Is there a script I can get or a means where after a javascript program has altered the html in the DOM it can be printed out to some text window ? This might help me analyze complex programs to figure out what they did to the html.
[URL]There appears to be an error in the XML.Google Chrome reports:This page contains the following errors:error on line 4800 at column 410:Opening and ending tag mismatch:longdesc line 0 and p Below is a rendering of the page up to the first error.Firefox reports:XML Parsing Error: mismatched tag. Expected: </longdesc>.[URL]Line Number 4800, Column 408:[URL]
I've a large array of nearly 5000 entries and trying to populate those entries into a dropdown list of my webpage. By doing that so, it is taking so much time ( nearly 30 seconds ) and is freezing the page.
Is there any way to load such a big array into dropdown in efficient manner...
var handles = [ ... around 5000 entries .... ]; function populateHandles(){ objSub = document.getElementById('listBox'); for(x=0; x < handles.length; x++){
I was wondering if there was an easy way to dump the html that gets generated after the page gets loaded to verify it's what I wanted and expected (I'd like to check out the source, not just the results).
I am using this photo shuffler code, located here: [URL] How can that be modified to allow for 2 instances? Basically, it would have 2 sets of arrays. I want to have 2 slide shows on the same page. I've tried modifying it myself for a few hours, and no luck.
The application that I am trying to develop is a web-crawler written in JavaScript. The top module called JSBrowse.html defines two frames: an upper one called toppart, and a lower one called bottompart. Toppart.html in turn defines two frames: one called leftpart and one called rightpart. (I would have atached all 4 modules, but I don't know how to attach more than one module, so I chose rightpart.html.)
Leftpart shows the current www page that you have crawled to.
Rightpart contains a button that takes you to the next page in what will eventually be a pushdown list.
Bottompart scans each page for the presence of keyword, and also shows the dom structure of the document.
In rightpart I use this statement to update the URL of leftpart: parent.frames('leftpart').window.document.URL=document.form1.text1.value;
THE PROBLEM IS: The DOM tree that is displayed is the tree of my original html page (i.e., leftpart). What I want is the DOM tree of the current content.
I own 5 books on JavaScript including "HTML Black Book", "JavaScript: The Complete Reference", and 3 others, and I have not found the answer to my question.
I could sure use a clue, or ideas to solve this problem.
Apparently, ` new Date() ` reads it correctly, though problems can occur if the browser returns only two digits for the year. In particular, time zone, field order and separators may vary. It is also reliant on the server's clock having been correctly set at the time of upload. See the URL below.
I have created a web page loaded from MySQL and PHP.It contains a text field, two list boxes and a hidden field for items moved between the list boxes.When I submit the form it send the text field and the last list box item moved but NOT the hidden text field
Basically, I want a page to load, and then every 5 seconds be able to check a file to see if it has been modified since the last time the page loaded. If it has refresh, if not then wait 5 more seconds. Is this possible using javascript?
I'm searching for a pre-made cookie script or a tutorial on making a simple session cookie. Just a cookie to make sure users are getting most current copies of HTML pages on my site.
Up till now I've just had messages on each page instructing them to refresh to make sure the have the latest version.
I have a site that is built with a frameset. What I would like to do is whenever I update a particular frame that contains the main content (ie. a news.html page), have it change a graphic in the navigation bar (ie. a separate .html document) to a glowing animated gif for 7 days. Since the news page doesn't load as the first page within the frameset, it would show that there was something new posted there.
I have a few JavaScript books around, and I -think- I know roughly what needs to be done, but I'm having trouble conjugating scripts.
I think it could be done by checking the date.lastModified against the current date, and if the abs difference was less than 7 days it would display news-anim.gif, else it would display news.gif - however I am not sure how to get the left navframe.html to read the date modified of news.html
Can anyone suggest any solutions (or know of any scripts out there?) or is this more of an issue that should be dealt with using cookies/something else?
I have found a useful script at [URL] which shows the date a page was last modified. I have put it at [URL] where it works perfectly. But the same script with a PHP file extension as here [URL] only shows the current time. There is no PHP in the page, but somehow the PHP processor seems to be upsetting it.
I use NETSCAPE established a catalog page in XML, which uses Javascript-DOM to add, remove and sort the products by their prices. But which Javascript function should I use in order to save the modified page into local hard disk? to sort products as well.
in my javascript code I'm using a synchronous XMLHTTPRequest to periodically fetch a file from a server. Recently I added the "If-Modified-Since" header request (to reduce downloads if nothing is modified). Since adding the "If-Modified-Since" header request the javascript code still works with all browser (IE, FF, GC, AS) besides Opera.
The issue only happens if there is no new file to be downloaded: with the other browser I can see the 304 request status code, while with Opera (opening dragonfly) the request remains indefinitely as "in progress", the request status code returned being 0.
The original page is visible for a very short moment, before the modifications done with the javascript are visible. This is logic to me, sinceI add my javascriptat the end of the page, as recomended. For the user it is a little confusing. Is there a way that the user sees only the page with the javascript modifications?
I am usingjquery-simplemodal.js plugin for displaying a modal form. My form is a separate .jspf file, being incuded into my main page. Here is my code:
function showPopup(popupContentId) { //wrap the content div with the border and show the dialog with the following params $.modal("<div class='layerBorderOuter'><div class='layerBorderInner'>" + $(popupContentId).html() + "</div></div>", {modal:true, [Code]...
When an element contains script tags, and the element gets moved/modified, the script is fired twice. Is there any way to fix this issue without modifying the contents of script tags? We have customers who may add script to their CRM and would be beyond my control. I have included an example of the issue. Note that this can occur in wrapAll, sortable, and anything else which directly modifies the dom.
Test Sample : Copy this into a htm and correct the paths to the js files. You will see that the alert() fires before the 2nd content div is drawn and then again after the div containing the script is moved. Afterwards the script doesn't fire again.