table.sortable");a.data("sortTable",r);var s=a.attr("data-sortkey"),i=o?n.lastSort:-1;d[s]=o?d[s]:a.attr("data-defaultsort"),void 0!==d[s]&&o===(s===i)&&(d[s]="asc"===d[s]?"desc":"asc",u(a,r))})})}function i(e){var a=t(e),r=a.data("sortTable")||a.closest("table.sortable");u(a,r)}function l(e){var a=e.data("bootstrap-sortable-context");return void 0===a&&(a={bsSort:[],lastSort:void 0},e.find('> thead th[data-defaultsort!="disabled"]').each(function(e){var r=t(this),o=r.attr("data-sortkey");a.bsSort[o]=r.attr("data-defaultsort"),void 0!==a.bsSort[o]&&(a.lastSort=o)}),e.data("bootstrap-sortable-context",a)),a}function c(t,a){e(t,a)}function u(e,a){a.trigger("before-sort");var s=parseFloat(e.attr("data-sortcolumn")),d=l(a),i=d.bsSort;if(e.attr("colspan")){var c=parseFloat(e.data("mainsort"))||0,f=parseFloat(e.data("sortkey").split("-").pop());if(a.find("> thead tr").length-1>f)return void u(a.find('[data-sortkey="'+(s+c)+"-"+(f+1)+'"]'),a);s+=c}var h=e.attr("data-defaultsign")||r;if(a.find("> thead th").each(function(){t(this).removeClass("up").removeClass("down").addClass("nosort")}),t.browser.mozilla){var p=a.find("> thead div.mozilla");void 0!==p&&(p.find(".sign").remove(),p.parent().html(p.html())),e.wrapInner('<div class="mozilla"></div>'),e.children().eq(0).append('<span class="sign '+h+'"></span>')}else a.find("> thead span.sign").remove(),e.append('<span class="sign '+h+'"></span>');var m=e.attr("data-sortkey"),v="desc"!==e.attr("data-firstsort")?"desc":"asc",b=i[m]||v;d.lastSort!==m&&void 0!==i[m]||(b="asc"===b?"desc":"asc"),i[m]=b,d.lastSort=m,"desc"===i[m]?(e.find("span.sign").addClass("up"),e.addClass("up").removeClass("down nosort")):e.addClass("down").removeClass("up nosort");var g=a.children("tbody").children("tr"),w=[];t(g.filter('[data-disablesort="true"]').get().reverse()).each(function(e,a){var r=t(a);w.push({index:g.index(r),row:r}),r.remove()});var S=g.not('[data-disablesort="true"]');if(0!=S.length){var y="asc"===i[m]&&n;o(S,{emptyEnd:y,selector:"td:nth-child("+(s+1)+")",order:i[m],data:"value"})}t(w.reverse()).each(function(t,e){0===e.index?a.children("tbody").prepend(e.row):a.children("tbody").children("tr").eq(e.index-1).after(e.row)}),a.find("> tbody > tr > td.sorted,> thead th.sorted").removeClass("sorted"),S.find("td:eq("+s+")").addClass("sorted"),e.addClass("sorted"),a.trigger("sorted")}if(t.bootstrapSortable=function(t){null==t?d({}):t.constructor===Boolean?d({applyLast:t}):void 0!==t.sortingHeader?i(t.sortingHeader):d(t)},s.on("click",'table.sortable>thead th[data-defaultsort!="disabled"]',function(t){i(this)}),!t.browser){t.browser={chrome:!1,mozilla:!1,opera:!1,msie:!1,safari:!1};var f=navigator.userAgent;t.each(t.browser,function(e){t.browser[e]=!!new RegExp(e,"i").test(f),t.browser.mozilla&&"mozilla"===e&&(t.browser.mozilla=!!new RegExp("firefox","i").test(f)),t.browser.chrome&&"safari"===e&&(t.browser.safari=!1)})}t(t.bootstrapSortable)}),function(){var t=$("table");t.append(newTableRow()),t.append(newTableRow()),$("button.add-row").on("click",function(){var e=$(this);t.append(newTableRow()),e.data("sort")?$.bootstrapSortable(!0):$.bootstrapSortable(!1)}),$("button.change-sort").on("click",function(){$(this).data("custom")?$.bootstrapSortable(!0,void 0,customSort):$.bootstrapSortable(!0,void 0,"default")}),t.on("sorted",function(){alert("Table was sorted.")}),$("#event").on("change",function(){$(this).is(":checked")?t.on("sorted",function(){alert("Table was sorted.")}):t.off("sorted")}),$("input[name=sign]:radio").change(function(){$.bootstrapSortable(!0,$(this).val())})}();
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table.sortable span.sign { display: block; position: absolute; top: 50%; right: 5px; font-size: 12px; margin-top: -10px; color: #bfbfc1; } table.sortable th:after { display: block; position: absolute; top: 50%; right: 5px; font-size: 12px; margin-top: -10px; color: #bfbfc1; } table.sortable th.arrow:after { content: ''; } table.sortable span.arrow, span.reversed, th.arrow.down:after, th.reversedarrow.down:after, th.arrow.up:after, th.reversedarrow.up:after { border-style: solid; border-width: 5px; font-size: 0; border-color: #ccc transparent transparent transparent; line-height: 0; height: 0; width: 0; margin-top: -2px; } table.sortable span.arrow.up, th.arrow.up:after { border-color: transparent transparent #ccc transparent; margin-top: -7px; } table.sortable span.reversed, th.reversedarrow.down:after { border-color: transparent transparent #ccc transparent; margin-top: -7px; } table.sortable span.reversed.up, th.reversedarrow.up:after { border-color: #ccc transparent transparent transparent; margin-top: -2px; } table.sortable span.az:before, th.az.down:after { content: "a .. z"; } table.sortable span.az.up:before, th.az.up:after { content: "z .. a"; } table.sortable th.az.nosort:after, th.AZ.nosort:after, th._19.nosort:after, th.month.nosort:after { content: ".."; } table.sortable span.AZ:before, th.AZ.down:after { content: "A .. Z"; } table.sortable span.AZ.up:before, th.AZ.up:after { content: "Z .. A"; } table.sortable span._19:before, th._19.down:after { content: "1 .. 9"; } table.sortable span._19.up:before, th._19.up:after { content: "9 .. 1"; } table.sortable span.month:before, th.month.down:after { content: "jan .. dec"; } table.sortable span.month.up:before, th.month.up:after { content: "dec .. jan"; } table.sortable thead th:not([data-defaultsort=disabled]) { cursor: pointer; position: relative; top: 0; left: 0; } table.sortable thead th:hover:not([data-defaultsort=disabled]) { background: #efefef; } table.sortable thead th div.mozilla { position: relative; }
