How can I embed links to URLs in the custom images when using BridgeIt augmented reality?
Ultimately I want to be able to touch the augmented reality image on the device screen and have it launch the browser to a custom wiki page.
BridgeIt Augmented Reality provides a callback that identifies the selected element. Once you receive that callback, you can use document.location to launch the wiki page.
Take a look at the onReturnFromAugmentedReality in demo-jqm/augmented-reality.html.
Here the selected element is used to display an icon, but it could easily be converted into a URL.
function onReturnFromAugmentedReality(event) {
var selection = event.value;
if (!!selection) {
console.log("AR selected " + selection);
document.getElementById("selected")
.setAttribute("src",
locations[selection].split(",")[4]);
} else if (event.response) {
var len = "Aug".length;
var responseLoc = "" + JSON.parse(event.response)["_loc"][0];
console.log("AR selected " + responseLoc);
document.getElementById("selected")
.setAttribute("src",
locations[responseLoc].split(",")[4]);
}
}
https://github.com/bridgeit/demo-jqm
Related
Can I use jQuery to add Removed += 1 like it has been used in the top function? Can I make it only add 1 if the attribute was removed?
window.onload = function() {
let Removed = 0
const anchorElements = document.getElementsByTagName('A')
for (element of anchorElements) {
if (!element.getAttribute('ping')) continue
console.log("Removed ping: " + element.getAttribute('ping'))
element.removeAttribute('ping')
Removed += 1
chrome.extension.sendMessage(Removed)
}
}
link();
function link(){
jQuery("a[onclick*='ga']").removeAttr('onclick');
jQuery("a[onclick*='_gaq.push']").removeAttr('onclick');
jQuery("link[rel*='pingback']").removeAttr('rel');
}
Please note that extensions use dedicated API browserAction.setBadgeText() to interact with the extensions badge from privileged scripts (not content scripts).
JQuery is used in your content and does not have access to above API.
You can use runtime.sendMessage() to pass the request to the background script.
I am trying to embed GoodData dashboard to an iframe in my application and it works well but each tab on that dashboard has different number of reports on it and I'd like to make the iframe height dynamic based on the actual dashboard content.
Is there a way how to do it? Does GoodData somehow propagate the space needed to render the dashboard?
Thank you.
In fact there is a postMessage() sent event called 'ui.frameinfo' which you could use to detect the dashboard tab height (when using dashboard.html). It is sent every time the tab changes its height.
The following listener should print out the iframe's internal height:
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
var message;
try {
message = JSON.parse(e.data);
} catch (e) {
// valid messages are JSON
message = {};
}
// drop other than GoodData events
if (!message.gdc) return;
if (message.gdc.name === 'ui.frameinfo') {
console.log('frame height:', message.gdc.data.height);
}
}
Note that this is not an official feature (yet) and potentially subject to change.
that is we have opened many tabs.In that tabs i want to search specific tab. Please tell if any ext or option or add-on in chrome or firefox.
Firefox has this functionality built in. If you just start typing in the URL bar and the first character you type is % followed by a space, the rest of what you type will be treated as a search on the titles and urls of open tabs in all Firefox windows.
I'm not sure if this is the site to be asking for help finding extensions that do end user tasks such as this so I'll answer your question explicitly as well as explain how to do it programatically.
The short answer is, yes one extension that will allow you to do this can be found here:
Tab Title Search
The long answer is, in order to find all tabs with a certain name, you need to use the chrome tabs API
I whipped up a short piece of javascript to demonstrate how to have an extension that will create a popup with a search box that you type the desired tab title into. If the tab is found, it will be listed below the search box. If you click on the listing, you will switch to the tab.
