Search Results

Search found 129 results on 6 pages for 'raphael pineda'.

Page 5/6 | < Previous Page | 1 2 3 4 5 6  | Next Page >

  • Access inner function variables in Javascript

    - by Elazar Leibovich
    In many frameworks, internal function variables are used as private variables, for example Raphael = (function(){ var private = function(a,b) {return a+b;}; var public = function(a) {return private(a,a);} var object = {mult2:public}; return object; })(); here, we cannot access from the global namespace the variable named private, as it is an inner variable of the anonymous function in the first line. Sometimes this function is contains a big Javascript framework, so that it wouldn't pollute the global namespace. I need to unit tests some object Raphael uses internally (in the above example, I wish to run unit tests on the object private). How can I test them?

    Read the article

  • Python - cours intensif pour les scientifiques : Optimiser le code, par Rick Muller

    Bonjour,Je vous présente ce tutoriel traduit par Raphaël Seban intitulé : Python - cours intensif pour les scientifiques Partie 4 : Optimiser le code Pour de nombreux scientifiques, Python est LE langage de programmation par excellence, car il offre de grandes possibilités en analyse et modélisation de données scientifiques avec relativement peu de charge de travail en termes d'apprentissage, d'installation ou de temps de développement. C'est un langage que vous pouvez intégrer en...

    Read the article

  • New book in the style of Advanced Programming Language Design by R. A. Finkel [closed]

    - by mfellner
    I am currently researching visual programming language design for a university paper and came across Advanced Programming Language Design by Raphael A. Finkel from 1996. Other, older discussions in the same vein on Stackoverflow have mentioned Language Implementation Patterns by Terence Parr and Programming Language Pragmatics* by Michael L. Scott. I was wondering if there is even more (and especially up-to-date) literature on the general topic of programming language design. *) http://www.cs.rochester.edu/~scott/pragmatics/

    Read the article

  • Python - cours intensif pour les scientifiques : Python avancé, par Rick Muller

    Bonjour,Je vous présente ce tutoriel traduit par Raphaël Seban intitulé : Python - cours intensif pour les scientifiquesPartie 3 : Python avancé Pour de nombreux scientifiques, Python est LE langage de programmation par excellence, car il offre de grandes possibilités en analyse et modélisation de données scientifiques avec relativement peu de charge de travail en termes d'apprentissage, d'installation ou de temps de développement. C'est un langage que vous pouvez intégrer...

    Read the article

  • Even More New ADF Bloggers

    - by Shay Shmeltzer
    A couple of weeks back I posted an entry about new ADF related blogs that I found out about. Well as they say "when it rain it pours"  - and over the past few days I came across several other new bloggers that cover ADF. So here are a few others that you might want to add to your ADF blog aggregator: http://adfplus.blogspot.com - Paco van der Lindenhttps://blogs.oracle.com/aramamoo/ - Arunhttp://e20labs.org - Chad Thompsonhttp://oracleadfhowto.blogspot.com/ - Vinay Agarwalhttp://javaosdev.blogspot.com - Donovan Sherriffs https://blogs.oracle.com/prajkumar - Phil Wanghttp://oracle-itself.tumblr.com - Wael Abdeenhttps://blogs.oracle.com/adfthoughts - Raphael Rodriguehttp://adfwithejb.blogspot.com - Prateek Kumar shaw And here are a few more that are not just about ADF but do have the occasional ADF related entry:http://yonaweb.be - Yannick Ongenahttp://blog.whitehorses.nl - whitehorseshttps://blogs.oracle.com/imc - ISV Migration Center Team and the usual reminder here: To keep track of all things new in the ADF blog world follow the JDeveloper twitter or like JDeveloper on facebook to get notified of the latest entries we find for you around the world.

    Read the article

  • "Street Invaders", grand gagnant du Challenge Mappy API - Developpez : quatre autres applications co

    "Street Invaders", grand gagnant du Challenge Mappy API - Developpez Découvrez les quatre autres applications qui composent le palmarès L'application Street Invaders est le grand gagnant du Developpez - Mappy API Challenge. Ce jeu a séduit les 12 membres du jury par l'intégration inédite des cartes Mappy, son interactivité et son aspect ludique. Son concepteur, Raphaël Candelier, remporte ainsi la somme de 10 000€. Le jury du Mappy API Challenge a annoncé vendredi dernier, lors d'une soirée symbolisant la dernière étape du concours gratuit ouvert en février, les 5 lauréats du Mappy API Challenge, un concours qui permettait, à qui le souhaitait, de créer des ...