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<link href=https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/font-awesome/5.13.1/css/all.min.css rel=stylesheet><link href=https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.4.1/css/bootstrap.min.css rel=stylesheet><div class=container><div class=hero-unit><h1>Bootstrap Sortable</h1></div><table class="sortable table table-bordered table-striped"><thead><tr><th style=width:20%;vertical-align:middle data-defaultsign=nospan class=az data-defaultsort=asc rowspan=2><i class="fa fa-fw fa-map-marker"></i>Name<th style=text-align:center colspan=4 data-mainsort=3>Results<th data-defaultsort=disabled><tr><th style=width:20% colspan=2 data-mainsort=1 data-firstsort=desc>Round 1<th style=width:20%>Round 2<th style=width:20%>Total<t
Amazon AWS recently launched macOS EC2 instances.
As of now (Dec 2020) they are pretty pricey, you have to reserve them minimum for 24h.
You can connect to the instance via VNC (sample guide for connecting from Windows) and test your browser.
If I have open a package in BIDS ("Business Intelligence Development Studio", the tool you use to design the packages), and do not select any item in it, I have a "Properties" pane in the bottom right containing - among others, the MaximumErrorCount
property. If you do not see it, maybe it is minimized and you have to open it (have a look at tabs in the right).
If you cannot find it this way, try the menu: View/Properties Window.
Or try the F4 key.
CREATE VIEW MyView AS
SELECT Column, Value FROM Table;
SELECT Column FROM MyView WHERE Value = 1;
Is the proper solution in MySQL, some other SQLs let you define Views more exactly.
Note: Unless the View is very complicated, MySQL will optimize this just fine.
Here is an short extension for 3 or more tables to the answer of D Stanley:
INSERT INTO other_table (name, age, sex, city, id, number, nationality)
SELECT name, age, sex, city, p.id, number, n.nationality
FROM table_1 p
INNER JOIN table_2 a ON a.id = p.id
INNER JOIN table_3 b ON b.id = p.id
...
INNER JOIN table_n x ON x.id = p.id
Swift 3
you can use index(where:) in Swift 3
func index(where predicate: @noescape Element throws -> Bool) rethrows -> Int?
example
if let i = theArray.index(where: {$0.name == "Foo"}) {
return theArray[i]
}
I did something like this. The first 2 zeros are because I don't know what kind of ascii type things this command wants from me. The general feeling I had was to create a temp char array. pass in the wide char array. boom. it works. The +1 ensures that the null terminating character is in the right place.
char tempFilePath[MAX_PATH] = "I want to convert this to wide chars";
int len = strlen(tempFilePath);
// Converts the path to wide characters
int needed = MultiByteToWideChar(0, 0, tempFilePath, len + 1, strDestPath, len + 1);
Yes you can handle with the catch operator like this and show alert as you want but firstly you have to import Rxjs
for the same like this way
import {Observable} from 'rxjs/Rx';
return this.http.request(new Request(this.requestoptions))
.map((res: Response) => {
if (res) {
if (res.status === 201) {
return [{ status: res.status, json: res }]
}
else if (res.status === 200) {
return [{ status: res.status, json: res }]
}
}
}).catch((error: any) => {
if (error.status === 500) {
return Observable.throw(new Error(error.status));
}
else if (error.status === 400) {
return Observable.throw(new Error(error.status));
}
else if (error.status === 409) {
return Observable.throw(new Error(error.status));
}
else if (error.status === 406) {
return Observable.throw(new Error(error.status));
}
});
}
also you can handel error (with err block) that is throw by catch block while .map
function,
like this -
...
.subscribe(res=>{....}
err => {//handel here});
as required for any status without checking particluar one you can try this: -
return this.http.request(new Request(this.requestoptions))
.map((res: Response) => {
if (res) {
if (res.status === 201) {
return [{ status: res.status, json: res }]
}
else if (res.status === 200) {
return [{ status: res.status, json: res }]
}
}
}).catch((error: any) => {
if (error.status < 400 || error.status ===500) {
return Observable.throw(new Error(error.status));
}
})
.subscribe(res => {...},
err => {console.log(err)} );
Organizing your application using class make it easy to you and others who work with you to debug problems and improve the app easily.
