HTML Input Droppable + Libre Office - html

I've a droppable input.
1- When i drag drop a html text, the drop works...
2- When i drag drop a gedit (bloc note linux), the drop works
3- But When i want to drop a selected text from LibreOffice Writer or
Calc, it don't works...
I've created a fiddle if someone can help me... : http://jsfiddle.net/CnwvC/
with code
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.9.1.js"></script>
<input id='inputid' type='text' value="snif">
<p>html blabla to test to drop </p>

Instead of gedit, the LibreOffice text content is not plain text. This could be one of the reasons that it doesn't allow you drag and drop its content to your input box.
One interesting fact is that if you drag and drop a content from a webpage to you document on Writer you'll get the HTML content of the page (all the tags), but if you do the same in Google Chrome, you will get the rich content (like colour, formatting, and so on). This was reported by other folks.
If you try to drag LibreOffice's content to any area on Firefox, it will be same issue.
So, the problem is not in your code, but in the way that LibreOffice (Writer, Impress, and all the other apps) integrate with the browser libraries.
Hope that help you, it's not an usual issue.
Thanks

When you "copy" a document fragment, the program puts in the clipboard possibly more than a single version of what you copied.
Versions are tagged with their format.
Like for example if you paste the fragment in a text editor like vim it will choose a "text only" version because it doesn't deal with "text richness".
There might also be an HTML formatted version, and one in "rich text" format.
It's up to the pasting application to choose the right version.
If it doesn't specify any then the system (my experience was on Windows) chooses the most universally accepted one, that is, plain text.
It is explained in this MSDN page.

Related

Markdown TOC with Special Characters?

I am trying to create a TOC for my Markdown blog.
The methods I am finding here... : Markdown to create pages and table of contents?
....do not work for me because I am naming all of my headers # _</>_ The Setup because I am using CSS on to style the "", giving each header a nice colored Icon next to it. If I simply use ```# The Setup ```` it works great.
This causes issues whenever I try to use [The Setup](#The-Setup).
I tried a few things like [The Setup](#_</>_-The-Setup) and other things, but I can not get it to work.
If someone can point me in the right direction I would greatly appreciate it. Also, if anyone has a better way of adding custom icons next to headers, I think that would be the better way to go about it.
As always, thanks in advance.
The general solution is to examine the rendered HTML output to see what the tool is converting the special characters to, in the HTML's element ID. Every tool could handle the conversion differently (it could convert special characters to -, _, or just remove special characters). Some examples:
<h1 id="_____the-setup">The Setup</h1>
<h1 id="-the-setup">The Setup</h1>
<h1 id="the-setup">The Setup</h1>
Once you have identified the exact id that the tool is using, then you use that value as the heading link in the markdown's table of contents. For example:
[The Setup](#_____the-setup)
Now, the tricky part is that not all Markdown tools will export the rendered HTML, including VS Code. The workaround for VS Code is:
Open the markdown preview mode (which renders to html internally).
Open the VS Code Developer Tools (Help > Toggle Developer Tools).
Use DevTools to inspect the element (in this case, the heading element for "The Setup").
I see that VS Code named the id as the-setup, so in the markdown's table of contents, I write [The Setup](#the-setup). Now the table of content hyperlink works in VS Code. Caveat: it might not work in other Markdown tools if they render a different HTML element ID!
Another shortcut now available in VS Code (1.70 July 2022), is that markdown can autocomplete the header ID. So you just type #, and it will list the valid IDs:

Link to a specific spot on a page I can't edit [duplicate]

