Browser Error - Conditional Compilation Turned Off
Mar 20, 2006I receive the following error from the browser, when I want to run the site I developed. Conditional compilation is turned off.
View 6 RepliesI receive the following error from the browser, when I want to run the site I developed. Conditional compilation is turned off.
View 6 RepliesThe following script raises the subject alarm.
<p><a href="javascript:void();"
onClick="mailto:sgagnon@cyberus.ca?Subject=BRITTANY WORKSHO P">
<img align=left src="britany.gif" width="231" height="40" border=0
alt="BRITTANY WORKSHOP
with Sylvio Gagnon" style="text-indent: .2em;
background:ffffff; color:bb5500;">
</a></p>
I'm learning javascript. The portion I'm learning right now is how to write a short page that alerts the user that their javascript is not enabled. Then , when they enable it, javascript code written into this same page auto-redirects the user to a another page that requires javascript. I run firefox with the noscript add on. I'm learning to write code that first asks the user to enable javascript. When they do, redirect to mypage.html
The code below renders "Please enable javascript" when javascript is turned off - as it should. The autoredirect happens when javascript is turned on - as it should. The problem is the absolute url of the "mypage.html" file in the code is also rendered as a blue link when javascript is off. I don't want that rendering when off. I do use html comment tags as you can see in the code below.
[Code]...
I'm having a problem on a particular site I am working on.
The URL is [url]
The problem is that when I try to close the browser in IE on the main page I get an popup with an error which says: "An error has occured on the script on this page"
Do you want to continue running scripts on this page?
"Yes" or "No" (Buttons to Click)
I have to click the 'Yes' button about thirty times before the browser will finally close. Does anyone have any idea what this is?
Here is the source code.
Code:
I have some very strange problem on the Mac (OS-X) with the Safari
browser 1.0 (v85). Some information in my form was not filled in...
after I turned on debugging and checked the console it displayed some
error messages.
The messages displayed were like:
(event handler): value undefined (result of expression trim) is not
object. Cannot be called.
I have no idea what this means!!! Does anyone know where to find the
solution for this problem? The page works fine on Windows with IE (and
probably some more browsers).
The trim function is located in an exteral javascript file which is
referenced in the head of the html. Code:
I've found a neat little single drop down for a link list. It works fine, but if I turn JS off in my browser the links will not show. I do have a 100 liner that will show links when JS is off, but I'd rather adapt this to do it.
How do you make it so that the list will show regardless of whether JS is on of off. I want the drop if on, which is why I use it.
Code:
<html>
<head>
<title>Drop div</title>
<style type="text/css">
<!--
#ardd{width:180px;}
[Code]...
I've noticed that when I click the Stop button on the browser, or navigate to another page, jQuery.ajax calls the error event. You can see the problem live at: [URL]..
[Code]...
I'm new to Ajax. I'm getting a parse error in $.ajax. The xml file I am feeding it is dead simple, and validates just fine elsewhere. What else can I do to see what is wrong with the xml file?[code]...
How can I get more information about why $.ajax thinks that [Object XMLHttpRequest] is not an object?
I am trying to get the JavaScript drop down menu from this site to work with the Internet Explorer browser:Simple JavaScript Drop Down Menu with timeout effect v2.0 � Scripts and Tricks � JavaScript DHTML TutorialsI can download the page to my computer, then open the page from the folder into which it wasdownloaded with the IE browser, and and it works fine.But however, if I: 1). rename the page or 2). copy and paste all of the Html code on the page and then paste it in to a new file and then try to open it in the IE browser I get this message:To help protect your security, Internet Explorer has restricted this webpage from running scripts or ActiveX controls that could access your computer. Click here for options..
View 1 Replies View RelatedI have a modest website that uses a lot of Javascript.
If anybody views the site and does not have Javascript enabled I want to
politely redirect them to another page, so I put this bit of code in my
<head> section :
<script type="text/javascript"
language="JavaScript">document.write("<!"+"--")</script>
<meta http-equiv="Refresh" content="0; URL=noscript.html">
<!--//-->
So far so good.