You can easily organize your application like this:
class hello(Tk):
def __init__(self):
super(hello, self).__init__()
self.btn = Button(text = "Click me", command=close)
self.btn.pack()
def close():
self.destroy()
app = hello()
app.mainloop()
Another tip: I initialized static fields in a wrong order - surprisingly it didn't bring up a Problem (NullPointerException?), instead Eclipse complained with exactly the message OP posted. Correcting the static initialization order made the class run-able. Example:
private static ScriptEngineManager factory = null;
private static ScriptEngine engine = null;
static {
engine = factory.getEngineByName("JavaScript");
// factory is supposed to initialize FIRST
factory = new ScriptEngineManager();
}
The numbers starting with 0x
are hexadecimal (base 16).0x6400
represents 25600
.
To convert,
The factors 1, 16, 256, etc. are the increasing powers of 16.
0x6400 = (0*1) + (0*16^1) + (4*16^2) + (6*16^3) = 25600
or
0x6400 = (0*1) + (0*16) + (4*256) + (6*4096) = 25600
Best way to add custom drawable is:
<RadioButton
android:id="@+id/radiocar"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:layout_gravity="center"
android:background="@android:color/transparent"
android:button="@drawable/yourbuttonbackground"
android:checked="true"
android:drawableRight="@mipmap/car"
android:paddingLeft="5dp"
android:paddingRight="5dp"
android:text="yourtexthere"/>
Shadow overlay by custom drawable is removed here.
The backslash \
is reserved for use as an escape character in Javascript.
To use a backslash literally you need to use two backslashes
\\
There are a number of "is methods" on strings. islower()
and isupper()
should meet your needs:
>>> 'hello'.islower()
True
>>> [m for m in dir(str) if m.startswith('is')]
['isalnum', 'isalpha', 'isdigit', 'islower', 'isspace', 'istitle', 'isupper']
Here's an example of how to use those methods to classify a list of strings:
>>> words = ['The', 'quick', 'BROWN', 'Fox', 'jumped', 'OVER', 'the', 'Lazy', 'DOG']
>>> [word for word in words if word.islower()]
['quick', 'jumped', 'the']
>>> [word for word in words if word.isupper()]
['BROWN', 'OVER', 'DOG']
>>> [word for word in words if not word.islower() and not word.isupper()]
['The', 'Fox', 'Lazy']
sp_who2 'active'
Check values under CPUTime and DiskIO. Note the SPID of process having large value comparatively.
kill {SPID value}
Well, as the error says, you have an expression (((t[1])/length) * t[1]
) on the left side of the assignment, rather than a variable name. You have that expression, and then you tell Python to add string
to it (which is always ""
) and assign it to... where? ((t[1])/length) * t[1]
isn't a variable name, so you can't store the result into it.
Did you mean string += ((t[1])/length) * t[1]
? That would make more sense. Of course, you're still trying to add a number to a string, or multiply by a string... one of those t[1]
s should probably be a t[0]
.
An Ajax alternative is to set an invisible <iframe>
as your form's target and read the contents of that <iframe>
in its onload
handler. But why bother when there's Ajax?
Note: I just wanted to mention this alternative since some of the answers claim that it's impossible to achieve this without Ajax.
Here's a nifty trick that doesn't use a semaphore:
dispatch_queue_t serialQ = dispatch_queue_create("serialQ", DISPATCH_QUEUE_SERIAL);
dispatch_async(serialQ, ^
{
[object doSomething];
});
dispatch_sync(serialQ, ^{ });
What you do is wait using dispatch_sync
with an empty block to Synchronously wait on a serial dispatch queue until the A-Synchronous block has completed.
if (Enum.IsDefined(typeof(foo), value))
{
return (Foo)Enum.Parse(typeof(foo), value);
}
Hope this helps
Edit This answer got down voted as value in my example is a string, where as the question asked for an int. My applogies; the following should be a bit clearer :-)
Type fooType = typeof(foo);
if (Enum.IsDefined(fooType , value.ToString()))
{
return (Foo)Enum.Parse(fooType , value.ToString());
}
It really depends :) One of the handy linux core utils (info coreutils
) is xargs
. If you are using awk
you probably have a more involved use-case in mind - your question is not very detailled.
printf "1 2\n3 4" | awk '{ print $2 }' | xargs touch
Will execute touch 2 4
. Here touch
could be replaced by your program. More info at info xargs
and man xargs
(really, read these).
I believe you would like to replace touch
with your program.
Breakdown of beforementioned script:
printf "1 2\n3 4"
# Output:
1 2
3 4
# The pipe (|) makes the output of the left command the input of
# the right command (simplified)
printf "1 2\n3 4" | awk '{ print $2 }'
# Output (of the awk command):
2
4
# xargs will execute a command with arguments. The arguments
# are made up taking the input to xargs (in this case the output
# of the awk command, which is "2 4".
printf "1 2\n3 4" | awk '{ print $2 }' | xargs touch
# No output, but executes: `touch 2 4` which will create (or update
# timestamp if the files already exist) files with the name "2" and "4"
Update In the original answer, I used echo
instead of printf
. However, printf
is the better and more portable alternative as was pointed out by a comment (where great links with discussions can be found).