How do I create a link to a part of long webpage on another website that I don't control?
I thought you could use a variant of the #partofpage at the end of my link. Any suggestions?
Just append a # followed by the ID of the <a> tag (or other HTML tag, like a <section>) that you're trying to get to. For example, if you are trying to link to the header in this HTML:
<p>This is some content.</p>
<h2><a id="target">Some Header</a></h2>
<p>This is some more content.</p>
You could use the link Link.
Create a "jump link" using the following format:
http://www.example.com/somepage#anchor
Where anchor is the id of the element you wish to link to on that page. Use browser development tools / view source to find the id of the element you wish to link to.
If the element doesn't have an id and you don't control that site then you can't do it.
That is only possible if that site has declared anchors in the page.
It is done by giving a tag a name or id attribute, so look for any of those close to where you want to link to.
And then the syntax would be
text
In case the target page is on the same domain (i.e. shares the same origin with your page) and you don't mind creation of new tabs (1), you can (ab)use some JavaScript:
see tenth paragraph on another page
Trivia:
var w = window.open('some URL of the same origin');
w.onload = function(){
// do whatever you want with `this.document`, like
this.document.querySelecotor('footer').scrollIntoView()
}
Working example of such 'exploit' you can try right now could be:
javascript:(function(url,sel,w,el){w=window.open(url);w.addEventListener('load',function(){w.setTimeout(function(){el=w.document.querySelector(sel);el.scrollIntoView();el.style.backgroundColor='red'},1000)})})('https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45014240/link-to-a-specific-spot-on-a-page-i-cant-edit','footer')
If you enter this into location bar (mind that Chrome removes javascript: prefix when pasted from clipboard) or make it a href value of any link on this page (using Developer Tools) and click it, you will get another (duplicate) SO question page scrolled to the footer and footer painted red. (Delay added as a workaround for ajax-loaded content pushing footer down after load.)
Notes
Tested in current Chrome and Firefox, generally should work since it is based on defined standard behaviour.
Cannot be illustrated in interactive snippet here at SO, because they are isolated from the page origin-wise.
MDN: Window.open()
(1) window.open(url,'_self') seems to be breaking the load event; basically makes the window.open behave like a normal a href="" click navigation; haven't researched more yet.
The upcoming Chrome "Scroll to text" feature is exactly what you are looking for....
https://github.com/bokand/ScrollToTextFragment
You basically add #targetText= at the end of the URL and the browser will scroll to the target text and highlight it after the page is loaded.
It is in the version of Chrome that is running on my desk, but currently it must be manually enabled. Presumably it will soon be enabled by default in the production Chrome builds and other browsers will follow, so OK to start adding to your links now and it will start working then.
Edit: It's been implemented in Chrome. See https://chromestatus.com/feature/4733392803332096
You can NOW...
As of Chrome release 81 (Feb 2020), there is a new feature called Text Fragments. It allows you to provide a link that opens at the precise text specified (with that text highlighted).
At the moment, it works in Edge, Chrome and Opera but not in Firefox, Safari or Brave. (See note 6 at bottom for more)
For security reasons, the feature requires links to be opened in a noopener context. Therefore, make sure to include rel="noopener" in your anchor markup or add noopener to your Window.open() list of window functionality features.
You create the link to your desired text by appending this string to the end of the URL:
/#:~:text=
and providing the percent-encoded search string thus:
/#:~:text=String%20to%20focus%20on
Here is a working example:
https://newz.icu/#:~:text=Google%20surveillance%20increases
Notes:
Test the above link in Chrome or Opera only
In the above example, note that the text string is in a div that is normally hidden on page load - so in this example it is being displayed despite what would normally happen. Useful.
Recent versions of Chrome also include a new option when you Right-Click on selected text: Copy link to highlight. This will auto-create the direct-to-text link for you (i.e. it automatically appends the /#:~:text= to the text you highlighted) and place it in the clipboard - just paste it where desired.
Suppose you want to highlight an entire block of text? The Text Fragments feature allows specifying a starting%20phrase and an ending%20phrase (separated by a comma), and it will highlight all text in between:
https://newz.icu/#:~:text=Dr.%20Mullis,before%20now
Note the comma between Mullis and before
web.dev article about Text Fragments
CanIUse status of Text Fragments
PS - Please forgive choice of example website. It simply had the desired
elements required for the demonstration. Hoping we can focus on function
rather than content.
First off target refers to the BlockID found in either HTML code or chromes developer tools that you are trying to link to. Each code is different and you will need to do some digging to find the ID you are trying to reference. It should look something like div class="page-container drawer-page-content" id"PageContainer"Note that this is the format for the whole referenced section, not an individual text or image. To do that you would need to find the same piece of code but relating to your target block. For example dv id="your-block-id" Anyways I was just reading over this thread and an idea came to my mind, if you are a Shopify user and want to do this it is pretty much the same thing as stated.
But instead of
> http://url.to.site.example/index.html#target
You would put
> http://example.com/target
For example, I am setting up a disclaimer page with links leading to a newsletter signup and shopping blocks on my home page so I insert https://mystore-classifier.com/#shopify-section-1528945200235 for my hyperlink.
Please note that the -classifier is for my internal use and doesn't apply to you. This is just so I can keep track of my stores.
If you want to link to something other than your homepage you would put
> http://mystore-classifier.example/pagename/#BlockID
I hope someone found this useful, if there is something wrong with my explanation please let me know as I am not an HTML programmer my language is C#!
It's now possible to create an "anchor" link that goes to a specific part of any webpage in most browsers in a few different ways.
All of them will create a link with an #anchor at the end, where "anchor" is the thing that you want to navigate to. The browser will interpret the part of the URL after the # to scroll to a specific part of the page.
Here are 3 ways to create a url like this:
Using an existing anchor. Perhaps there will be one in the URL as you scroll down the page. If not, look around the page for a header that has a little link icon to the left of it and click it to update the browsers navigation url.
Using any html element's id property or the name or id on an ("anchor") element. The other answers explain this quite well. You will have to open the developer console and inspect the part of the page to find an id (and you may not find one). It's a little different on each browser, but here's how to inspect an element in Chrome.
Using a text snippet to highlight part of the page.
Basically, html tag can have id="abc" as shown below:
<div id="abc">test</div>
<p id="abc">test</p>
<span id="abc">test</span>
<a id="abc">test</a>
And, "<a>" tag can also have name="abc" as shown below:
<a name="abc">test</a>
Then, you can use the id and name values "abc" with "#" in urls as shown below to go to the specific part of a page:
https://www.example.com/#abc
https://www.example.com/index.html#abc
Then, you can put the urls above in "<a>" tag to create the links to id="abc" and name="abc" as shown below:
test
test
And, if you want to go to the specific part of the same page, you can only put the id and name values "abc" with "#" in "<a>" tag to create the links to id="abc" and name="abc" as shown below:
<!-- Go to the specific part of the same page -->
test
<div id="abc">test</div>
<!-- Go to the specific part of the same page -->
test
<a name="abc">test</a>

