Search Results

Search found 14294 results on 572 pages for 'browser modes'.

Page 321/572 | < Previous Page | 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328  | Next Page >

  • profiling php inline

    - by mononym
    I'm looking for a solution to profile my php scripts within the browser (rather than having to use *cachegrind) I saw this a while ago http://particletree.com/features/php-quick-profiler/, but i have no idea how good it is (or accurate) tips/advice appreciated

    Read the article

  • Responsive width for iPhone

    - by Alex Marchant
    This is my first time building a responsive site, and as I tailor the CSS for the iPhone I'm running into a problem. The styles all apply correctly, the text changes size and the wrapper changes widths. The problem is the iPhone browser still opens up at a huge width, see the screenshot: I'm using @media all and (max-device-width: 480px) {} to set the specific iPhone css. body {width:;} doesn't work. Thanks for the help :)

    Read the article

  • What is the most widely used IDE for PHP?

    - by Tom
    Note I am not asking for which is the "best" IDE for PHP or anything subjective like that. I want to know which is the most widely used backed by some sort of statistic (something like the W3's stats for browser usage) but for IDE usage amongst PHP developers.

    Read the article

  • Input field name starts with a number

    - by fire
    I have an input field whose name is an MD5 string e.g.: <input type="hidden" name="7815696ecbf1c96e6894b779456d330e" value="1"> Now I understand that having a number as the first letter in an input field name is generally bad practice, but are there any side-effects to this such as a certain browser won't send it in the POST request?

    Read the article

  • load page with inactive scrollbar

    - by atwellpub
    I have a page that scrolls through images, some taller than the others. When a tall image loads it auto-creates a scrollbar in the browser window, causing a width jerk. Is there a way to load a scroll bar regardless of if it is needed, and when a tall image apears it activates itself accordingly, then deactivates its self accordingly when the image changes to a shorter image? Thank you!

    Read the article

  • Httpclient not returning entire response

    - by whakojacko
    Using HttpClient 4.0, Im having an issue where the response I get from the ResponseHandler is only about half of what the actual page content should be (~61k bytes in the string vs ~125k in the page returned to a browser). I cant seem to find any place where there might be some sort of limit that would limit this. Any ideas?

    Read the article

  • Pattern match and replace in Javascript

    - by T_t
    There is something in my mind: In a web page,there are lots of things we can see from our browser.One of them is text. Now i have some patterns,"abc","hello",or some other strings.In the text, i want to find all the patterns and change the color or background-color of them. Like this: text: what a wonderful day! pattern: "a","day" resulet: what a wonderful day! How can solve this whit Javascript?

    Read the article

  • How do i make form data not disappear after hitting refresh?

    - by acidzombie24
    I went to test my page on another browser. On google chrome i can fill out a form, hit back and forward and still have the data there. Now i need to refresh the page so certain data is correct (such as session id if the cookie expires or user logs out before submitting). I refresh and lose all data. Is there some option i can set so all data is kept?

    Read the article

  • Do more specific css rules load better?

    - by bobobobo
    You can do this: .info { padding: 5px ; } Or, if you know it will be a div, you can do this div.info { padding: 5px ; } So, when there's a nested list.. you can do this.. div.info ul.navbar li.navitem a.sitelink { color: #f00; } Or you can do this a.sitelink { color: #f00; } Readability aside, which is better for the browser to parse/run?

    Read the article

  • What is a valid use for Response.Redirect("SomeURL", false) ?

    - by Aheho
    In ASP.NET I frequently use Response.Redirect to redirect the end user to another page on my system. I always set the second parameter to true to immediately end the response. For the life of me, I can't think of a reason why anybody would ever set that parameter to true. What's the point of continuing generating a page when the end user's browser is just going to be redirected to a different page immediately?

    Read the article

  • Embedding script with timeout in case server goes down

    - by vsync
    I need a way to make sure my script won't block the viewed page, if the server serving the script is down (port 80 is blocked for some reason). Currently when I test it and take down the server (Apache), or close the firewall, I see in the browser that it is trying to load the resource (script in that case), without success for long seconds, until it aborts. Is there a nice way to get past this issue?

    Read the article

  • Maximum number of cookies allowed

    - by Nouveau
    As far as Google searches tell me, the maximum allowed number of cookies depends very much on the browser, however I cannot find any recent data as to how much cookies are allowed on modern browsers. I need to store a somewhat large number of user preferences in cookies (for not-yet-registered users), so what would be the best way of doing that? (Also, those cookies would be accessed both via javascript client-side and php server-side)

    Read the article

  • Why is the operation address incremented by two?

    - by Gavin Jones
    I am looking at a Javascript emulator of a NES to try and understand how it works. On this line: addr = this.load(opaddr+2); The opcode is incremented by two. However, the documentation (see appendix E) I'm reading says: Zero page addressing uses a single operand which serves as a pointer to an address in zero page ($0000-$00FF) where the data to be operated on can be found. By using zero page addressing, only one byte is needed for the operand, so the instruction is shorter and, therefore, faster to execute than with addressing modes which take two operands. An example of a zero page instruction is AND $12. So if the operand's argument is only one byte, shouldn't it appear directly after it, and be + 1 instead of + 2? Why +2? This is how I think it works, which may be incorrect. Suppose our memory looks like: ------------------------- | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | <- index ------------------------- | a | b | c | d | e | f | <- memory ------------------------- ^ \ PC and our PC is 0, pointing to a. For this cycle, we say that the opcode: var pc= 0; //for example's sake var opcode= memory[pc]; //a So shouldn't the first operand be the next slot, i.e. b? var first_operand = memory[pc + 1]; //b

    Read the article

  • How to automate the java Applet(tree view) from my .NET application.

    - by rajeev-vj
    Hi I have a java applet (tree view) on Internet Explorer. when i Click on this applet (+) it collapes, as the information is based on this plus sign. I need to automate this java applet to click automatically from my C#.NET winforms application but am not able to get the details of the java applet. How to get the details of the java applet from browser and how to automate the java applet? Thanks

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328  | Next Page >