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  • Google I/O 2010 - Writing zippy Android apps

    Google I/O 2010 - Writing zippy Android apps Google I/O 2010 - Writing zippy Android apps Android 201 Brad Fitzpatrick Come hear tips & war stories on making fast, responsive (aka "non-janky") Android apps. No more ANRs! Eliminate event loop stalls! Fast start-ups! Optimized database queries with minimal I/O! Also, learn about the tools and techniques we use to find performance problems across the system and hear what's coming in the future. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 3 0 ratings Time: 57:38 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - App Engine Overview

    Google I/O 2012 - App Engine Overview Doug Orr, Jesse Jiang, Alexander Power Be the first to hear about the exciting new platform products which you can use to work better in the cloud. Discover how the Google Cloud Platform is expanding to meet your current and future needs. Learn how the over 150k developers in startups and businesses building mobile, games and modern web apps are already enjoying the benefits of the platform. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 1781 16 ratings Time: 54:04 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - What's hot in Java for App Engine

    Google I/O 2010 - What's hot in Java for App Engine Google I/O 2010 - What's hot in Java for App Engine App Engine 201 Toby Reyelts, Don Schwarz Learn what's new with Java on App Engine. We'll take a whirlwind tour through the changes since last year, walk through a code sample for task queues and the new blobstore service, and demonstrate techniques for improving your application's performance. We'll top it off with a glimpse into some new features that we've planned for the year ahead. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 8 0 ratings Time: 01:02:10 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Making Google Product Search Work for You Using the Content API for Shopping

    Google I/O 2012 - Making Google Product Search Work for You Using the Content API for Shopping Mayuresh Saoji, Danny Hermes To get the best out of product search, merchants need to provide complete and accurate product information, as well as fresh price and availability data for all products. This session will provide merchants with concrete steps they can take to improve their data quality using the Content API for Shopping. We will provide details on when it makes sense to use the Content API to submit data (as opposed to Feeds), and how to use the API. We will also go into details on how to debug API requests and errors, and talk about general best practices to follow in order to use the API optimally and efficiently. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 35 1 ratings Time: 43:50 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Measure in milliseconds: Meet Speed Tracer

    Google I/O 2010 - Measure in milliseconds: Meet Speed Tracer Google I/O 2010 - Measure in milliseconds redux: Meet Speed Tracer GWT 201 Kelly Norton It turns out that web apps can be slow for all sorts of opaque and unintuitive reasons. Don't be fooled into thinking that bloated, slow JavaScript is the only culprit. This session introduces you to Speed Tracer, a new GWT tool that can tell you exactly where time is going within the browser. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 7 0 ratings Time: 01:00:53 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Casting a wide net for all Android devices

    Google I/O 2010 - Casting a wide net for all Android devices Google I/O 2010 - Casting a wide net: How to target all Android devices Android 201 Justin Mattson One of Android's strengths is its flexibility to run on a wide variety of devices. In this session, we will explore the facilities the Android resource system provides to developers to make supporting many devices from one application binary easier, as well as common pitfalls. In addition to hardware heterogeneity, more than one version of Android may exist in the wild at any given time. We will go over strategies for providing cross-version compatibility. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 4 0 ratings Time: 01:02:15 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - A Master Class in Map Styling

    Google I/O 2012 - A Master Class in Map Styling Scott Shawcroft, Jonah Jones Custom Styled Maps allow developers to customize the look and feel of the underlying Google Maps tiles. This makes it really easy to make a great looking map. You can tailor your map to your message, to your color scheme, or to help emphasize your data. In this class, master maps designers will help you build beautiful, elegant styles that make your maps work for you. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 23 0 ratings Time: 38:21 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - The open & social web

    Google I/O 2010 - The open & social web Google I/O 2010 - The open & social web Social Web 101 Chris Messina This session will cover the latest and most important trends of the Social Web and dive deep into where this is all going, at both technical and conceptual levels. From the concepts of digital identity, relationships, and social objects, this session will cover emerging technologies like WebFinger, Salmon, ActivityStrea.ms, OpenID, OAuth and OpenSocial. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 4 0 ratings Time: 47:12 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Architecting for performance with GWT