It appears to work, *and* it passes the the 'W3C MarkUp Validation Service'
test ( http://validator.w3.org/ ).
Now the bad news: Google doesn't index my site any more, presumably because
their crawler always gets redirected.
Does anybody have a solution to this dilema, please?
Redirecting to a 'with-script' page is not an option because my page is
linked-to by many other sites.
I am trying to make an order form I am working on accessible for users who have javascript turned off in their browser, and to do this I would like to hide a div if JS is disabled.
Searching the Web has led me to think that styling the div to not display is the way forward and then using JS to display it. It is the JS bit I am struggling with! The div in question is a set of radio buttons to allow a purchaser to choose how many gift memberships they want to buy:
<div id="giftmember-buttons" style="display:none";>
<h2 class="threepeaksform">How many gift memberships do you wish to purchase?</h2>
<fieldset class="threepeaksform">
<legend>Please select the number of people you are buying a gift membership for using the buttons below.</legend>
<div class="generalcontactform-group">
[Code]...
I am a student and new to JavaScript, my problem is I am willing to do JavaScript form validation for emails , text etc. But on one of the forum I found out JS is not a very good way to do validation as JavaScript can be easily turned off by end-user and we shld always do server side validation also, but due to some concerns I want to stick to JavaScript (client side) validation.
My scenario is somewhat like Ive a form and a button in it which on being clicked calls a JavaScript function that will validate the fields and then submit the form through form.submit(); So my question is if JavaScript is turned off on end user then with validation the end user will also be not able to submit the form as the form is being submitted in a JavaScript function (which is turned off)? If this is thn cool.
But is it somehow possible to hack this procedure, and one can skip the JavaScript validation but can still submit the form? My primary concern is not to let pass any malicious or improper data (sql-injections, poorly formatted strings etc. to the server db)
My page has a form which has some sections that do not show unless needed, but if JS is turned off then these section will never show, so looking for a way to test if it is on or not and if not allow the page to display everything that would normally be hidden unless needed.
View 4 Replies View RelatedCan anyone point me to statistics on how many people don't have javascript .. or have javascript turned off? I'm about to purchase a template to re-design a site. I know javascript can do some neat things, but I'd like to keep the site accessible to as many as possible .. and easy to maintain (it's a volunteer organization, which may pass the Web design responsibility around from time-to-time).
View 2 Replies View Related i have a form that has both front end and backend validation (php)
basically i got the code off the net, and it needs the submit button to be of type "button" rather than "submit"
and obviously the form doesn't submit if javascript is turned off
i'm not a javascript expert, on the button it has onClick="formvalidate())"
and in the javascript it has
if form is ok form.submit() or something to that effect
now is it possible to use a submit type so that if javascript is turned off, the form will still submit
but won't submit if javascript is on and the form is invalid
does it have something to do with the onSubmit attribute for the form
currently there is none
because we have the backend validation it doesn't really matter if javascript is turned off but it does matter if the form can't even be submitted at all
Does any one know of a way to redirect someone with JavaScript disables to another page (or would we need a little JS to accomplish this?)
I'm putting together a site that uses a horizontal javascript drop down navbar, and thought it would be coolness to redirect those that either cannot read js, or have js turned off to my site map page.
I am a student and new to JavaScript, my problem is I am willing to do JavaScript form validation for emails , text etc.But on one of the forum I found out JS is not a very good way to do validation as JavaScript can be easily turned off by end-user and we shld always do server side validation also, but due to some concerns I want to stick to JavaScript (client side) validation.My scenario is somewhat like Ive a form and a button in it which on being clicked calls a JavaScript function that will validate the fields and then submit the form through form.submit();So my question is if JavaScript is turned off on end user then with validation the end user will also be not able to submit the form as the form is being submitted in a JavaScript function (which is turned off)? If this is thn cool.But is it somehow possible to hack this procedure, and one can skip the JavaScript validation but can still submit the form?
View 1 Replies View RelatedI'm trying to make my javascript linked "print" button NOT appear in browsers with js disabled? I'm a total js noob. Here's my code:
<a href="javascript:window.print()"><img src="images/PrintButton.png"></a>
I have a form that only shows the submit (update) buttons if the value select field beside it is changed. But what is someone has JS disabled, how can I enable them?