Linking to a specific part of a web page

How do I create a link to a part of long webpage on another website that I don't control?
I thought you could use a variant of the #partofpage at the end of my link. Any suggestions?
Just append a # followed by the ID of the <a> tag (or other HTML tag, like a <section>) that you're trying to get to. For example, if you are trying to link to the header in this HTML:
<p>This is some content.</p>
<h2><a id="target">Some Header</a></h2>
<p>This is some more content.</p>
You could use the link Link.
Create a "jump link" using the following format:
http://www.example.com/somepage#anchor
Where anchor is the id of the element you wish to link to on that page. Use browser development tools / view source to find the id of the element you wish to link to.
If the element doesn't have an id and you don't control that site then you can't do it.
That is only possible if that site has declared anchors in the page.
It is done by giving a tag a name or id attribute, so look for any of those close to where you want to link to.
And then the syntax would be
text
In case the target page is on the same domain (i.e. shares the same origin with your page) and you don't mind creation of new tabs (1), you can (ab)use some JavaScript:
see tenth paragraph on another page
Trivia:
var w = window.open('some URL of the same origin');
w.onload = function(){
// do whatever you want with `this.document`, like
this.document.querySelecotor('footer').scrollIntoView()
}
Working example of such 'exploit' you can try right now could be:
javascript:(function(url,sel,w,el){w=window.open(url);w.addEventListener('load',function(){w.setTimeout(function(){el=w.document.querySelector(sel);el.scrollIntoView();el.style.backgroundColor='red'},1000)})})('https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45014240/link-to-a-specific-spot-on-a-page-i-cant-edit','footer')
If you enter this into location bar (mind that Chrome removes javascript: prefix when pasted from clipboard) or make it a href value of any link on this page (using Developer Tools) and click it, you will get another (duplicate) SO question page scrolled to the footer and footer painted red. (Delay added as a workaround for ajax-loaded content pushing footer down after load.)
Notes
Tested in current Chrome and Firefox, generally should work since it is based on defined standard behaviour.
Cannot be illustrated in interactive snippet here at SO, because they are isolated from the page origin-wise.
MDN: Window.open()
(1) window.open(url,'_self') seems to be breaking the load event; basically makes the window.open behave like a normal a href="" click navigation; haven't researched more yet.
The upcoming Chrome "Scroll to text" feature is exactly what you are looking for....
https://github.com/bokand/ScrollToTextFragment
You basically add #targetText= at the end of the URL and the browser will scroll to the target text and highlight it after the page is loaded.
It is in the version of Chrome that is running on my desk, but currently it must be manually enabled. Presumably it will soon be enabled by default in the production Chrome builds and other browsers will follow, so OK to start adding to your links now and it will start working then.
Edit: It's been implemented in Chrome. See https://chromestatus.com/feature/4733392803332096
You can NOW...
As of Chrome release 81 (Feb 2020), there is a new feature called Text Fragments. It allows you to provide a link that opens at the precise text specified (with that text highlighted).
At the moment, it works in Edge, Chrome and Opera but not in Firefox, Safari or Brave. (See note 6 at bottom for more)
For security reasons, the feature requires links to be opened in a noopener context. Therefore, make sure to include rel="noopener" in your anchor markup or add noopener to your Window.open() list of window functionality features.
You create the link to your desired text by appending this string to the end of the URL:
/#:~:text=
and providing the percent-encoded search string thus:
/#:~:text=String%20to%20focus%20on
Here is a working example:
https://newz.icu/#:~:text=Google%20surveillance%20increases
Notes:
Test the above link in Chrome or Opera only
