The problem with the above solution is the back/forward buttons and all the other browser options. Because of this, I am trying to get the following solution to work:
function popUp(url)
{
window.open(url, "PDF",
"width=500,height=500,status=no,toolbar=no,menubar= no");
}
When I use this implementation, I get a window asking if I'm sure I want to download the file (which I do not get from the first implemenation). I click yes, and it says it was unable to download the file. Just as an experiment, I have taken the url that ends up in the location bar from the working method and pasted it in a new browser window. That gives me the same error as the popup function method.
I thought this would be an easy window.open script but I'm having problems with IE7 (surprise surprise...). I'm working with some YouTube videos, and what I'm basically doing is grabbing their embed code from their YouTube page and using just the URL to make the video pop up in a new window. Here is my function I wrote to open the new window:
I am trying to create a way for my users to download some code dynamically from my web page via a file download. Below is the code that i have written so far. It seems to be dying on the iframe but i'm not sure why.
Here is my jquery trigger which is inside my onreadystate function.
I need to have a submit input button automatically start a download when clicked, but also redirect to an additional "information" page. Since I'm not sure if this can simply be solved with HTML or must use some Javascript.
I have a page /download.php.basically on entry this page displays a browser download dialog box for a file.I was wondering if there is a way to use .load() to get the same download dialog box on another page.I tried the code below but it does not work/ what jquery function I can use to get this working
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 anybody have a Download Dialog written in JavaScripts? This is for a website. I've seen it done before.... where you click on what you want and the dialog comes up asking you if you want to save it. From what I can tell, the name of the file is passed as a parameter of the JavaScript.
I'm using ASP.NET and setting window.location.href in my web page to output an audio file that the user is prompted to download. I would like to provide a link so that the user can download the audio file and an XML file one after the other. I've been experimenting with opening a new window, but there must be a cleaner way of doing this.
I tried redirecting in the onLoad event of the form but doesn't work. I suppose it redirects as soon as the activeX is loaded and not when it has finished its download.
How to download a pdf link? suppose we have a pdf url [URL] now i have to create a button on click of which it downloads that pdf. i have tried window.open() method in javascript but it opens it in another window. is there a way to download a pdf link using javascript or ajax.
I need to download - randon size - parts of a file, not the whole file. Says: I have the zip file test.zip, it is 10 mega bytes long. But I don't want the 10 mega today. Today I want 5 mega bytes. Tomorrow I could want more 3 mega bytes of the file, but it is not sure, could be 4 mega bytes. I need to part the zip file in chunks at request. No CGI, no asp, no php. Only client side scripts.
I am curious to know if any research has been conducted regarding the efficiency of having a single (large) .js file downloaded for a webpage compared to several smaller .js files.
For example in my web pages I often include the scripting code <script language="javascript" type="text/javascript" src="ascript.js"></script>
which contains all the code for a given function, i.e. the main function and any subsidiary functions.
I have developed a few library functions (leftString, rightString, etc.) and these can be invoked by functions in other .js files, so I would have something like":
I'm just wondering if there is any difference in download time when the HTML has to download these separate .js files rather than a single one.
Even though the use of broadband is spreading I still like to keep my web pages as efficient as possible, not everyone has broadband after all, some still use dial-up connections.
The script below allows me to link to a file and as the user clicks to download, the 'File Download' windows appears as normal, and the user can download...
The original page is then redirected to a new page.. This works, but it also opens a blank page..
How can this be chaged to stop the blank page from opening... ?
I have several PDF files that I want folks to read. Should I just write some text and make a hyperlink to the file. I'm still trying to decide if I want them to only open the file and read it or force them do download it.
I want to download BeautyTips. I go to [URL].... and I get to what appears to be an appropriate page.However, I can't find anything to click that seems to result in a download.
I do not see a link that would allow me to copy the documentation. I want to have it local so I can work disconnected from the 'net. Spidering the tree off the website seems a bit much. Did I miss it?
i noticed today that if i type in my js file name in the url i get a download box, i have an htaccess on my site so this should not be happening, thats another issue.. my question is, is there a trick to creating a js file that cant be accessed in this manner, i was thinking about adding a php define statement as it comes from one source only, but i wanted to ask first to see if there was something on the js side i could do or is that strictly a htaccess or server side issue..
I website I've seen recently uses a clever technique, which I'm still working to figure out. When you go to view an image, a pop-up window opens -- the image is downloaded (non-cached) and then some javascript (presumably) loads a replacement image in its place (it's not displayed) -- when you go to save it, you get the dummy image.
Further, they make some javascript call (presumably, or jquery) to replace the document content of that page, so when you do a View Source, you get something totally different.
How this is actually working, and whether something like that could be cross-browser supported.
I got a contact form written out and it is working and it was integrated from this site:Download link at the bottom to whoever needs it. and I integrated it into my site:But how can I set it so once someone successfully sends a message, the textareas get automatically erased?
I have a problem, say that I have a lot of diffrent websites, and that those are on diffrent webservers, now also say that I want one specific objekt on all those websites, is it possible to write a javascript that gets that object from another webserver?
Code: function getElementFromAnotherSite(){ /*Download www.example.com/images/example.gif
I'm wanting a message box to appear when a user clicks on a link that pops up a message. Once they click "OK' on the message box, a file download box pops up letting them open/save the file.
Basically a person clicks on a link for a class. A message box pops up saying "Please print and bring the following papers to class." When they click "OK", the *.pdf file pops up ready to be downloaded.
I know there got 1 function is fileUpload, the code is like this: <input type="file" name="filename" size="35"> After that will prompt out 1 dialog box to let user to select file to upload. *User must select 1 file to upload.
How about If I just want to browse the path? and I do not want to select a file but create a filename by myself?
Actually I just want to specify the path and filename so that later I can create 1 file by using the filename and create the file in that path.