    Google I/O 2010 - Architecting for performance with GWT Google I/O 2010 - Architecting for performance with GWT GWT 201 Joel Webber, Adam Schuck Modern web applications are quickly evolving to an architecture that has to account for the performance characteristics of the client, the server, and the global network connecting them. Should you render HTML on the server or build DOM structures with JS in the browser, or both? This session discusses this, as well as several other key architectural considerations to keep in mind when building your Next Big Thing. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 9 1 ratings Time: 01:01:09 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Writing real-time games for Android redux

    Google I/O 2010 - Writing real-time games for Android redux Google I/O 2010 - Writing real-time games for Android redux Android 201 Chris Pruett This session is a crash course in Android game development: everything you need to know to get started writing 2D and 3D games, as well as tips, tricks, and benchmarks to help your code reach optimal performance. In addition, we'll discuss hot topics related to game development, including hardware differences across devices, using C++ to write Android games, and the traits of the most popular games on Market. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 10 0 ratings Time: 58:57 More in Science & Technology

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  • Plataforma social Google+ innovación para desarrolladores

    Plataforma social Google+ innovación para desarrolladores En este programa presentaremos una visión general de las novedades tecnológicas desde el equipo de relaciones para desarrolladores de la región de sur de Latinoamérica. Seguiremos presentando nuestro enfoque de desarrollo, ingeniería y las mejores prácticas para implementar tecnología Google favoreciendo la evolución de soluciones tecnológicas. Luego nos introduciremos en un escenario técnico en donde analizaremos la solución de social de Google+ para desarrolladores, opciones y posibilidad de innovar en este ecosistema. Finalmente estaremos conversando con la comunidad de desarrollo, resolviendo un desafío técnico y premiando todo el talento regional. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Education

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  • Google Games Chat #6

    Google Games Chat #6 Google Games Chat is back once again. What kinds of crazy topics will be talking about this time around? Will Todd ever finish Skyrim? What Google employee and/or homeless person is sleeping behind the couch this week? Tune in and find out! Ask us questions in the moderator link! We might even get around to answering them! From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 0 0 ratings Time: 00:00 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - Make your app real-time with PubSubHubbub

    Google I/O 2010 - Make your app real-time with PubSubHubbub Google I/O 2010 - Make your application real-time with PubSubHubbub Social Web 201 Brett Slatkin This session will go over how to add support for the PubSubHubbub protocol to your website. You'll learn how to turn Atom and RSS feeds into real-time streams. We'll go over how to consume real-time data streams and how to make your website reactive to what's happening on the web right now. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 5 0 ratings Time: 55:46 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2010 - GWT Linkers target HTML5 WebWorkers & more

    Google I/O 2010 - GWT Linkers target HTML5 WebWorkers & more Google I/O 2010 - GWT Linkers target HTML5 Web Workers, Chrome Extensions, and more GWT 301 Matt Mastracci At its core GWT has a well-defined and customizable mechanism -- called Linkers -- that controls exactly how GWT's compiled JavaScript should be packaged, served, and run. This session will describe how to create linkers and explains some of the linkers we've created, including a linker that turns a GWT module into an HTML5 Web Worker and one that generates an HTML App Cache manifest automatically. For all I/O 2010 sessions, please go to code.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 6 1 ratings Time: 59:59 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Bring Your App to the Big Screen

    Google I/O 2012 - Bring Your App to the Big Screen Michael Sundermeyer, Ossama Alami Google TV expands the reach of the Android and the web to television, but designing applications for the TV is fundamentally different than building apps for mobile, tablet or PCs. In this session we'll we share the core points of our user research and give you tips on how to connect with your users by designing beautiful and functional Android and web applications for the biggest screen in the house. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 617 17 ratings Time: 58:07 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google+ Platform Office Hours (EMEA Edition): Devfest London & Hangouts