Now you can use just window.scrollTo({ top: 0, behavior: 'smooth' })
to get the page scrolled with a smooth effect.
const btn = document.getElementById('elem');_x000D_
_x000D_
btn.addEventListener('click', () => window.scrollTo({_x000D_
top: 400,_x000D_
behavior: 'smooth',_x000D_
}));
_x000D_
#x {_x000D_
height: 1000px;_x000D_
background: lightblue;_x000D_
}
_x000D_
<div id='x'>_x000D_
<button id='elem'>Click to scroll</button>_x000D_
</div>
_x000D_
You can do something like this:
var btn = document.getElementById('x');_x000D_
_x000D_
btn.addEventListener("click", function() {_x000D_
var i = 10;_x000D_
var int = setInterval(function() {_x000D_
window.scrollTo(0, i);_x000D_
i += 10;_x000D_
if (i >= 200) clearInterval(int);_x000D_
}, 20);_x000D_
})
_x000D_
body {_x000D_
background: #3a2613;_x000D_
height: 600px;_x000D_
}
_x000D_
<button id='x'>click</button>
_x000D_
ES6 recursive approach:
const btn = document.getElementById('elem');_x000D_
_x000D_
const smoothScroll = (h) => {_x000D_
let i = h || 0;_x000D_
if (i < 200) {_x000D_
setTimeout(() => {_x000D_
window.scrollTo(0, i);_x000D_
smoothScroll(i + 10);_x000D_
}, 10);_x000D_
}_x000D_
}_x000D_
_x000D_
btn.addEventListener('click', () => smoothScroll());
_x000D_
body {_x000D_
background: #9a6432;_x000D_
height: 600px;_x000D_
}
_x000D_
<button id='elem'>click</button>
_x000D_
Use either of these depending how you want backslashes in the shell variables handled (avar
is an awk variable, svar
is a shell variable):
awk -v avar="$svar" '... avar ...' file
awk 'BEGIN{avar=ARGV[1];ARGV[1]=""}... avar ...' "$svar" file
See http://cfajohnson.com/shell/cus-faq-2.html#Q24 for details and other options. The first method above is almost always your best option and has the most obvious semantics.
In my case [Win64, Python 2.7, cygwin] the issue was with a missing gcc
.
Using apt-cyg install gcc-core
enabled me to then use pip2 wheel ...
to install my wheels automatically.
You could also just create a Group Policy Preference and have it create the reg key for you. (no scripting involved)
Just because you're in PowerShell don't forgot about good ol' exes. Sometimes they can provide the easiest solution e.g.:
icacls.exe $folder /grant 'domain\user:(OI)(CI)(M)'
May be your Plesk panel or other panel subscription has been expired....please check subscription End.
Use textContent
instead of value
to set the button text.
Typically the value attribute is used to associate a value with the button when it's submitted as form data.
Note that while it's possible to set the button text with innerHTML
, using textContext
should be preferred because it's more performant and it can prevent cross-site scripting attacks as its value is not parsed as HTML.
JS:
var b = document.createElement('button');
b.setAttribute('content', 'test content');
b.setAttribute('class', 'btn');
b.textContent = 'test value';
var wrapper = document.getElementById("divWrapper");
wrapper.appendChild(b);
Produces this in the DOM:
<div id="divWrapper">
<button content="test content" class="btn">test value</button>
</div>
You can use a FileReader
object to read text file here is example code:
<div id="page-wrapper">
<h1>Text File Reader</h1>
<div>
Select a text file:
<input type="file" id="fileInput">
</div>
<pre id="fileDisplayArea"><pre>
</div>
<script>
window.onload = function() {
var fileInput = document.getElementById('fileInput');
var fileDisplayArea = document.getElementById('fileDisplayArea');
fileInput.addEventListener('change', function(e) {
var file = fileInput.files[0];
var textType = /text.*/;
if (file.type.match(textType)) {
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function(e) {
fileDisplayArea.innerText = reader.result;
}
reader.readAsText(file);
} else {
fileDisplayArea.innerText = "File not supported!"
}
});
}
</script>
Here is the codepen demo
If you have a fixed file to read every time your application load then you can use this code :
<script>
var fileDisplayArea = document.getElementById('fileDisplayArea');
function readTextFile(file)
{
var rawFile = new XMLHttpRequest();
rawFile.open("GET", file, false);
rawFile.onreadystatechange = function ()
{
if(rawFile.readyState === 4)
{
if(rawFile.status === 200 || rawFile.status == 0)
{
var allText = rawFile.responseText;
fileDisplayArea.innerText = allText
}
}
}
rawFile.send(null);
}
readTextFile("file:///C:/your/path/to/file.txt");
</script>
You can remove item from list view like this: or you can choose on your Button event which item have to be removed
public class Third extends ListActivity {
private ArrayAdapter<String> adapter;
private List<String> liste;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_third);
String[] values = new String[] { "Android", "iPhone", "WindowsMobile",
"Blackberry", "WebOS", "Ubuntu", "Windows7", "Max OS X",
"Linux", "OS/2" };
liste = new ArrayList<String>();
Collections.addAll(liste, values);
adapter = new ArrayAdapter<String>(this,
android.R.layout.simple_list_item_1, liste);
setListAdapter(adapter);
}
@Override
protected void onListItemClick(ListView l, View v, int position, long id) {
liste.remove(position);
adapter.notifyDataSetChanged();
}
}
Set the min SDK version in your project's AndroidManifest.xml file and in the toolbar search for "Sync Projects with Gradle Files" icon. It works for me.
