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Is there something like gettext for HTML or LaTeX? It would be great for generating simple bilingual webpages or LaTeX documents that should be kept in sync.
Is there something like that already? I guess there must be some Perl script for that, but I couldn't find one. :-)
Thanks!
Probably not. Translation software is problematic because of the differences in connotation and grammar from language to language. I'd imagine (though i've never used gettext) that gettext might work OK for short strings, but for a full document, you're sure to run into problems.
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I was reading a Wikipedia article when I came accross this page.
Can anyone explain to me the meaning of HTML used as a server-side programming language?
Looks like the information was incorrectly taken from This blog post (it's the reference on the wiki page you linked)
The image on the blog that relates to server-side programming languages is this: http://blog.stoneriverelearning.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/blog3.jpg
Looks like whoever transcribed the information confused "Ruby and others" with "HTML" somehow.
All in all this is a good demonstration of why wikipedia isn't a flawless resource.
HTML is used for rendering contents of a web page.I am not sure if it can be used as a programming language.It is a markup language as I understand.
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I suspect that someone has copy-pasted my website HTML and is using it as their own. How can I find out who it is? Is there any way to track them down?
I know that I can reverse-image search.
Is there a way to search the internet by webpage html fragments?
If they didn't rehost my resources, is there a way to check who is hotlinking my CSS or JS, if anyone? (what this person mentioned but didn't explain Hotlinking my Cascading Style Sheets )
You can check the request body fields, assuming that they're stealing your server's bandwith. You can also write a crawler that tries to match your html with other but It won't be reliable. Maybe you can use Google to find specific html blocks: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_hacking
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In Notepad++, there is no syntax highlighting for CSS inside a HTML file. Is it possible to enable it?
This question has been answered in superuser Different Language Syntax Highlighting. To sum it up, np++ does not support this feature with HTML and CSS, but it does with HTML and JS. There are a few links in the responses to the question which should be helpful in finding a tool that does support multiple languages.
My suggestion is to go to np++ and request the feature. If enough of us do it then maybe they will pay attention.
I always just create a second np++ file and mark the language as CSS, then once I'm done copy it over to the HTML file. :)
May not answer your exact question, but that's the way I work around it.
Try another editor similar to Notepad++, SynWrite, it has such a CSS feature.
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How do those webhosting companies enforce ads on your page?
I'd love to enforce a specific piece of html code on a webserver.
So, how do they?
They might use append and prepend depending on the exact solution you are referring to.
You basically use it to call another file (html, php etc) which is appended or prepended on the page (At the top or botton).
I did it once years ago and it worked.
Maybe stick the adsense code in the appended/prepended file.
See: http://www.maheshchari.com/php-auto-append-prepend-file-using-htaccess/
James
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So, I have a web-site. The links have a following structure: http://example.com/1, http://example.com/2, http://example.com/3, etc. Each of this pages has a simple table. So how can I download automatically every single page on my computer? Thanks.
P.S. I know that some of you may tell me to google it. But I don't know what I'm actually looking for (I mean what to type in search field).
usewget (http://www.gnu.org/software/wget/ ) to scrape the site
Check out the wget command line tool. It will let you download and save web pages.
Beyond that, your question is too broad for the Stack Overflow community to be of much help.
You could write a simple app and loop through all the urls and pull down the html. For a Java example, take a look at: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/networking/urls/readingWriting.html