    Read the article

  • 3d js map rendering

    - by gotha
    In the past I've done a 2D tile map using HTML, CSS and Javascript. Now I have the task of creating a 3D version using the same technologies - think of it like a space map where all planets have x/y/z positions. Currently, I have no idea to do this. Is there an existing library or something I can modify to do my job? If not, what method of rendering the map should I use? It needs to be as browser independent as possible, so I can't use webgl, flash or canvas. I'm considering plain JS & HTML or SVG (using Raphael for compatibility).

    Read the article

  • Math.min.apply(0, x) - why?

    - by Trevor Burnham
    I was just digging through some JavaScript code (Raphaël.js) and came across the following line (translated slightly): Math.min.apply(0, x) where x is an array. Why on earth would you do this? The behavior seems to be "take the min from the array x."

    Read the article

  • Javascript !something && function()

    - by cpf
    Hi Stackoverflow, I have been looking at the source code of raphael (http://raphaeljs.com/index.html) and I see a lot of stuff like !variable && function() (e.g.: !svg.bottom && (svg.bottom = this); ) What does that exactly do? Does it check first and execute only if not true? Thanks.

    Read the article

  • Ruby on Rails - How to migrate code from float to decimal?

    - by user1723110
    So I've got a ruby on rails code which use float a lot (lots of "to_f"). It uses a database with some numbers also stored as "float" type. I would like to migrate this code and the database to decimal only. Is it as simple as migrating the database columns to decimal (adding a decimal column, copying float column to decimal one, deleting float column, renaming decimal column to old float column name), and replacing "to_f" with "to_d" in the code? Or do I need to do more than that? Thanks a lot everyone Raphael

    Read the article

  • Vertical textes inside of table headers with respect of a JavaScript based on SVG library

    - by Oleg
    I use jqGrid with many columns contains Boolean information, which are displayed as checkboxes inside of table (see http://www.ok-soft-gmbh.com/VerticalHeaders/TestFixedO.htm as an example). To display information more compact I use vertical column headers. It works very well and works in jqGrid in all browsers (see my discussion with Tony Tomov in jqGrid forum http://www.trirand.com/blog/?page_id=393/feature-request/headers-with-vertical-orientation/), but in IE vertical texts looks not nice enough. I was asked from users why the texted displayed so strange. So I think about using a JavaScript based SVG library like SVG Web ( http://code.google.com/p/svgweb/ ) or Raphaël ( http://raphaeljs.com/ ). SVG is very powerful and it is difficult to find a good example is not very easy. I need only display vertical texts (-90 grad, from bottom to up) and use if possible without working in mode of absolute position. So one more times my question: I need have a possibility to display vertical texts (-90 grad rotation) inside of <td> element of table header. I want use a JavaScript based SVG library like SVG Web or Raphaël. The solution must support on IE6. Have somebody a good reference to example which could help me to do this? If somebody post a whole solution of the problem I would be happy. To be exact here is my current solution: I define .rotate { -webkit-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Safari, Chrome */ -moz-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Firefox */ -o-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Opera starting with 10.50 */ /* Internet Explorer: */ filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3); } define RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders function var RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders = function (grid, headerHeight) { // we use grid as context (if one have more as one table on tnhe page) var trHead = $("thead:first tr", grid.hdiv); var cm = grid.getGridParam("colModel"); $("thead:first tr th").height(headerHeight); headerHeight = $("thead:first tr th").height(); for (var iCol = 0; iCol < cm.length; iCol++) { var cmi = cm[iCol]; if (cmi.formatter === 'checkbox') { // we must set width of column header div BEFOR adding class "rotate" to // prevent text cutting based on the current column width var headDiv = $("th:eq(" + iCol + ") div", trHead); headDiv.width(headerHeight).addClass("rotate"); if (!$.browser.msie) { if ($.browser.mozilla) { headDiv.css("left", (cmi.width - headerHeight) / 2 + 3).css("bottom", 7); } else { headDiv.css("left", (cmi.width - headerHeight) / 2); } } else { var ieVer = jQuery.browser.version.substr(0, 3); // Internet Explorer if (ieVer !== "6.0" && ieVer !== "7.0") { headDiv.css("left", cmi.width / 2 - 4).css("bottom", headerHeight / 2); $("span", headDiv).css("left", 0); } else { headDiv.css("left", 3); } } } } }; And include a call like RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders(grid, 110); after creating jqGrid.