Also look for your project's build.gradle file and update the min sdk version.
I got this error when I forgot to add new form fields/database columns to the $fillable
array in the Laravel model - the model was stripping them out.
Starting from the decoded base64 data of an OpenSSL rsa-ssh Key, i've been able to guess a format:
00 00 00 07
: four byte length prefix (7 bytes)73 73 68 2d 72 73 61
: "ssh-rsa"00 00 00 01
: four byte length prefix (1 byte)25
: RSA Exponent (e
): 2500 00 01 00
: four byte length prefix (256 bytes)RSA Modulus (n
):
7f 9c 09 8e 8d 39 9e cc d5 03 29 8b c4 78 84 5f
d9 89 f0 33 df ee 50 6d 5d d0 16 2c 73 cf ed 46
dc 7e 44 68 bb 37 69 54 6e 9e f6 f0 c5 c6 c1 d9
cb f6 87 78 70 8b 73 93 2f f3 55 d2 d9 13 67 32
70 e6 b5 f3 10 4a f5 c3 96 99 c2 92 d0 0f 05 60
1c 44 41 62 7f ab d6 15 52 06 5b 14 a7 d8 19 a1
90 c6 c1 11 f8 0d 30 fd f5 fc 00 bb a4 ef c9 2d
3f 7d 4a eb d2 dc 42 0c 48 b2 5e eb 37 3c 6c a0
e4 0a 27 f0 88 c4 e1 8c 33 17 33 61 38 84 a0 bb
d0 85 aa 45 40 cb 37 14 bf 7a 76 27 4a af f4 1b
ad f0 75 59 3e ac df cd fc 48 46 97 7e 06 6f 2d
e7 f5 60 1d b1 99 f8 5b 4f d3 97 14 4d c5 5e f8
76 50 f0 5f 37 e7 df 13 b8 a2 6b 24 1f ff 65 d1
fb c8 f8 37 86 d6 df 40 e2 3e d3 90 2c 65 2b 1f
5c b9 5f fa e9 35 93 65 59 6d be 8c 62 31 a9 9b
60 5a 0e e5 4f 2d e6 5f 2e 71 f3 7e 92 8f fe 8b
The closest validation of my theory i can find it from RFC 4253:
The "ssh-rsa" key format has the following specific encoding:
string "ssh-rsa" mpint e mpint n
Here the 'e' and 'n' parameters form the signature key blob.
But it doesn't explain the length prefixes.
Taking the random RSA PUBLIC KEY
i found (in the question), and decoding the base64 into hex:
30 82 01 0a 02 82 01 01 00 fb 11 99 ff 07 33 f6 e8 05 a4 fd 3b 36 ca 68
e9 4d 7b 97 46 21 16 21 69 c7 15 38 a5 39 37 2e 27 f3 f5 1d f3 b0 8b 2e
11 1c 2d 6b bf 9f 58 87 f1 3a 8d b4 f1 eb 6d fe 38 6c 92 25 68 75 21 2d
dd 00 46 87 85 c1 8a 9c 96 a2 92 b0 67 dd c7 1d a0 d5 64 00 0b 8b fd 80
fb 14 c1 b5 67 44 a3 b5 c6 52 e8 ca 0e f0 b6 fd a6 4a ba 47 e3 a4 e8 94
23 c0 21 2c 07 e3 9a 57 03 fd 46 75 40 f8 74 98 7b 20 95 13 42 9a 90 b0
9b 04 97 03 d5 4d 9a 1c fe 3e 20 7e 0e 69 78 59 69 ca 5b f5 47 a3 6b a3
4d 7c 6a ef e7 9f 31 4e 07 d9 f9 f2 dd 27 b7 29 83 ac 14 f1 46 67 54 cd
41 26 25 16 e4 a1 5a b1 cf b6 22 e6 51 d3 e8 3f a0 95 da 63 0b d6 d9 3e
97 b0 c8 22 a5 eb 42 12 d4 28 30 02 78 ce 6b a0 cc 74 90 b8 54 58 1f 0f
fb 4b a3 d4 23 65 34 de 09 45 99 42 ef 11 5f aa 23 1b 15 15 3d 67 83 7a
63 02 03 01 00 01
From RFC3447 - Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) #1: RSA Cryptography Specifications Version 2.1:
A.1.1 RSA public key syntax
An RSA public key should be represented with the ASN.1 type
RSAPublicKey
:RSAPublicKey ::= SEQUENCE { modulus INTEGER, -- n publicExponent INTEGER -- e }
The fields of type RSAPublicKey have the following meanings:
- modulus is the RSA modulus n.
- publicExponent is the RSA public exponent e.