// Function to search for tabs
function searchtabs() {
chrome.tabs.query({
title: ""
},
// Callback to process results
function(results) {
// Place holder for the tab to process
var foundTab = null;
// Text to match against
var queryText = document.getElementById("textToSearchInput").value;
// Div to place divs of matched title in
var queryAnswerDiv = document.getElementById("foundTabsDiv");
// Clear the current children
while (queryAnswerDiv.hasChildNodes()) {
queryAnswerDiv.removeChild(queryAnswerDiv.lastChild);
}
// Iterate over all the results
for (var i = 0; i < results.length; i++) {
// Keep track of the tab that is currently being processed
foundTab = results[i];
// If we have a title containing our string...
if (foundTab.title.indexOf(queryText) > -1) {
// Create a new div
var tabDiv = document.createElement("div");
// Set its content to the tabs title
tabDiv.innerHTML = foundTab.title;
// Let it know what the tabs id is
tabDiv.tabToSwitchTo = results[i].id;
// Allow for users to click on the representing div to switch to it
tabDiv.onclick = function() {
// Make the tab selected
chrome.tabs.update(this.tabToSwitchTo, {
selected: true
});
};
// Append the created div to our answer div
queryAnswerDiv.appendChild(tabDiv);
}
}
});
}
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function() {
var inputField = document.getElementById("textToSearchInput");
inputField.focus();
inputField.onkeydown = searchtabs;
});
Also, if this is more what you are looking for rather than the extension that I linked, let me know and I can pack this extension.
Edit:
Fixed an error in using the wrong ID to get the input field as well as not getting the first letter of the title (use indexOf() > -1)
An extension that does this is Tab Hero for Chrome ($0.99 Chrome extension). It searches through all of the open tabs (across multiple windows) and offers to switch to the filtered tab. Try and see if it works for you.
I wanted to save the google map into an image from a webpage.
while i was searching for that i got this program.
http://www.codres.de/downloads/gms.exe[^]
besides other alternatives like print screen i wanted to use a program or map api which can save a specified dimension of google map instead of the screen.
i have used browser component in c# for http access and for displaying certain webpages.
I want to know whether there are options to capture the browser screen to image using any c# functionality or even the browser component would have given such options. just a guess.
i would like to have answers, suggestions on how to capture the map with custom dimension and zoom size to an image.
I used this to get captcha Image from the current page, so you can use similar code just amend the imageID to point to the google map image and use this solution for zooming.
public string newsavefunction(WebBrowser webBrowser1)
{
IHTMLDocument2 doc = (IHTMLDocument2)webBrowser1.Document.DomDocument;
IHTMLControlRange imgRange = (IHTMLControlRange)((HTMLBody)doc.body).createControlRange();
string imagename = string.Empty;
try
{
foreach (IHTMLImgElement img in doc.images)
{
imgRange.add((IHTMLControlElement)img);
imgRange.execCommand("Copy", false, null);
using (Bitmap bmp = (Bitmap)Clipboard.GetDataObject().GetData(DataFormats.Bitmap))
{
bmp.Save(#"F:\captchaimages\captchapic.jpg");
}
imagename = img.nameProp;
break;
}
}
catch (System.Exception exp)
{ }
return imagename;
}
I see that Lifehacker is able to change the url while using AJAX to update part of the page. I guess that can be implemented using HTML5 or history.js plugin, but I guess lifehacker is using neither.
Does any one has a clue on how they do it?
I am new to AJAX and just managed to update part of the page using Ajax.
Thank you #Robin Anderson for a detailed step by step algo. I tried it and it is working fine. However, before I can test it on production, I would like to run by you the code that I have. Did I do everything right?
<script type="text/javascript">
var httpRequest;
var globalurl;
function makeRequest(url) {
globalurl = url;
/* my custom script that retrieves original page without formatting (just data, no templates) */
finalurl = '/content.php?fname=' + url ;
if(window.XMLHttpRequest){httpRequest=new XMLHttpRequest}else if(window.ActiveXObject){try{httpRequest=new ActiveXObject("Msxml2.XMLHTTP")}catch(e){try{httpRequest=new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP")}catch(e){}}}
/* if no html5 support, just load the page without ajax*/
if (!(httpRequest && window.history && window.history.pushState)) {
document.href = url;
return false;
}
httpRequest.onreadystatechange = alertContents;
alert(finalurl); /* to make sure, content is being retrieved from ajax */
httpRequest.open('GET', finalurl);
httpRequest.send();
}
/* for support to back button and forward button in browser */
window.onpopstate = function(event) {
if (event.state !== null) {
document.getElementById("ajright").innerHTML = event.state.data;
} else {
document.location.href = globalurl;
return false;
};
};
/* display content in div */
function alertContents() {
if (httpRequest.readyState === 4) {
if (httpRequest.status === 200) {
var stateObj = { data: httpRequest.responseText};
history.pushState(stateObj, "", globalurl);
document.getElementById("ajright").innerHTML = httpRequest.responseText;
} else {
alert('There was a problem with the request.');
}
}
}
</script>
PS: I do not know how to paste code in comment, so I added it here.