In the above example, note that the text string is in a div that is normally hidden on page load - so in this example it is being displayed despite what would normally happen. Useful.
Recent versions of Chrome also include a new option when you Right-Click on selected text: Copy link to highlight. This will auto-create the direct-to-text link for you (i.e. it automatically appends the /#:~:text= to the text you highlighted) and place it in the clipboard - just paste it where desired.
Suppose you want to highlight an entire block of text? The Text Fragments feature allows specifying a starting%20phrase and an ending%20phrase (separated by a comma), and it will highlight all text in between:
https://newz.icu/#:~:text=Dr.%20Mullis,before%20now
Note the comma between Mullis and before
web.dev article about Text Fragments
CanIUse status of Text Fragments
PS - Please forgive choice of example website. It simply had the desired
elements required for the demonstration. Hoping we can focus on function
rather than content.
First off target refers to the BlockID found in either HTML code or chromes developer tools that you are trying to link to. Each code is different and you will need to do some digging to find the ID you are trying to reference. It should look something like div class="page-container drawer-page-content" id"PageContainer"Note that this is the format for the whole referenced section, not an individual text or image. To do that you would need to find the same piece of code but relating to your target block. For example dv id="your-block-id" Anyways I was just reading over this thread and an idea came to my mind, if you are a Shopify user and want to do this it is pretty much the same thing as stated.
But instead of
> http://url.to.site.example/index.html#target
You would put
> http://example.com/target
For example, I am setting up a disclaimer page with links leading to a newsletter signup and shopping blocks on my home page so I insert https://mystore-classifier.com/#shopify-section-1528945200235 for my hyperlink.
Please note that the -classifier is for my internal use and doesn't apply to you. This is just so I can keep track of my stores.
If you want to link to something other than your homepage you would put
> http://mystore-classifier.example/pagename/#BlockID
I hope someone found this useful, if there is something wrong with my explanation please let me know as I am not an HTML programmer my language is C#!
It's now possible to create an "anchor" link that goes to a specific part of any webpage in most browsers in a few different ways.
All of them will create a link with an #anchor at the end, where "anchor" is the thing that you want to navigate to. The browser will interpret the part of the URL after the # to scroll to a specific part of the page.
Here are 3 ways to create a url like this:
Using an existing anchor. Perhaps there will be one in the URL as you scroll down the page. If not, look around the page for a header that has a little link icon to the left of it and click it to update the browsers navigation url.
Using any html element's id property or the name or id on an ("anchor") element. The other answers explain this quite well. You will have to open the developer console and inspect the part of the page to find an id (and you may not find one). It's a little different on each browser, but here's how to inspect an element in Chrome.
Using a text snippet to highlight part of the page.
Basically, html tag can have id="abc" as shown below:
<div id="abc">test</div>
<p id="abc">test</p>
<span id="abc">test</span>
<a id="abc">test</a>
And, "<a>" tag can also have name="abc" as shown below:
<a name="abc">test</a>
Then, you can use the id and name values "abc" with "#" in urls as shown below to go to the specific part of a page:
https://www.example.com/#abc
https://www.example.com/index.html#abc
Then, you can put the urls above in "<a>" tag to create the links to id="abc" and name="abc" as shown below:
test
test
And, if you want to go to the specific part of the same page, you can only put the id and name values "abc" with "#" in "<a>" tag to create the links to id="abc" and name="abc" as shown below:
<!-- Go to the specific part of the same page -->
test
<div id="abc">test</div>
<!-- Go to the specific part of the same page -->
test
<a name="abc">test</a>