<select title="3553" name="3553" onchange="JavaScript:document.cart.add3553.disabled=false;">
I am using a checkbox to turn on and off some labels on a line on a google map, which is working fine if the line is already drawn, using this function:
function distboxclick(labelsbox) {
if (labelsbox.checked) {
for (var i=0; i<distmarkers.length; i++) {
if (distmarkers[i].mLabel != null) distmarkers[i].mLabel.show();
}
} else {
[Code]....
but the thing is that I want the labels to be turned off to begin with and switched on if the box is checked.
[Code]...
I have an upload file operation in the web application. UploadForm.jsp
is the form, and UploadAction.jsp is the form processing. The web server is
Websphere.
//UploadForm.jsp
<FORM NAME="InputForm" ACTION="UploadAction.jsp" METHOD="POST"
enctype=multipart/form-data>
<input type="file" name="fileName">
//etc ...
</FORM>
After I deploy the application to the web server, if I upload a small
file size, it is fine.
But if I upload a huge file size more than 10MB, then it cannot even go
to UploadAction.jsp.
After 30 seconds, it has error "The page cannot be displayed" shown on
the web browser.
It cannot even go to UploadAction.jsp. But both UploadForm.jsp and
UnploadAction.jsp are in the same machine.
Interestingly, if I test in local machine, I can upload any file size
without problem. I don't have any hints now. any ideas?
Is there anybody who knows were to find a javascript that does the trick
of conditional pulldowns (3).
Here is what i am looking for:
When you select an item from the first pulldown, the second pulldown
gets populated with the children of the item you choose. Then, when you
select an item from the newly populated second pulldown, the third
puldown gets populated.
Essentially, I would like the user to be prompted that application has not been completed on back, close etc. I however do not want the user to be prompted if they have completed the application.
I have a function on submit where I plan to set the flag to true.
I would expect something like the following but it doesnt work for me?
function unloadMess()
{
mess = "Leaving this page without submitting the application form will clear DOB entries. Do you wish to leave the application form?"
return mess;
}
function setBunload(on)
{
window.onbeforeunload = (on) ? unloadMess : true ;
}
if (flag = "N") // Application form has not been submitted.
{
setBunload(true);
}
else
{
setBunload(false);
}
Any Ideas?
i have the following regex:
(s*{s*(<?)s*(>?)s*}s*)
this needs to be able to match a string and make the following replacements:
if the string matches without < or >, replace the match with a space, a replacement string, and another space. if < matches also, do not add the left space. if > matches, do not add the right space. if < and > match, do not add the beginning or ending space
Old {} String => Old Replacement String
Old {<} String => OldReplacement String
Old {>} String => Old ReplacementString
Old {<>} String => OldReplacementString
this will have to be done a LOT of times, so efficiency is very important the answer in php is below. can anyone help me figure out how to do it in javascript? PHP Code:
Alright, my site is curerntly using server side includes (hoping to switch it all over to PHP soon). What I would like to do is include a different file depending on screen resolution. Does anyone know how to do this?
View 5 Replies View RelatedI just wrote the following script for something I'm working on:
<html>
<head>
<script type="text/javascript">
function KP_growit(subject,widthto,heightto) {
var target = document.getElementById(subject);
var tweenit = setInterval(grower,10);
function grower() {
(parseInt(target.style.width) < widthto)? target.style.width =
(parseInt(target.style.width) + 10) + "px";
(parseInt(target.style.height) < heightto)? target.style.height =
(parseInt(target.style.height) + 10) + "px";
(parseInt(target.style.width) == widthto && parseInt(target.style.height)
== heightto)? clearInterval(tweenit);
}
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="bluebox" style="position:absolute; left:173px; top:48px;
width:100px; height:80px; z-index:1; background-color:#99CCFF;"></div>
<div><a href="#" onClick="KP_growit('bluebox',400,300); return false;">grow
it</a></div>
</body>
</html>
I noticed that the script does not work because of the conditional
operators; however it DOES work when using the if...else format. Why is
this?