    Google+ Platform Office Hours (EMEA Edition): Devfest London & Hangouts For those who couldn't make it to this weekend's #devfestlondon at +Campus London, Google+ Platform Office Hours in Europe continues on Wednesday with a roundup of some of +Silvano Luciani, +Ian Barber and +Lee Denison's favourite moments from the event. +Silvano Luciani will be showing us how we too can Be +Paul Irish with the Hangout app he presented during the weekend, and we'll be talking about how to build Google Analytics into Hangout apps to make it easier to measure usage. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 49 6 ratings Time: 19:29 More in Science & Technology

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  • Google I/O 2012 - Use What You Know: HTML and JavaScript in Apps Script

    Google I/O 2012 - Use What You Know: HTML and JavaScript in Apps Script Corey Goldfeder This session covers how to build dynamic webapps and services in Apps Script, using skills that you already have. During the session we'll show how to create rich interactive apps using regular HTML and JavaScript, while maintaining deep Google integration via Apps Script. We'll also cover how to use scripts to serve text content like JSON and XML. For all I/O 2012 sessions, go to developers.google.com From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 476 7 ratings Time: 40:29 More in Science & Technology

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  • Last-modified date not showing up in indexed documents

    - by Jared
    We have tried everything, pushing feeds, setting up fields in "document dates" screen to enable all documents in the index to contain a value for Last-modified date. Nothing seems to make documents retain a "last-modified date" in the index. How does one enable a last-modified date for all documents in the index? Note: the meta value will come from an external xml source (not a database). Followed the google instructions for our gsa version (6.4.0.G.22). Yes I know the GSA version is quite old, we've been told by our google-representative support team themselves, that updating the GSA to the latest version "should" resolve the problem, and by "should" I mean, their GSA did the same thing (no last-modified date) and updating our GSA is another can of worms story :)

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  • How can I design my classes to include calendar events stored in a database?

    - by Gianluca78
    I'm developing a web calendar in php (using Symfony2) inspired by iCal for a project of mine. At this moment, I have two classes: a class "Calendar" and a class "CalendarCell". Here you are the two classes properties and method declarations. class Calendar { private $month; private $monthName; private $year; private $calendarCellList = array(); private $translator; public function __construct($month, $year, $translator) {} public function getCalendarCellList() {} public function getMonth() {} public function getMonthName() {} public function getNextMonth() {} public function getNextYear() {} public function getPreviousMonth() {} public function getPreviousYear() {} public function getYear() {} private function calculateDaysPreviousMonth() {} private function calculateNumericDayOfTheFirstDayOfTheWeek() {} private function isCurrentDay(\DateTime $dateTime) {} private function isDifferentMonth(\DateTime $dateTime) {} } class CalendarCell { private $day; private $month; private $dayNameAbbreviation; private $numericDayOfTheWeek; private $isCurrentDay; private $isDifferentMonth; private $translator; public function __construct(array $parameters) {} public function getDay() {} public function getMonth() {} public function getDayNameAbbreviation() {} public function isCurrentDay() {} public function isDifferentMonth() {} } Each calendar day can includes many calendar events (such as appointments or schedules) stored in a database. My question is: which is the best way to manage these calendar events in my classes? I think to add a eventList property in CalendarCell and populate it with an array of CalendarEvent objects fetched by the database. This kind of solution doesn't allow other coders to reuse the classes without db (because I should inject at least a repository services also) just to create and visualize a calendar... so maybe it could be better to extend CalendarCell (for instance in CalendarCellEvent) and add the database features? I feel like I'm missing some crucial design pattern! Any suggestion will be very appreciated!

