I am doing a website in flex, In that give option to user to language change option...Suppose if user select Hindi language total site will display in Hindi.. How to do this task?
A solution of this problem is described in Adobe Flex 3 Help:
http://livedocs.adobe.com/flex/3/html/help.html?content=l10n_1.html
And exactly what you want is described here (with an example):
http://livedocs.adobe.com/flex/3/html/help.html?content=l10n_1.html
Related
Is there any best practices?
Say, I need to develop a flip-flop block with title/icon on front and text on reverse side.
And I want that user can simply insert that block in a grid. With params, I said above.
From here - I see only macros-way (simple). I mean - develop each block in macros, so umbraco-engine can paste it (macros) to grid "from-a-box". But, I don't believe it, I can not even create a folder from backoffice for macro!
Harder way - dive into custom property editor, many setups, many moves. And I don't sure - can I paste result into grid?
I see, that people talks about some great package that called "ARCHETYPE", but project is closed for now... Should anyone bet on that?
Which way is right?
If I understand correctly, you are using Umbraco Grid and want to create a custom grid edtior. If that is the case, I would recommend you looking into LeBlender. It basically enables you to create grid types in the same way you make document types, including templates.
I have an unusual task. I have a big html with images and links. I need parse it and show as book with book style paging (by swipes). Do someone faced with task similar in iOS? Maybe there exist an opensource ebook solutions (with HTML support)? For example in Android I used FBReader.
I need iOS native solution.
You have turnjs, but it's not free
And jQuery booklet, but this one doesn't include swipe
if you are looking for native code you can get the paging effect from the following example
http://mobile.tutsplus.com/tutorials/iphone/building-an-ipad-reader-for-war-of-the-worlds/
I need a tool to compare the design of a website, I do not want to compare the HTML code only, but the output design.
Is this even possible? also is there any opensource program of this kind?
I have searched google, but I only get one candidate so far which is an HTML Match.
In modern webpages the appearance is controlled by various 'things': html code, css styles and images at least (also javascript in some pages). Simple text-based diff programs are not enough because their output can be irrelevant to the webpage appearance (i.e. cleaning up css can show many differences but the rendered webpage remains the same).
For simpler pages HTML Match mentioned above could do the job. If I have to compare the design of two "complex" pages (including layout, space, image and text changes) I would do a two-step approach:
Run a diff tool on the html sources to highlight the textual content differences. Then I would modify one of the pages to show the same content as the other (in order to make the next step more accurate and 'focused' to show 'real' layout changes). Of course it works only with very similar html.
Load the pages in the same web browser, get some screenshots from the rendered output at fixed positions and compare the images (i.e. with ImageMagick). It should show all visual differences in the rendered output.
It is not perfect but should work.
[UPDATE] HTML Match seems dead, see this answer for an alternative solution.
Solution: “compare web pages” tool. (“We've been doing it since 1999. It's free.”)
Example output (comparing pages for TP-Link USB hub model UH700 and UH720):
Under windows:
http://www.htmlmatch.com/
If you are using KDE, you can use Kompare or KDiff3.
However, if you want to view how your web page looks in different browsers in different operating systems, BrowserShots can used.
There are these online tools - that aren't brilliant:
http://www.w3.org/2007/10/htmldiff
http://www.aaronsw.com/2002/diff/
I like the look of daisydiff but have not used it in anger: http://code.google.com/p/daisydiff/
The keyword you're looking for is "diff".
A good program that can show you the differences between two files (html markup or other) would be ExamDiff for windows.
I'm working on one and i tell you it's hard and there is nothing on the market. Maybe Google and Bing have something inhouse. You can use some image comparison tools which identify rectangle regions of changed images. This is for example a part of all modern video compression but you have to do it for different regions of the webpage (the nav bar section, the main article, the region filtered by an ad-blocker etc.) as some of them may change and it's still considered the same content on the page.
As i said very complex problem with no exact solution.
The other is going the non visual way and just compare the resulting computed computer styles of each html element. You have to hack the browser to get access to the layout tree. There is also no official API or existing library/program/hack/patch for it.
You can make a visual comparison with Araxis Merge Pro by taking screen output with systems like BrowserStack, Cross Browser, PhantomJS
I'm working on a Flex app that needs to display ads from third party vendors that come in the form of HTML docs containing javascript. Are there any components available that can display such things? It seems like we need a mini-browser that runs inside of Flex.
Thanks a lot,
Alex
In short, yes. Unfortunately, Flex on its own doesn't do a particularly good job of rendering HTML, but there are some ways to work around this. A post on Alex's Flex Closet does a good job of describing some options:
http://blogs.adobe.com/aharui/2008/01/html_and_flex_1.html
One component, aptly named HTMLComponent, may be of particular interest:
http://drumbeatinsight.com/
I required to write a small web application that allow customer to select predefined layout template in html and be able to modify it. The application need to allow customer to add block text to pre defined area and images. The block texts need to be able to reorder based on customer need. eg. move up , move down or move to sidebar. THe complete layout will be able to convert to table layout and inline css due to email program doesn't like div & css. I don't know where should I looking for the information to make this happen, could anyone show me how to do this.
Thank you
Of course, I may be misunderstanding you. You might consider using a standard content management system such as:
linux based
joomla
Mambo
Windows based
DotNetNuke
Sharepoint
Those systems have the functionality you described built in with the added benefit that most of them are free and open source.
I'm not sure why someone downvoted you, but check out a javascript framework like script.aculo.us or Yahoo's YUI
Those will go a long way towards creating the interface you need. Also they have a lot of examples.
The Yahoo framework has an inplace html editor (I think that is what you are asking for). Another editing is the fckeditor.