Using Microsoft's excellent (and the only real) ASN.1 documentation:
30 82 01 0a ;SEQUENCE (0x010A bytes: 266 bytes)
| 02 82 01 01 ;INTEGER (0x0101 bytes: 257 bytes)
| | 00 ;leading zero because high-bit, but number is positive
| | fb 11 99 ff 07 33 f6 e8 05 a4 fd 3b 36 ca 68
| | e9 4d 7b 97 46 21 16 21 69 c7 15 38 a5 39 37 2e 27 f3 f5 1d f3 b0 8b 2e
| | 11 1c 2d 6b bf 9f 58 87 f1 3a 8d b4 f1 eb 6d fe 38 6c 92 25 68 75 21 2d
| | dd 00 46 87 85 c1 8a 9c 96 a2 92 b0 67 dd c7 1d a0 d5 64 00 0b 8b fd 80
| | fb 14 c1 b5 67 44 a3 b5 c6 52 e8 ca 0e f0 b6 fd a6 4a ba 47 e3 a4 e8 94
| | 23 c0 21 2c 07 e3 9a 57 03 fd 46 75 40 f8 74 98 7b 20 95 13 42 9a 90 b0
| | 9b 04 97 03 d5 4d 9a 1c fe 3e 20 7e 0e 69 78 59 69 ca 5b f5 47 a3 6b a3
| | 4d 7c 6a ef e7 9f 31 4e 07 d9 f9 f2 dd 27 b7 29 83 ac 14 f1 46 67 54 cd
| | 41 26 25 16 e4 a1 5a b1 cf b6 22 e6 51 d3 e8 3f a0 95 da 63 0b d6 d9 3e
| | 97 b0 c8 22 a5 eb 42 12 d4 28 30 02 78 ce 6b a0 cc 74 90 b8 54 58 1f 0f
| | fb 4b a3 d4 23 65 34 de 09 45 99 42 ef 11 5f aa 23 1b 15 15 3d 67 83 7a
| | 63
| 02 03 ;INTEGER (3 bytes)
| 01 00 01
giving the public key modulus and exponent:
0xfb1199ff0733f6e805a4fd3b36ca68...837a63
As you discovered, in VS11 the compiler will disallow an async Main
method. This was allowed (but never recommended) in VS2010 with the Async CTP.
I have recent blog posts about async/await and asynchronous console programs in particular. Here's some background info from the intro post:
If "await" sees that the awaitable has not completed, then it acts asynchronously. It tells the awaitable to run the remainder of the method when it completes, and then returns from the async method. Await will also capture the current context when it passes the remainder of the method to the awaitable.
Later on, when the awaitable completes, it will execute the remainder of the async method (within the captured context).
Here's why this is a problem in Console programs with an async Main
:
Remember from our intro post that an async method will return to its caller before it is complete. This works perfectly in UI applications (the method just returns to the UI event loop) and ASP.NET applications (the method returns off the thread but keeps the request alive). It doesn't work out so well for Console programs: Main returns to the OS - so your program exits.
One solution is to provide your own context - a "main loop" for your console program that is async-compatible.
If you have a machine with the Async CTP, you can use GeneralThreadAffineContext
from My Documents\Microsoft Visual Studio Async CTP\Samples(C# Testing) Unit Testing\AsyncTestUtilities. Alternatively, you can use AsyncContext
from my Nito.AsyncEx NuGet package.
Here's an example using AsyncContext
; GeneralThreadAffineContext
has almost identical usage:
using Nito.AsyncEx;
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
AsyncContext.Run(() => MainAsync(args));
}
static async void MainAsync(string[] args)
{
Bootstrapper bs = new Bootstrapper();
var list = await bs.GetList();
}
}
Alternatively, you can just block the main Console thread until your asynchronous work has completed:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
MainAsync(args).GetAwaiter().GetResult();
}
static async Task MainAsync(string[] args)
{
Bootstrapper bs = new Bootstrapper();
var list = await bs.GetList();
}
}
Note the use of GetAwaiter().GetResult()
; this avoids the AggregateException
wrapping that happens if you use Wait()
or Result
.
Update, 2017-11-30: As of Visual Studio 2017 Update 3 (15.3), the language now supports an async Main
- as long as it returns Task
or Task<T>
. So you can now do this:
class Program
{
static async Task Main(string[] args)
{
Bootstrapper bs = new Bootstrapper();
var list = await bs.GetList();
}
}
The semantics appear to be the same as the GetAwaiter().GetResult()
style of blocking the main thread. However, there's no language spec for C# 7.1 yet, so this is only an assumption.
As others have noted time.clock()
is deprecated in favour of time.perf_counter()
or time.process_time()
, but Python 3.7 introduces nanosecond resolution timing with time.perf_counter_ns()
, time.process_time_ns()
, and time.time_ns()
, along with 3 other functions.
These 6 new nansecond resolution functions are detailed in PEP 564:
time.clock_gettime_ns(clock_id)
time.clock_settime_ns(clock_id, time:int)
time.monotonic_ns()
time.perf_counter_ns()
time.process_time_ns()
time.time_ns()
These functions are similar to the version without the _ns suffix, but return a number of nanoseconds as a Python int.
As others have also noted, use the timeit
module to time functions and small code snippets.
function myfunction() {_x000D_
var first = document.getElementById("textbox1").value;_x000D_
var second = document.getElementById("textbox2").value;_x000D_
var answer = parseFloat(first) + parseFloat(second);_x000D_
_x000D_
var textbox3 = document.getElementById('textbox3');_x000D_
textbox3.value = answer;_x000D_
}
_x000D_
<input type="text" name="textbox1" id="textbox1" /> + <input type="text" name="textbox2" id="textbox2" />_x000D_
<input type="submit" name="button" id="button1" onclick="myfunction()" value="=" />_x000D_
<br/> Your answer is:--_x000D_
<input type="text" name="textbox3" id="textbox3" readonly="true" />
_x000D_
You can get column type of DataTable with DataType attribute of datatable column like below:
var type = dt.Columns[0].DataType
dt : DataTable object.