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  • Custom Icon for Marker Clusterer

    - by Nyxynyx
    I am using Marker Clusterer library for Google Maps API V3. Now that I have the clusterer working, I want to change the default icon to a custom one. Prorblem: When I try to set the style property of the marker clusterer, the default icon still appears. Where did I go wrong? JS Code // Marker Clusterer var styles = {styles: [{ height: 53, url: "http://localhost/mywebsite/images/template/markers/cluster.png", width: 53 }, { height: 56, url: "http://google-maps-utility-library-v3.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/markerclusterer/images/m2.png", width: 56 }, { height: 66, url: "http://google-maps-utility-library-v3.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/markerclusterer/images/m3.png", width: 66 }, { height: 78, url: "http://google-maps-utility-library-v3.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/markerclusterer/images/m4.png", width: 78 }, { height: 90, url: "http://google-maps-utility-library-v3.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/markerclusterer/images/m5.png", width: 90 }]}; var mcOptions = {gridSize: 50, maxZoom: 15, styles: styles[styles]}; mc = new MarkerClusterer(map, [], mcOptions);

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  • Could not import Django settings into Google App Engine

    - by gkelsall
    Hello all you Google App Engine experts, I have used Django a little before but am new to Google App Engine and am trying to use it's development web server with Django for the first time. I don't know if this is relevent but I previously had Django 1.1 and Python 2.6 on my Windows XP and even though I have uninstalled Python 2.6 there is still a folder and entries in the registry. I have followed the instructions from Google but when I browse to the GAE developemnt web server it cannot find my settings (details below). Any hints gratefully received. Regards Geoff C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing\ingsite>echo %PATH% C:\WINDOWS\system32;C:\WINDOWS;C:\WINDOWS\System32\Wbem;C:\WINDOWS \system32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0;;C:\Python25;C:\Python25\Lib\site- packages\django\bin;C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing \ingsite;C:\Program Files\Google\google_appengine\ C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing\ingsite>echo %PYTHONPATH% C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing\ingsite C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing\ingsite>C:\Documents and Settings\GeoffK\My Documents\ing\ingsite>dev_appserver.py -- debug_imports ingiliz\ INFO 2009-08-04 07:29:45,328 appengine_rpc.py:157] Server: appengine.google. com INFO 2009-08-04 07:29:45,358 appcfg.py:322] Checking for updates to the SDK. INFO 2009-08-04 07:29:45,578 appcfg.py:336] The SDK is up to date. WARNING 2009-08-04 07:29:45,578 datastore_file_stub.py:404] Could not read data store data from c:\docume~1\geoffk\locals~1\temp \dev_appserver.datastore WARNING 2009-08-04 07:29:45,578 datastore_file_stub.py:404] Could not read data store data from c:\docume~1\geoffk\locals~1\temp \dev_appserver.datastore.history WARNING 2009-08-04 07:29:45,608 dev_appserver.py:3296] Could not initialize ima ges API; you are likely missing the Python "PIL" module. ImportError: No module named _imaging INFO 2009-08-04 07:29:45,625 dev_appserver_main.py:465] Running application ingiliz on port 8080: http://localhost:8080 ..... Now attempting to browse if need more detail here I can post ..... if not settings.DATABASE_ENGINE: File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\django\conf\__init__.py", line 28, in __ge tattr__ self._import_settings() File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\django\conf\__init__.py", line 59, in _imp ort_settings self._target = Settings(settings_module) File "C:\Python25\lib\site-packages\django\conf\__init__.py", line 94, in __in it__ raise ImportError, "Could not import settings '%s' (Is it on sys.path? Does it have syntax errors?): %s" % (self.SETTINGS_MODULE, e) ImportError: Could not import settings 'settings' (Is it on sys.path? Does it ha ve syntax errors?): No module named settings INFO 2009-08-04 07:31:02,187 dev_appserver.py:2982] "GET / HTTP/ 1.1" 500 -

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  • Problem with Google Analytics for Android : "Dispatcher thinks it finished, but there were 543 faile