It is not an requirement to have the markup as HTML5 in order to use the history API in the browser even if it is an HTML5 feature.
One really quick and simple implementation of making all page transistions load with AJAX is:
Hook up all links except where rel="external" exist to the function "ChangePage"
When ChangePage is triggered, check if history API is supported in the browser.
If history API isn't supported, do either push a hashtag or make a normal full page load as fallback.
If history API is supported:
Prevent the normal link behaviour.
Push the new URL to the browser history.
Make a AJAX request to the new URL and fetch its content.
Look for your content div (or similar element) in the response, take the HTML from that and replace the HTML of the corresponding element on the current page with the new one.
This will be easy to implement, easy to manage caches and work well with Google's robots, the downside is that is isn't that "optimized" and it will be some overhead on the responses (compared to a more complex solution) when you change pages.
Will also have backward compatibility, so old browsers or "non javascript visitors" will just get normal page loads.
Interesting links on the subject
History API Compatibility in different browsers
Mozillas documentation of the History API
Edit:
Another thing worth mentioning is that you shouldn't use this together with ASP .Net Web Forms applications, will probably screw up the postback handling.
Code addition:
I have put together a small demo of this functionality which you can find here.
It simply uses HTML, Javascript (jQuery) and a tiny bit of CSS, I would probably recommend you to test it before using it. But I have checked it some in Chrome and it seems to work decent.
Some testing I would recommend is:
Test in the good browsers, Chrome and Firefox.
Test it in a legacy browser such as IE7
Test it without Javascript enabled (just install Noscript or similar to Chrome/Firefox)
Here is the javascript I used to achieve this, you can find the full source in the demo above.
/*
The arguments are:
url: The url to pull new content from
doPushState: If a new state should be pushed to the browser, true on links and false on normal state changes such as forward and back.
*/
function changePage(url, doPushState, defaultEvent)
{
if (!history.pushState) { //Compatability check
return true; //pushState isn't supported, fallback to normal page load
}
if (defaultEvent != null) {
defaultEvent.preventDefault(); //Someone passed in a default event, stop it from executing
}
if (doPushState) { //If we are supposed to push the state or not
var stateObj = { type: "custom" };
history.pushState(stateObj, "Title", url); //Push the new state to the browser
}
//Make a GET request to the url which was passed in
$.get(url, function(response) {
var newContent = $(response).find(".content"); //Find the content section of the response
var contentWrapper = $("#content-wrapper"); //Find the content-wrapper where we are supposed to change the content.
var oldContent = contentWrapper.find(".content"); //Find the old content which we should replace.
oldContent.fadeOut(300, function() { //Make a pretty fade out of the old content
oldContent.remove(); //Remove it once it is done
contentWrapper.append(newContent.hide()); //Add our new content, hidden
newContent.fadeIn(300); //Fade it in!
});
});
}
//We hook up our events in here
$(function() {
$(".generated").html(new Date().getTime()); //This is just to present that it's actually working.
//Bind all links to use our changePage function except rel="external"
$("a[rel!='external']").live("click", function (e) {
changePage($(this).attr("href"), true, e);
});
//Bind "popstate", it is the browsers back and forward
window.onpopstate = function (e) {
if (e.state != null) {
changePage(document.location, false, null);
}
}
});
The DOCTYPE has no effect on which features the page can use.
They probably use the HTML5 History API directly.