When copying automatically add URL

I have seen on few websites that when you copy some text from there, and paste anywhere, it will add the URL of the page from where I copied the text.
For example:
This is text I copied.
and when I paste, I get:
This is text I copied.
Read more: http://example.com/abc/def
I'm just curious to know how this is done? How to add additional text in the copied text?
Example: Check this question (or any other) on answers.com. Copy the question text and paste. Tested with Firefox latest version.
There are many online tools which provide this and other website/blog management utilities. Answer.com is also using one such service named tynt. Open the link, scroll down to the bottom and you can see answer.com in featured clients ;).
For more information.
Zeroclipboard should help you modify the clipboard content. It's a flash movie that is hidden in the browser and exposes a JavaScript API to access the clipboard.
Example.
var clip = new ZeroClipboard.Client();
clip.addEventListener('complete', function(client, text) {
clip.setText(text + "Read more at www.");
});

HTML link to a certain point in a webpage - slight twist

Here's the use case: A user clicks on a link that opens a window displaying the contents of a text log. Easy enough. But is there a way of using POST, to open that text log to a certain location (i.e., search for a particular timestamp given in the post, and show the file at that specific location)?
(Assume I can't put html tags inside the text log -- it's a raw file).
Template of log:
+++ 2009/06/19 10:47:12.264 ACTION +++
+++ 2009/06/19 10:49:12.111 ACTION +++
So I want the page to load a specific timestamp.
Thanks,
Michael
Why can't you just have a php or perl or simlar script that processes the log file on the spot, and sticks in html anchors and calls it a day?
Doing on the spot processing would also allow you display a trimmed down copy of the log thats only relevant to the timespan around the event in question.
Since you can't modify the file, the only way would be to wrap it in a <frame> or an <iframe> and drive the searching and scrolling from JavaScript in the neighbouring/containing page.
Here's an example, which you can try out online at http://entrian.com/so-container.html
<html><head><script>
function go() {
// "line" is the <input> for which line to jump to; see the HTML.
var line = document.getElementById('line').value;
if (document.body.createTextRange) { // This is IE
var range = frames['log'].document.body.createTextRange();
if (range.findText(line)) {
range.select(); // Scroll the match into view and highlight it.
}
} else { // Non-IE. Tested in Firefox; YMMV on other browsers.
frames['log'].find(line); // Scroll the match into view and highlight it.
}
}
</script></head><body>
<input type='text' size='5' name='line' id='line' value='10'>
<button onclick='go()'>Go</button><br>
<iframe name='log' width='100' height='50' src='so-data.txt'>
<!-- so-data.txt contains the numbers 01-20 on separate lines -->
</body></html>
I've tested that in IE7 and FF3; I'd be surprised if it worked elsewhere without edits, but you never know your luck!
Obviously in your case you'd be driving the scrolling programmatically rather than via an <input> box, but you can see how it would work for you.
If you could put some tags around the file's text, then you could probably insert some javascript that would scroll the window after loading it.
Yes, but passing your parameters via a querystring would be a whole lot simpler.
To scroll to a certain position in the text file you will need to user javascript (overly complicated in my opinion) or add an html anchor tag.
If you were planning to post the raw text log in a window, you will also run into some difficulty as HTML will not recognize the newlines and run the log together into one blob.
have you tried
window.open ('log.txt');
window.scrollTo (0, window.scrollMaxY);
? From mozilla reference : https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/window.scrollMaxY
Keep a 'living copy' of the log file that has been translated to HTML - every time the original file is modified (or simply every X seconds), check for and append the newest lines with HTML anchors applied to the HTML version.
A new feature was added to Chromium waaaaay back in 2020 that allows you to link to ANY location on any webpage.
At the time of this writing, it works for sure in Chrome and Opera but not yet in Firefox, Safari or Brave browser.
The trick is to add:
/#:~:text=
and follow the equal sign with the desired search text, replacing any spaces with %20. Example:
There is no ID near this location on the page
<div>IMPORTANT: Use Opera or Chrome to open above link</div>
For more information:
Linking to a specific part of a web page