    - by PHP_Jedi
    Anyone know how to solve this problem? 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): Problem with socket or streams. 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): java.net.SocketException: Broken pipe 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.harmony.luni.platform.OSNetworkSystem.sendStreamImpl(Native Method) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.harmony.luni.platform.OSNetworkSystem.sendStream(OSNetworkSystem.java:498) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.harmony.luni.net.PlainSocketImpl.write(PlainSocketImpl.java:585) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.harmony.luni.net.SocketOutputStream.write(SocketOutputStream.java:59) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.http.impl.io.AbstractSessionOutputBuffer.flushBuffer(AbstractSessionOutputBuffer.java:87) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.http.impl.io.AbstractSessionOutputBuffer.flush(AbstractSessionOutputBuffer.java:94) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.http.impl.AbstractHttpClientConnection.doFlush(AbstractHttpClientConnection.java:168) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at org.apache.http.impl.AbstractHttpClientConnection.flush(AbstractHttpClientConnection.java:173) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at com.google.android.apps.analytics.PipelinedRequester.sendRequests(Unknown Source) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at com.google.android.apps.analytics.NetworkDispatcher$DispatcherThread$AsyncDispatchTask.dispatchSomePendingEvents(Unknown Source) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at com.google.android.apps.analytics.NetworkDispatcher$DispatcherThread$AsyncDispatchTask.run(Unknown Source) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at android.os.Handler.handleCallback(Handler.java:587) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:92) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:123) 03-23 13:03:20.585: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): at android.os.HandlerThread.run(HandlerThread.java:60) 03-23 13:03:21.088: WARN/googleanalytics(3430): Dispatcher thinks it finished, but there were 543 failed events Specially the last line explain why there is lost so much data, as the dispatcher thinks it is done, but have 543 events not dispatched... The application have a good internet connection and there is no problem reaching the app server-side api. I see in analytics that lots of startups and click-events the past few days are lost, even I know the traffic is normal since i can see statistics from the the server api. In the analytics reports I see a day by day under-reporting. So the problems seems to be spreading/growing to all the devices using this application. Im wondering why google does not answer this in their mail-groups - several people have complained about this...well, well... I found this thread relevant: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/682560/java-net-socketexception-broken-pipe But, I'm still not sure if there is anything I can do to fix it or not. If there is nothing I can do to fix it, I guess its not my fault that it got broken. But i got a feeling it is, since the problem got dramatically worse on the last deploy to Android market. Anyone else with experience on Google Analytics for android ?

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  • Google maps API - info window height and panning

    - by Tim Fountain
    I'm using the Google maps API (v2) to display a country overlay over a world map. The data comes from a KML file, which contains coords for the polygons along with a HTML description for each country. This description is displayed in the 'info window' speech bubble when that country is clicked on. I had some trouble initially as the info windows were not expanding to the size of the HTML content they contained, so the longer ones would spill over the edges (this seems to be a common problem). I was able to work around this by resetting the info window to a specific height as follows: GEvent.addListener(map, "infowindowopen", function(iw) { iw = map.getInfoWindow(); iw.reset(iw.getPoint(), iw.getTabs(), new GSize(300, 295), null, null); }); Not ideal, but it works. However now, when the info windows are opened the top part of them is sometimes obscured by the edges of the map, as the map does not pan to a position where all of the content can be viewed. So my questions: Is there any way to get the info windows to automatically use a height appropriate to their content, to avoid having to fix to a set pixel height? If fixing the height is the only option, is there any way to get the map to pan to a more appropriate position when the info windows open? I know that the map class has a panTo() method, but I can't see a way to calculate what the correct coords would be. Here's my full init code: google.load("maps", "2.x"); // Call this function when the page has been loaded function initialize() { var map = new google.maps.Map2(document.getElementById("map"), {backgroundColor:'#99b3cc'}); map.addControl(new GSmallZoomControl()); map.setCenter(new google.maps.LatLng(29.01377076013671, -2.7866649627685547), 2); gae_countries = new GGeoXml("http://example.com/countries.kmz"); map.addOverlay(gae_countries); GEvent.addListener(map, "infowindowopen", function(iw) { iw = map.getInfoWindow(); iw.reset(iw.getPoint(), iw.getTabs(), new GSize(300, 295), null, null); }); } google.setOnLoadCallback(initialize);

