Search Results

Search found 55482 results on 2220 pages for 'html line'.

Page 275/2220 | < Previous Page | 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282  | Next Page >

  • using jquery into an ajax nested html file

    - by TrustWeb
    Hello, i am trying to solve this problem: i have a tab interface build with jquery.tools, more exactly i used the ajax tab to load external html files into div. you can see the example here: http://flowplayer.org/tools/demos/tabs/ajax.html i am trying to use jquery to animated the elements loaded by ajax, do you know if and how is it possible? i am trying both loading scripts outside, in the main page, or in the loaded page. thanks a lot

    Read the article

  • What is this line doing exactly?

    - by mystify
    From the Finch audio library: - (void) play { [[sounds objectAtIndex:current] play]; current = (current + 1) % [sounds count]; // this line here... } I try to grok it: There is a number of sounds n, and current is increased by 1 on every iteration. As soon as current is bigger than number of sounds n, the modulo returns zero. That way, it starts from the beginning. Is this correct?

    Read the article

  • Loading package html + resources into webview

    - by mobileopen
    I would like to know how I can display a HTML page in webview with references to relative/local images. The goal is to have the html page and all linked images contained in the android application package itself. Where would I need to place the assets (assets directory?) and how do I reference these so they load into the webview? Thanx! Sven

    Read the article

  • Parsing line with delimiter in Python

    - by neversaint
    I have lines of data which I want to parse. The data looks like this: a score=216 expect=1.05e-06 a score=180 expect=0.0394 What I want to do is to have a subroutine that parse them and return 2 values (score and expect) for each line. However this function of mine doesn't seem to work: def scoreEvalFromMaf(mafLines): for word in mafLines[0]: if word.startswith("score="): theScore = word.split('=')[1] theEval = word.split('=')[2] return [theScore, theEval] raise Exception("encountered an alignment without a score") Please advice what's the right way to do it?

    Read the article

  • Line for signature in markdown

    - by JBarberU
    I'm writing a document using markdown, which I'm exporting to a PDF using pandoc. At the end of the document I need to have space for signatures on a printed copy of the PDF. I've tried to find how to draw a line with a fixed width, but so far I only got to escaping the underscore character, which doesn't feel quite right. It's as if I'm missing something, this couldn't possibly be that unusual to want to do. Any help or pointers are greatly appreciated.

    Read the article

  • Loading local html pages in UIWebView

    - by mwt
    I'm working with a UIWebView loading local (i.e. in the source bundle) html pages, ala Apple's Transweb example. Loading the first page is trivial. However, I have added a second html page and linked to it from the first. Attempting to link to a second page doesn't seem to work. Anyone know how to make this work? Thanks.

    Read the article

  • C++: Pass array created in the function call line

    - by Jarx
    How can I achieve a result like somebody would expect it according to the following code example: // assuming: void myFunction( int* arr ); myFunction( [ 123, 456, 789 ] ); // as syntactical sugar for... int values[] = { 123, 456, 789 }; myFunction( values ); The syntax I thought would work spit out a compile error. How can I define an argument array directly in the line where the function is called?

    Read the article

  • Elegant solution for line-breaks (PHP)

    - by Nimbuz
    $var = "Hi there"."<br/>"."Welcome to my website"."<br/>;" echo $var; Is there an elegant way to handle line-breaks in PHP? I'm not sure about other languages, but C++ has eol so something thats more readable and elegant to use? Thanks

    Read the article

  • Reading a line backwards

    - by Jimmy
    Hi, I'm using regular expression to count the total spaces in a line (first occurrence). match(/^\s*/)[0].length; However this reads it from the start to end, How can I read it from end to start. Thanks

    Read the article

  • Ccnvert PDF File to HTML in C#

    - by Jepe d Hepe
    I had a problem highlighting text in a pdf file embedded in webbrowser control and highlighting text using PDFLibNet.pdfwrapper so i'm shifting to another process where i'll just convert the pdf to html so i can manipulate the source code to highlight text. How can i convert pdf files to html files? Is there a better way? Thanks, Jepe

    Read the article

  • using dictionary to assign misspelled words to its line number

    - by jad
    This is the code I have so far d = {} counter = 0 for lines in words: counter += 1 for word in text1: if word not in words: d[word] = [counter] else: d[word].append(counter) print(word, d[counter]) words = my text file text1 is my misspelled words But this gives me an error. What I want to do is print the word and the line number e.g. togeher 5 7

    Read the article

  • What does this line of code mean?

    - by Victor
    Hi, I am wondering what this line of code mean? b = (gen_rand_uniform()>0.5)?1:0; The gren_rand_uniform() is a function to generate random 0 and 1 numbers. However I don't get the meaning for >0.5 and 1:0. I know this is supposed to be a basic question, please bear with me. Thanks!

    Read the article

  • Converting HTML file to PDF file in Iphone.

    - by japs
    Hello All, This is my first thread iam developing an application in which i have to convert the HTML contents to pdf file. I had generate the PDF File but don't know how to create a pdf file from HTML format. Anyone can suggest the solution? Thank You.

    Read the article

  • jquery-like HTML parsing in Python?

    - by Roy Tang
    Is there any Python library that allows me to parse an HTML document similar to what jQuery does? i.e. I'd like to be able to use CSS selector syntax to grab an arbitrary set of nodes from the document, read their content/attributes, etc. The only Python HTML parsing lib I've used before was BeautifulSoup, and even though it's fine I keep thinking it would be faster to do my parsing if I had jQuery syntax available. :D

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282  | Next Page >