0 : DataTable column index.
Hope It Helps
Ty :)
Sub Scrape()
Dim Browser As InternetExplorer
Dim Document As htmlDocument
Dim Elements As IHTMLElementCollection
Dim Element As IHTMLElement
Set Browser = New InternetExplorer
Browser.Visible = True
Browser.navigate "http://www.stackoverflow.com"
Do While Browser.Busy And Not Browser.readyState = READYSTATE_COMPLETE
DoEvents
Loop
Set Document = Browser.Document
Set Elements = Document.getElementById("hmenus").getElementsByTagName("li")
For Each Element In Elements
Debug.Print Element.innerText
'Questions
'Tags
'Users
'Badges
'Unanswered
'Ask Question
Next Element
Set Document = Nothing
Set Browser = Nothing
End Sub
@Query("select b.equipSealRegisterId from EquipSealRegister b where b.sealName like %?1% and b.deleteFlag = '0'" )
List<String>findBySeal(String sealname);
I have tried this code and it works.
Use crontab to add job
0 0 9 ? * MON,WED,FRI *
The above expression will run the job at 9 am on every mon, wed and friday. You can validate this in : http://www.cronmaker.com/
try This
setTimeout( function(){
// call after 5 second
} , 5000 );
<activity android:name="com.example.abc"
android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"></activity>
Just add android:configChanges="orientation|screenSize"
in activity tab of manifest file.
So, Activity won't restart when orientation change.
My 2 cents:
select DATEADD(DAY,-1,DATEADD(MONTH,1,DATEADD(day,(0-(DATEPART(dd,'2008-02-12')-1)),'2008-02-12')))
Raj
Maybe something like this:
import matplotlib.pyplot
import pylab
x = [1,2,3,4]
y = [3,4,8,6]
matplotlib.pyplot.scatter(x,y)
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
EDIT:
Let me see if I understand you correctly now:
You have:
test1 | test2 | test3
test3 | 1 | 0 | 1
test4 | 0 | 1 | 0
test5 | 1 | 1 | 0
Now you want to represent the above values in in a scatter plot, such that value of 1 is represented by a dot.
Let's say you results are stored in a 2-D list:
results = [[1, 0, 1], [0, 1, 0], [1, 1, 0]]
We want to transform them into two variables so we are able to plot them.
And I believe this code will give you what you are looking for:
import matplotlib
import pylab
results = [[1, 0, 1], [0, 1, 0], [1, 1, 0]]
x = []
y = []
for ind_1, sublist in enumerate(results):
for ind_2, ele in enumerate(sublist):
if ele == 1:
x.append(ind_1)
y.append(ind_2)
matplotlib.pyplot.scatter(x,y)
matplotlib.pyplot.show()
Notice that I do need to import pylab
, and you would have play around with the axis labels. Also this feels like a work around, and there might be (probably is) a direct method to do this.
Visual Studio 2015:
Project
=>
Your Application Properties
. Each argument can be separated using space. If you have a space in between for the same argument, put double quotes as shown in the example below.
static void Main(string[] args)
{
if(args == null || args.Length == 0)
{
Console.WriteLine("Please specify arguments!");
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine(args[0]); // First
Console.WriteLine(args[1]); // Second Argument
}
}
You could try using the DirectoryEntry class with the IIS path prefix:
using(DirectoryEntry de = new DirectoryEntry("IIS://Localhost/w3svc/1/root" + DOCUMENT_PATH))
{
filePath = de.Properties["Path"].Value;
}
if (!File.Exists(filePath))
return;
var fileInfo = new System.IO.FileInfo(filePath);
Response.ContentType = "application/octet-stream";
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", String.Format("attachment;filename=\"{0}\"", filePath));
Response.AddHeader("Content-Length", fileInfo.Length.ToString());
Response.WriteFile(filePath);
Response.End();
In jQuery 3 and perhaps earlier versions, the following simpler config also works for individual requests:
$.ajax(
'https://foo.bar.com,
{
dataType: 'json',
xhrFields: {
withCredentials: true
},
success: successFunc
}
);
The full error I was getting in Firefox Dev Tools -> Network tab (in the Security tab for an individual request) was:
An error occurred during a connection to foo.bar.com.SSL peer was unable to negotiate an acceptable set of security parameters.Error code: SSL_ERROR_HANDSHAKE_FAILURE_ALERT
You can use the Get-InstalledModule
If (-not(Get-InstalledModule SomeModule -ErrorAction silentlycontinue)) {
Write-Host "Module does not exist"
}
Else {
Write-Host "Module exists"
}
Dont get confusion : simply remember
Old Answer (July 2016):
You can't directly debug Chrome for iOS due to restrictions on the published WKWebView
apps, but there are a few options already discussed in other SO threads:
If you can reproduce the issue in Safari as well, then use Remote Debugging with Safari Web Inspector. This would be the easiest approach.
WeInRe allows some simple debugging, using a simple client-server model. It's not fully featured, but it may well be enough for your problem. See instructions on set up here.