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  • Using JSON Data to Populate a Google Map with Database Objects

    - by MikeH
    I'm revising this question after reading the resources mentioned in the original answers and working through implementing it. I'm using the google maps api to integrate a map into my Rails site. I have a markets model with the following columns: ID, name, address, lat, lng. On my markets/index view, I want to populate a map with all the markets in my markets table. I'm trying to output @markets as json data, and that's where I'm running into problems. I have the basic map displaying, but right now it's just a blank map. I'm following the tutorials very closely, but I can't get the markers to generate dynamically from the json. Any help is much appreciated! Here's my setup: Markets Controller: def index @markets = Market.filter_city(params[:filter]) respond_to do |format| format.html # index.html.erb format.json { render :json => @market} format.xml { render :xml => @market } end end Markets/index view: <head> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.google.com/jsapi?key=GOOGLE KEY REDACTED, BUT IT'S THERE" > </script> <script type="text/javascript"> var markets = <%= @markets.to_json %>; </script> <script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8"> google.load("maps", "2.x"); google.load("jquery", "1.3.2"); </script> </head> <body> <div id="map" style="width:400px; height:300px;"></div> </body> Public/javascripts/application.js: function initialize() { if (GBrowserIsCompatible() && typeof markets != 'undefined') { var map = new GMap2(document.getElementById("map")); map.setCenter(new GLatLng(40.7371, -73.9903), 13); map.addControl(new GLargeMapControl()); function createMarker(latlng, market) { var marker = new GMarker(latlng); var html="<strong>"+market.name+"</strong><br />"+market.address; GEvent.addListener(marker,"click", function() { map.openInfoWindowHtml(latlng, html); }); return marker; } var bounds = new GLatLngBounds; for (var i = 0; i < markets.length; i++) { var latlng=new GLatLng(markets[i].lat,markets[i].lng) bounds.extend(latlng); map.addOverlay(createMarker(latlng, markets[i])); } } } window.onload=initialize; window.onunload=GUnload;

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  • Using JSON Data to Populate a Google Map with Database Objects

    - by MikeH
    I'm revising this question after reading the resources mentioned in the original answers and working through implementing it. I'm using the google maps api to integrate a map into my Rails site. I have a markets model with the following columns: ID, name, address, lat, lng. On my markets/index view, I want to populate a map with all the markets in my markets table. I'm trying to output @markets as json data, and that's where I'm running into problems. I have the basic map displaying, but right now it's just a blank map. I'm following the tutorials very closely, but I can't get the markers to generate dynamically from the json. Any help is much appreciated! Here's my setup: Markets Controller: def index @markets = Market.filter_city(params[:filter]) respond_to do |format| format.html # index.html.erb format.json { render :json => @market} format.xml { render :xml => @market } end end Markets/index view: <head> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.google.com/jsapi?key=GOOGLE KEY REDACTED, BUT IT'S THERE" > </script> <script type="text/javascript"> var markets = <%= @markets.to_json %>; </script> <script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8"> google.load("maps", "2.x"); google.load("jquery", "1.3.2"); </script> </head> <body> <div id="map" style="width:400px; height:300px;"></div> </body> Public/javascripts/application.js: function initialize() { if (GBrowserIsCompatible() && typeof markets != 'undefined') { var map = new GMap2(document.getElementById("map")); map.setCenter(new GLatLng(40.7371, -73.9903), 13); map.addControl(new GLargeMapControl()); function createMarker(latlng, market) { var marker = new GMarker(latlng); var html="<strong>"+market.name+"</strong><br />"+market.address; GEvent.addListener(marker,"click", function() { map.openInfoWindowHtml(latlng, html); }); return marker; } var bounds = new GLatLngBounds; for (var i = 0; i < markets.length; i++) { var latlng=new GLatLng(markets[i].lat,markets[i].lng) bounds.extend(latlng); map.addOverlay(createMarker(latlng, markets[i])); } } } window.onload=initialize; window.onunload=GUnload;

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