    Read the article

  • Vertical text inside table headers using a JavaScript-based SVG library

    - by Oleg
    I use jqGrid with many columns containing boolean information, which are displayed as checkboxes inside the table (see http://www.ok-soft-gmbh.com/VerticalHeaders/TestFixedO.htm as an example). To display information more compactly I use vertical column headers. It works very well and works in jqGrid in all browsers (see my discussion with Tony Tomov in jqGrid forum http://www.trirand.com/blog/?page_id=393/feature-request/headers-with-vertical-orientation/), but in IE vertical text is blurred and doesn't look nice enough (open the link above in IE and you will see exactly what I mean). I was asked from users why the text displayed so strangely. So I'm thinking of using a JavaScript-based SVG library like SVG Web ( http://code.google.com/p/svgweb/ ) or Raphaël ( http://raphaeljs.com/ ). SVG is very powerful and it is difficult to find a good example. I need only to display vertical text (-90 grad, from the bottom up) and use if possible without working in mode of absolute positioning. So one more time my question: I need to have a possibility to display vertical text (-90 grad rotation) inside <td> elements of a table header. I want to use a JavaScript-based SVG library like SVG Web or Raphaël. The solution must support IE6. Does anybody have a good reference example which could help me do this? If somebody posts a whole solution of the problem I would be happy. To be exact here is my current solution: I define .rotate { -webkit-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Safari 3.1+, Chrome */ -moz-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Firefox 3.5+ */ -o-transform: rotate(-90deg); /* Opera starting with 10.50 */ /* Internet Explorer: */ filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3); /* IE6, IE7 */ -ms-filter: "progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3)" /* IE8 */; } define RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders function var RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders = function (grid, headerHeight) { // we use grid as context (if one have more as one table on tnhe page) var trHead = $("thead:first tr", grid.hdiv); var cm = grid.getGridParam("colModel"); $("thead:first tr th").height(headerHeight); headerHeight = $("thead:first tr th").height(); for (var iCol = 0; iCol < cm.length; iCol++) { var cmi = cm[iCol]; if (cmi.formatter === 'checkbox') { // we must set width of column header div BEFOR adding class "rotate" to // prevent text cutting based on the current column width var headDiv = $("th:eq(" + iCol + ") div", trHead); headDiv.width(headerHeight).addClass("rotate"); if (!$.browser.msie) { if ($.browser.mozilla) { headDiv.css("left", (cmi.width - headerHeight) / 2 + 3).css("bottom", 7); } else { headDiv.css("left", (cmi.width - headerHeight) / 2); } } else { var ieVer = jQuery.browser.version.substr(0, 3); // Internet Explorer if (ieVer !== "6.0" && ieVer !== "7.0") { headDiv.css("left", cmi.width / 2 - 4).css("bottom", headerHeight / 2); $("span", headDiv).css("left", 0); } else { headDiv.css("left", 3); } } } } }; And include a call like RotateCheckboxColumnHeaders(grid, 110); after creating jqGrid.