You could try and create a simple WKWebView
browser app (some instructions here), or look for an existing one on GitHub. Since Chrome uses the same rendering engine, you could debug using that, as it will be close to what Chrome produces.
There's a "bug" opened up for WebKit: Allow Web Inspector usage for release builds of WKWebView. If and when we get an API to WKWebView
, Chrome for iOS would be debuggable.
Update January 2018:
Since my answer back in 2016, some work has been done to improve things.
There is a recent project called RemoteDebug iOS WebKit Adapter, by some of the Microsoft team. It's an adapter that handles the API differences between Webkit Remote Debugging Protocol and Chrome Debugging Protocol, and this allows you to debug iOS WebViews in any app that supports the protocol - Chrome DevTools, VS Code etc.
Check out the getting started guide in the repo, which is quite detailed.
If you are interesting, you can read up on the background and architecture here.
You can just read from stdin unless the user supply a filename ?
If not, treat the special "filename" -
as meaning "read from stdin". The user would have to start the program like cat file | myprogram -
if he wants to pipe data to it, and myprogam file
if he wants it to read from a file.
int main(int argc,char *argv[] ) {
FILE *input;
if(argc != 2) {
usage();
return 1;
}
if(!strcmp(argv[1],"-")) {
input = stdin;
} else {
input = fopen(argv[1],"rb");
//check for errors
}
If you're on *nix, you can check whether stdin is a fifo:
struct stat st_info;
if(fstat(0,&st_info) != 0)
//error
}
if(S_ISFIFO(st_info.st_mode)) {
//stdin is a pipe
}
Though that won't handle the user doing myprogram <file
You can also check if stdin is a terminal/console
if(isatty(0)) {
//stdin is a terminal
}
The guaranteed, rock solid way to force a UIView
to re-render is [myView setNeedsDisplay]
. If you're having trouble with that, you're likely running into one of these issues:
You're calling it before you actually have the data, or your -drawRect:
is over-caching something.
You're expecting the view to draw at the moment you call this method. There is intentionally no way to demand "draw right now this very second" using the Cocoa drawing system. That would disrupt the entire view compositing system, trash performance and likely create all kinds of artifacting. There are only ways to say "this needs to be drawn in the next draw cycle."
If what you need is "some logic, draw, some more logic," then you need to put the "some more logic" in a separate method and invoke it using -performSelector:withObject:afterDelay:
with a delay of 0. That will put "some more logic" after the next draw cycle. See this question for an example of that kind of code, and a case where it might be needed (though it's usually best to look for other solutions if possible since it complicates the code).
If you don't think things are getting drawn, put a breakpoint in -drawRect:
and see when you're getting called. If you're calling -setNeedsDisplay
, but -drawRect:
isn't getting called in the next event loop, then dig into your view hierarchy and make sure you're not trying to outsmart is somewhere. Over-cleverness is the #1 cause of bad drawing in my experience. When you think you know best how to trick the system into doing what you want, you usually get it doing exactly what you don't want.
Pod is not started due to problem coming after initialization of POD.
Check and use command to get docker container of pod
docker ps -a | grep private-reg
Output will be information of docker container with id.
See docker logs:
docker logs -f <container id>
Here is a solution without using regular expressions:
function onlyDigits(s) {
for (let i = s.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
const d = s.charCodeAt(i);
if (d < 48 || d > 57) return false
}
return true
}
where 48 and 57 are the char codes for "0" and "9", respectively.
C99 has log2
(as well as log2f
and log2l
for float and long double).
1) "container" is a class and not an ID 2) .container - set z-index and display: none in your CSS and not inline unless there is a really good reason to do so. Demo@fiddle
$("#button").click(function() {
$(".container").css("opacity", 0.2);
$("#loading-img").css({"display": "block"});
});
CSS:
#loading-img {
background: url(http://web.bogdanteodoru.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/bouncy-css3-loading-animation.jpg) center center no-repeat; /* different for testing purposes */
display: none;
height: 100px; /* for testing purposes */
z-index: 12;
}
And a demo with animated image.
You could also have problems if the string has <
, >
or &
chars in it, etc. Pass it to cgi.escape()
to deal with those.
http://docs.python.org/library/cgi.html?highlight=cgi#cgi.escape
Edited:
I think you are trying to do as done in this DEMO
There are three states of a button: normal, hover and active
You need to use CSS Image Sprites for the button states.
See The Mystery of CSS Sprites
/*CSS*/_x000D_
_x000D_
.imgClass { _x000D_
background-image: url(http://inspectelement.com/wp-content/themes/inspectelementv2/style/images/button.png);_x000D_
background-position: 0px 0px;_x000D_
background-repeat: no-repeat;_x000D_
width: 186px;_x000D_
height: 53px;_x000D_
border: 0px;_x000D_
background-color: none;_x000D_
cursor: pointer;_x000D_
outline: 0;_x000D_
}_x000D_
.imgClass:hover{ _x000D_
background-position: 0px -52px;_x000D_
}_x000D_
_x000D_
.imgClass:active{_x000D_
background-position: 0px -104px;_x000D_
}
_x000D_
<!-- HTML -->_x000D_
<input type="submit" value="" class="imgClass" />
_x000D_
The answer is quite simple:
DateTime Today = DateTime.Today;
string zeroBased = Today.ToString("yy-MM-dd");