Which download I need to use to use TinyMCE in JSP(Struts application)
I see Main Package, Development Package and also different Compression packages.
I am trying to implement Rich text editor for a text area in our application.
The compression packages are just compressed versions of the main package - you should be careful about using them because they can cause a lot of load on the client-side. The development package will probably be an unstable version of the code, so you should probably use the main package to be safe.
I got it working.
Answering my own quesion: We need to copy the entire folder to the project and edit the Jsp as per examples in the website.
I used main package.
Related
I'm on Windows and I have an index.html in a folder and a huge set of html pages in subfolders.
How can I convert these html files to MediaWiki pages?
Check the Converting content from HTML text file section from the manual at mediawiki.org. Personally I would start with these two, and if that doesn't work I'd build something based on pywikibot. Any of these solutions can be made to work on Windows, though it is advisable to try it on Linux or OS X first, and if not install Cygwin.
You're unlikely to find any kind of streamlined GUI tool for such a specialized action. If you need more help with using the code available there you should hire a programmer or learn how to do it yourself.
Is there a library manager for Sublime Text 2? I'm looking for something similar to NuGet where I can, for example, load all files for Bootstrap into my current project in a few, quick steps.
I found NetTuts fetch, which is nice, but not very efficient. If I wanted to load dev and prod versions of Bootstrap, I would have to create multiple files and fetch into each of them. Instead, I would like to run a single command to load all of the files into my project.
I found Bower. Here is the plugin for Sublime Text 2.
Similar question: A package manager for web assets
There's a website, in particular http://thisquantumworld.com
It is a text-only site with inter-related links. I want to have the content on this site as reading material. I can(and I did) download the site as html using wget.
But, it would be good to have it as a .chm file. In that case, it will be easily redistributable too.
Can anyone suggest a way to download a website as .chm(maybe using wget)? I have no experience with .chm files and have no idea how do they work.
For such purpose (convert web-site to chm), I use Windows freeware tool Web2Chm.
It works perfectly, and I almost sure - it will work under the Wine in Linux too.
If you want to use only wget, I think your task can be solved using python scripts.
At the moment I'm learning spring and have the basic website running now on tomcat. Can I ask, how do you load images onto the website now and where do you store the images, css, javascript etc in your project folder?
The answer depends a lot on your development/deployment environment. If you are using Maven for example, which has a specific directory layout, you would put the files in src/main/webapp/.
If you are using Eclipse as your IDE and use Ant to build your project, you would normally use WebContent/.
In any case, I would advise to use specific folders for each type of file. You can still use Tomcat Filters, if you want to influence the headers that are sent with the files. (Important for caching, ...)
I found this site that has a link to a .Net project.
The link is to a folder structure.
How do I down load this project without SVN??
Is it specific SVN??
http://svn2.assembla.com/svn/nbdn_web_store/
Source Code
I would say that either you install svn (which is not a huge install), or you have a lot of clicking to do when you download each file separately using your web browser. Can't see any other alternatives, really.
install subversion and check out the file with e.g. the command
svn co http://svn2.assembla.com/svn/nbdn_web_store/trunk/ ndbn_web_store
First of all, I agree that installing svn is a good option.
If you don't want to do that (and don't like clicking tons of links to download each file) you can use an offline browser such as this one recommended by CNET