    Read the article

  • JavaOne Latin America Schedule Changes For Thursday

    - by Tori Wieldt
    tweetmeme_url = 'http://blogs.oracle.com/javaone/2010/12/javaone_latin_america_schedule_changes_for_thursday.html'; Share .FBConnectButton_Small{background-position:-5px -232px !important;border-left:1px solid #1A356E;} .FBConnectButton_Text{margin-left:12px !important ;padding:2px 3px 3px !important;} The good news: we've got LOTS of developers at JavaOne Latin America.The bad news: the rooms are too small to hold everyone! (we've heard you)The good news: selected sessions for Thursday have been moved larger rooms (the keynote halls) More good news: some sessions that were full from Wednesday will be repeated on Thursday. SCHEDULE CHANGES FOR THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9THNote: Be sure to check the schedule on site, there still may be some last minute changes. Session Name Speaker New Time/Room Ginga, LWUIT, JavaDTV and You 2.0 Dimas Oliveria Thursday, December 9, 11:15am - 12:00pm Auditorio 4 JavaFX do seu jeito: criando aplicativos JavaFX com linguagens alternativas Stephen Chin Thursday, December 9, 3:00pm - 3:45pm Auditorio 4 Automatizando sua casa usando Java; JavaME, JavaFX, e Open Source Hardware Vinicius Senger Thursday, December 9, 9:00am - 9:45am Auditorio 3 Construindo uma arquitetura RESTful para aplicacoes ricas com HTML 5 e JSF2 Raphael Helmonth Adrien Caetano Thursday, December 9, 5:15pm - 6:00pm Auditorio 2 Dicas eTruquies sobre performance em Java EE JPA e JSF Alberto Lemos e Danival Taffarel Calegari Thursday, December 9, 2:00pm - 2:45pm Auditorio 2 Escrevendo Aplicativos Multipatforma Incriveis Usando LWUIT Roger Brinkley Cancelled Platforma NetBeans: sem slide - apenas codigo Mauricio Leal Cancelled Escalando o seu AJAX Push com Servlet 3.0 Paulo Silveria Keynote Hall 9:00am - 9:45am Cobetura Completa de Ferramentas para a Platforma Java EE 6 Ludovic Champenois Keynote Hall 10:00am - 10:45am Servlet 3.0 - Expansivel, Assincrono e Facil de Usar Arun Gupta Keynote Hall 4:00pm - 4:45pm Transforme seu processo em REST com JAX-RS Guilherme Silveria Keynote Hall 5:00pm - 5:45pm The Future of Java Fabiane Nardon e Bruno Souza Keynote Hall 6:00pm - 6:45pm Thanks for your understanding, we are tuning the conference to make it the best JavaOne possible.

    Read the article

  • What is the simplest way for a slippy SVG visualization?

    - by totymedli
    I have a big SVG file representing a complicated graph with hundreds of points. I want to represent this in a web page. My idea was that I could make it like Google Maps represent their maps, in those slippy, dragable, moveable maps. I'am looking for an easy and fast JavaScript library which could do the work. What I need for my "map" is the drag/move, zoom ability, and some way to click on the points of the picture, which makes a little information apear about that point, like Google maps markers. I'am looking for a free/open source library. I saw some solutions but I'am uncertain about them, and none of them seemed to be perfet: Polymaps - I love the technique it uses, but I don't know much about this library. Leaflet - I love the simplicity of it, but I dont know how could I apply it for my SVG. Raphael - I heard the awesomeness of this, but It seemed a lots of work to do this task. What would be the best/easiest solution for my problem, and what is your opinion aboute the above libraries?

    Read the article

  • setTimeout(fun) with a single argument

    - by Elazar Leibovich
    The HTML5 specifications states that setTimeout can be run without the additional "timeout" argument which is supposed to say after how many milliseconds will the function "handler" be scheduled. handle = window . setTimeout( handler [, timeout [, arguments ] ] ) Schedules a timeout to run handler after timeout milliseconds. Any arguments are passed straight through to the handler. However, I failed to find anywhere which explains what happens when no "timeout" time period is set. An example usage is, the animation implementation int the Raphael library. animationElements[length] && win.setTimeout(animation);

    Read the article

  • Any ideas on how to implement a 'touchMoveOver' event in Javascript?

    - by gargantaun
    I'm faffing around with SVG, specifically for web content aimed at iPad users. I've created a little dial type thingy that I'm calling a "cheese board" that I'd like to use as an interface element. http://appliedworks.co.uk/files/times/SVGTests/raphael.html Clicking on a piece of cheese (to keep the analogy going) will do "something". That bit's easy. However, I'd like the user to be able to drag their finger around the 'cheese board', firing a new event (touchesMovedOver?) every time they their finger moves over a new piece of cheese. But I can't figure out how to do it since there's no 'mouseOver' equivalent for touch interfaces. If the whole thing was made of squares, I could have created some sort of 'rectContainsPoint' method to be called for every 'touchesMoved', but that approach wouldn't work here. If anyone has any idea about how something like this could be achieved, I'd love to hear it.

    Read the article

  • Image rendering on browser or temporary images?

