I need to include an alternate CSS style sheet if the viewer is using a phone. Right now, I have the code to test for an iphone, but I think I need to test for any phone. Anyway, the script stylesheet isn't being included with the code I am using.
Code:
<script language="javascript">
if (navigator.userAgent && (navigator.userAgent.indexOf("iPhone") > -1))
{
Ive created this simple test page with a textarea, a div, and a button. And then this code:
function copytext() { var temp= $('#TextArea').text(); $('#emptydiv').append(temp); }
Now in a normal browser (IE, firefox), when i type something in the field, and push the button, the text appends and shows - exactly as it should.
But on a phone (I´ve tried with Iphone and htc), nothing happens. It wont copy the text. I´m using jquery for alot of other stuff on the mobile page which works just fine.
With the releases of IE 8 (probably IE 9 by now), just how necessary is it to adjust for IE 7 or earlier if you site appears fine in other browsers like Firefox...etc?
It seems that the latest versions (or two versions) of IE sees things the same as Firefox..finally.
If I do need to test and adjust for earlier versions of IE, where can I find specifics on those versions to include in my JavaScript?
Is there any way to test for the presence of the Adobe Acrobat plug-in in Internet Explorer? It's doable in Netscape but so far I cannot get it to work in MSIE.
I'm trying to get JSUnit to work - I've tried everything I can think of, but I can't get the simplest of tests working - example 1 of the jsunit homepage - Both on my server and locally, nothing happens after clicking run - or if I'm lucky, a window pops up, blank, other than the heading "Tracing - JSUnit".
I had a rethink about my problem discussed in this [URL] thread, where the function won't run properly a second time if the page hasn't been reloaded. That one appears not to have a solution, and I was thinking that a reasonable plan B is the following:
a) test if the function has already been run since the page was loaded
b) if not, run the function
c) if it has, reload the page with the onClick, then run the function automatically on reloading.
the problem I envisage is will the page "remember" to run the function once it has been reloaded?Of course, it would be simpler to do it running the function automatically once the page loads, then just reloading if the test comes back that the function has been run already, but that wouldn't work for the first time you visit the page - it would start running straight away, whereas I want it to wait for that first click. Here's the page [URL] I'm working on, if you want to have a look.
I was putting some javascript in a form and doing my usual testing and swearing when the javascript did not run without an error message of any type and reverting the code back until it did run and adding code til it didn't.
Then it hit me - isn't there a better way - doesn't someone have a program or utility that will help debug Javascript ???
As I'm doing Javascript it is much harder to decode than the 30 year-old Fortran programs - they typically gave a line number and variable name that was missing.
When I did Basic before Visual Basic, the editor identified errors in real time as we typed. What is available for Javascript?
In the assignment, I'm asking the user to put in a 10 digit phone number (numbers only, no dashes or parenthesis), and the program spits out the phone number WITH the parenthesis and dashes like this: System.out.printf( "(%03d) %03d-%04d", part1, part2, part3);
HOW to parse the phone number. Here's what I've got so far.. Middle and end.
import java.util.*; public class C1Phone { public static void main(String [] args) { Scanner in = new Scanner (System.in);
i was doing this in php but then i decided to do it in js but i am not familiar at all with it. i am trying to validate a phone number. it is supposed to be in the format xxx-xxx-xxxx.
If I have to test my code on different Netscape versions, can I download and run those versions on the same computer or will it create conflicts? And if I had to test only one version which one should it be - which one has the most common elements to all the versions?
I am trying to check if my new window is open and if it is change the url. This works until I use the x in the corner to close the window. At that point i get an error when i try to open the window again. I believe that it is because newWindow is still active. How do I close newWindow when it is unloaded or closed by the x. If this is truely the problem.
determine what the first letter of a selector is? For example, if the very first letter of a paragraph is a quote (or a ‘ , or a “ , etc) I would like to apply a negative text- indent to the found paragraph so as to replicate "hanging quotes" that are commonplace in the print world. The code I've come up with is: $("p:contains(“), h1:contains(“), h2:contains(“)").css({'text- indent':'-0.3em'}); but this grabs any p or h1 or h2 that *contains* an opening curly quote; not what I'm looking for. I need it to select paragraphs that *start* with the opening curly quote. Incidentally, I could not get this to work when I was searching for $ ("p:contains(“)... but it worked when I entered an actual opening curly quote in the search (as above top). I tried both single and double escapes too.
does anyone know how I can test, in javascript, which of several buttons was pressed when submitting a form? Currently, I use the onSubmit event handler to call a form validator function, and it is in that function which I would like to test which submit button was pressed. Anyone know?
Is there any way to test if there is overflow in a text area (i.e. a scrollbar is displayed)? This is a read only field so I could change the textarea to a div if necessary.
Is there any way to detect through Javascript whether a browser supports a particular property of CSS? I am experimenting around with CSS3 and I would like to be able to detect whether the browser understands what to do with a particular setting, as in "elementRef.style.newCSS3_property = '3px' " I have heard, although I do not know if its true, that there is some way to access whether the browser knows what such a declaration means.
Code: <script language="javascript"> <!-- // Max number of items to show/hide
[Code].....
Which is designed to hide all but one of a group of DIVs with consecutive IDs in the form "listings_stations_<number>". The problem is, I won't know how many of these DIVS there will be. I know a maximum possible number though.
The script as-is works, but obviously throws up errors trying to get handles to non-existent elements/objects. How can I check an element exists before getting and setting style properties for it? I'd like a solution that works for all three browser-types the script currently works with.