I can retrieve the version of Microsoft Excel application installed in my system, but how can i do the same for Adobe Flash application. Does anyone know how to do it. The problem is i dont kknow the Application name to be used for Adobe flash so it returns nothing.
I have an application developed using jQuery1.2.3 and I currently have issues with printing a pre-defined area of a page within the application.I found the solution in the jQuery Plugin - PrintArea but it's not compattible with jQuery 1.2.x. The introduction of PrintArea and jQuery 1.3.2 to my app throws errors like "exception thrown and not caught - Query1.3.2.js" and "object does not support this property or method - on the line where I'm calling the printArea function".
I have problems updating from version 1.7.2. to version 1.8. I'm using a custom theme - can anybody give me a step-by-step guide how to update without destroying the whole site ? :) I would like to have the button featueres in the new version
I am trying to get started using JQuery, but I find I can't even get to lesson #1. When I go to jquery.com and click to download the latest version (or any version) it doesn't "download" anything. It opens the file as a webpage in my browser and I see all the JQuery in one big string. Why won't the file just download? Is it the browser I am using? Is it my Mac?
Does anyone have a quick script to find which version of IE a page is being viewed with?
Specifically, I want to seperate version 4 from versions 5+, and post a warning against using 4.
I expect I'll have to search out the (navigator.appAgent) string for the MSIE substring, but since I don't need it until tomorrow, laziness dictates I ask here before getting on with it. Is there another variable? a less cumbersome way?
Is there a possibility to compare and visualize in a user-friendly way the differences of two html files?
I need also something like a version-control. I think I could generate for everychange of the text a new record in the database. But now I need a tool (JavaScript, Java, etc.) to compare and visualize two versions of these html-files online over a web-browser. I know, this is not really a javascript topic, but perhaps here is anyone how knows a tool for that.
Strange question i know, but i am trying to read javascript ( not necessarily clever enough to program), so that i can at least understand other scripts when incorporating them on my site as i feel this is important.
Would it be ok to go straight to v1.5 or as there are differences between the versions, start at say 1.2 and learn the differences between the upgrades.
I suppose i am hoping that i only need to start at 1.5 to make things easier.
I have a frame's onload event calling a function which needs to know which file was loaded. Is there any java object/method to determine the file name or any type of file id?
I know it's possible to retrieve the IP address of a visitor's computer. However, I need to figure out a way to get the IP address of the server where the files are placed. Here's a description of my issue:
My application, along with some HTML Electronic manuals, are loaded onto a server in an electronic classroom. In order to get to any of these items (manuals or app), the students access the server where an index page is located in the D drive and click a link to get to any of them.
The problem is that these manuals are loaded into the D: drive while my application, because it uses ASP, is saved in the C:inetpubwwwroot folder.
The other issue is that this application will not be placed in just one classroom. Each classroom will have its own server with any number of computers accessing it. Since I don't know how each of the servers will be set up, I need to get the IP address so I can access the wwwroot folder.
What I need to do is figure out, using some non-server-side language, what the IP address or computer name of the server is so that I can access the appropriate folder in the wwwroot folder.
This should be an easy one. I am using a single OnChange event with several <Select> statements, and need to identify the specific <Select> control that fired off the onchange event. I'm certain there must be a way to grab the ID or Name from the specific control in the javascript function, but I haven't been able to find it.
My spidey senses are telling me this can't be done without making an additional [XMLHttp] request, but ... Any way to read the redirected URL for an image? Suppose I have the following tag: HTML Code: <img src='/images/test.jpg' /> And suppose the image request redirects to /images/test.jpg?token=123. The image src, according to JavaScript is still /images/test.jpg. Any way to determine the new URL? (short of making an AJAX request for the image and reading the response header?)
I've have got this script, the only thing I want to be changed is the first part. It has to detect IE version 6 instead of just "Microsoft Internet Explorer". Can somebody help me out? I tried "Microsoft Internet Explorer 6" but that doesn't work.
I noticed that some sites use <script src='fineName.js?ver=XXX'></script(even google) Someone told me that it's for script changes, means - if the file in server has been changed than the new XXX will demand to load the new file. I find it hard to believe that it's true.
I am exhausted today, not to include the funk that the BCS national championship put me in, so I must be either crazy or missing something. When I do the following the code works;
I want to know the latest available version of the browser i am using and also i want to upgrade my current browser version to the latest one when i call a javascript method.on body onload i want to change my current browser version to the latest available version of the browser.
I have just written a expanding menu which works great in IE6/NS7, what I have installed to check with, but the first person I went to show it to had IE 5.0, and guess what? It fell over.
So, I am wondering if anyone has any ideas about how I can go about checking this in IE5. I am using XP and, while i haven't tried, my understanding is that I cannot have multiple versions of IE installed, is this right? If not where can I get older versions from?
Does somebody know the code to detect the Blackberry version with javascript? If its a blackberry i need to detect the version of the OS because our mobile site only support version 4.5.0.127 and up. If the version is under that i have to redirect the user to another page to tell him that his OS version is not supported, they have to update there OS before using our mobile site.
While attempting to create a greasemonkey script in FF2 (don't ask), I discovered that the "let" statement was causing my code to fail. After confirming that this statement has been available since FF2 (js engine 1.7) [URL] became curious as one determines their javascript engine in FF. IE has a way to inspect the jscript engine, ala [URL] but I couldn't find anything similar for FF. Feel free to list links for testing engines in other browsers,
I need to develope a multilanguage application in javascript: is there some particular library, or do you have some pointer to guidelines to follows: the messages should if possible be keeped in a separate file, one for language. Is there some standard format?
I having taken on a large project (set by myself), and I can never seem to plan out my functions, classes, variables etc... in a format that's easy to read, and follow.
Would anyone know of some kind of application which will allow me to "prototype" my application first? I am sure such a thing exists, I just don't know what I am looking for. I think I am after something along the lines of Microsoft Visio, but a bit simpler.
I know this sounds so stupid, but it's a project that I am working on. I need to develop an application where people can upload a picture of themself and then it will add a wig to their picture over their hair.I just don't know how the code scans the uploaded photo and finds where to add the wig to the picture. The program will be really simple. No choice of wigs there is just one wig and as soon as the picture is uploaded the wig should be added and then displayed.