    - by Muralha
    I'm trying to make a statistics page where it will show several data and charts. The charts need to be pictures so that the user can save it/drag-and-drop to his/her personal reports. I'm using Gruff Graphs for Ruby to produce the charts but I don't know the best way to display the results safe and protected. Some of my ideas/tries are: save the chart to a file (jpg, png)? problem: data is available to anyone (don't have access to cron, to delete data from time to time) render in the browser (has to work on IE)? Use javascript (Raphaël—JavaScript Library) or Google API and output a PDF report (need plugin or gem, right)? use send_data? i've tried to output other way than inline, because I needs to show other data, is it possible? Thanks for any help.

    Read the article

  • Making an SVG DOM JavaScript class

    - by CryptoQuick
    I'm unsatisfied with other JavaScript libraries and frameworks like jQuery, MooTools, and Raphael, because of their inability to support SVG grouping. You'd think it'd be a very simple thing for them to implement. Anyway, I'm trying to make a JavaScript class (using John Resig's class.js script) like this: var El = Class.extend({ el: null, svgNS: "http://www.w3.org/2000/svg", init: function (type) { this.el = document.createElementNS(this.svgNS, type); }, set: function (name, attr) { this.el.setAttributeNS(null, name, attr); }, get: function (el, name) { var attr = this.el.getAttributeNS(null, name); return attr; }, add: function (targEl) { targEl.el.appendChild(this.el); }, remove: function (targEl) { targEl.el.removeChild(this.el); }, setEl: function (docId) { this.el = document.getElementById(docId); } }); I can add elements to the DOM using these statements outside of the class, but storing the element inside the class becomes problematic. Anyone have any creative ideas?

    Read the article

  • Data driven charts and graphs from xml to svg

    - by garymlewis
    I asked this question a week ago, but did not do a good job of describing the problem. Here's a second attempt. I'd like to produce data-driven charts, graphs, and other data visualizations, starting with data in an xml database and ending up with the visualizations as SVG. Here's an example from the W3C. It uses Javascript to create a stacked bar chart as SVG from xml. I'd like to do something similar but use a graphics library (or ???) instead of js to handle the construction of axes, labels, titles, data points, etc. My question, then: what are the options that I should consider ... things like Raphael I suppose, but initially I'd like to cast a wide net and look at many different options. My experience is all with static data visualizations using statistics packages like R, but eventually I'd like to create interactive data visualizations with html5/css3/svg. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks.

    Read the article

  • How to implement a book preview (2 page spread) without using Flash?

    - by littlejim84
    I'm looking into a solution for work, where you have a two page spread of the book to preview. Either side of this, you can hover in the corner to create a pseudo-flip and then click the mouse button to actually turn the page. I know there is many Flash solutions out there, but in this case we cannot use it... So we are looking for a possible solution that can work across all major browsers (yes, including IE6)... I looked a few canvas solutions, but with Google's canvas extension for IE, these will terribly slow. So was thinking about an SVG/VML solution, like Raphael Javascript library. This could be good, but then trying to look into how to code this, without examples, could be a challenge with the time constraint. Is there a solution out there that fits (or almost fits) this problem?

    Read the article

  • Javascript Library - Family Tree Flowchart

    - by MrMime
    Im looking for a simple Javascript Library (svg?) that allow me to draw a family tree relationships. I have searched a lot on google found a lot of interesting libraries like Raphaël and its extention Dracula. Google has its own library to make flowcharts too. Unfortunally, every library make a relation between nodes with a sigle line. If A and B has a relation to C, I will obtain 2 line: one from A to C and one from B to C. What I need is a line from A to B (we call it AB) and a line from AB to C to represent the Marriage of A and B. example-image Thanks.

    Read the article

  • Windows telling me, the local security authority is internally inconsistent upon mounting a network drive

    - by acme
    Since ages I've mounted a network share (via samba to a Linux machine) in Windows 7 to access it via drive letter. This worked flawlessly so far. Until now. Suddenly I couldn't access the drive anymore. Windows was telling me the network name (I didn't remember the exact term) was already in use. So I disconnected and tried to connect again: net use Y: \\10.10.10.208\work After a long time I get a message saying "The Local Security Authority (LSA) database contains an internal inconsistency" A restart didn't help. The mapped share is accessible (works on other machines in the same network), so obviously something strange is going on on my machine. Can anyone tell me how I can fix this inconsistency? Update: All machines that have saved the login information refuse with this error. So it must be something with the authorization. When I use net use Y: \\10.10.10.208\work /user:raphael it prompts me for the password and then returns that error message.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 1 2 3 4 5 6  | Next Page >