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  • Combining position: relative with float in CSS

    - by user74847
    I have always thought of position: relative and float: left as different tools that should be used separately, with some features that overlap. position should be used for positioning things relative to the viewport and float used for floating things within a container. Today I saw someone combining float: left and position: relative also using top: 10px, when they could have used margin top on the floated element and not added the position relative at all. It is obviously not wrong to do it in this way because it works, but what is the best practice? Should position relative be used on an element as well as float?

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  • XDIME for Mobile Applications

    - by Carlos Gavidia
    I'm involved in a project that requires to mobile-enable some previously developed Portlets. The Portlets are deployed in WebSphere Portal, and the container offers a technology called IBM Mobile Portal Accelerator that uses XDIME to render mobile pages according to the device. I'm trying to document myself in the technology and I'm having a bad time: Google only shows some outdated sites from IBM and even older posts from Volantis, another company involved in the technology (Amazon shows no related books). So... what's the current status of that technology actually? Is has some decent level of adoption?

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  • Get a new instance with StructureMap

    - by Aligned
    It took me too long to figure this out, so hopefully it will help you. StructureMap has way that will create a new instance of the object every time, instead of storing this in the container. I’m going to use this for the DBContext and for WCF Service references. Since the ObjectFactory is a static class, MVC will have these stored in memory without this. Credit goes to Joshua Flanagan for answering my question.[TestMethod] public void GetConcreteInstanceOf_ShouldReturn_DifferentInstance() { ObjectFactory.Initialize(registry => { // set it up so that it's new every time // use this for DBContext and service references registry.For<ISystemDataService>().Use(() => new SystemDataService()); }); ISystemDataService result = Resolver.GetConcreteInstanceOf<ISystemDataService>(); ISystemDataService result2 = Resolver.GetConcreteInstanceOf<ISystemDataService>(); Assert.AreNotSame(result, result2); }

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  • Jersey 2.0 Milestone 2 Now Available

    - by arungupta
    Jersey 2.0 milestone 2 is now available. It builds upon the first milestone and adds several new features such as server-side asynchronous processing, server-side content negotiation, improved JAX-RS parameter injection, and several others. The REST endpoints can be published on Java SE HTTP Server, Grizzly 2 HTTP container, and some basic Servlet-based deployments. It also provides HTTPURLConnection-based client API implementation. Read about these and more about what's new in Marek's detailed post. Of course this is also the future reference implementation for JAX-RS 2.0. Feel like trying it out? Simply go to Maven Central (of course none of this is production quality at this point). The latest JAX-RS Javadocs and Jersey 2.0 API docs are good starting points to explore. And provide them feedback at [email protected].

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  • Using Minified Page Specific JS [migrated]

    - by Mike C
    I've been working on a rather large scale project which makes use of a number of different pages with some very specific Javascript for each of them. To lessen load times, I plan to minify it all in to one file before deploying. The problem is this: how should I avoid launching page specific JS on pages which don't require it? So far my best solution has been to wrap each page in some additional container <div id='some_page'> ...everything else... </div> and I extended jQuery so I can do something like this: // If this element exists when the DOM is ready, execute the function $('#some_page').ready(function() { ... }); Which, while kind of cool, just rubs me the wrong way.

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  • Application versioning

    - by Mathew
    Haven't find similar issue so sorry if thats a duplicate. I'm about to start a migration of an already existing project from one web container version to the another. Currently, the application version is 2.2.5. Business requirement is to deliver a 3.0 version by the end of the year. Additional constraint is to release a working, stable version by the end of Q3. We are about to work in 2-weeks sprints and I'm wondering how can I approach the problem? I was thinking about releasing 2.3 by the end of Q2, then immediately promoting it as 3.0-a1, work on alphas (3.0-a2, 3.0-a3, ...) till the end of Q3, to start with 3.0-b1 in the early Q4 and finally release 3.0 around December. I don't feel comfortable saying that the application is already in 3.0 state in July, but I can't see other options. If you find some book chapters/blogs or your personal experience interesting please share your opinion.

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  • Is it OK to mix C and C++ in an interview?

    - by John Pell
    If I am asked in an interview to write down some code, should I completely stick with C++ or is it acceptable to "mix" the two to write easy code as it comes to my mind? I'll explain it: if I'm asked to create a "stack" data type, a C++ class is perfectly suited, while if I need to parse some strings a strtok/sscanf is far easier than STL. On the other hand, if I need a generic container STL and templates are the way to go. Everything can be done in C or in C++, but in an interview I can't code everything or remember every standard/STL function. What is an acceptable tradeoff?

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  • HTTP resource bundling/streaming practice

    - by icelava
    Our SPA (plain HTML and Javascript) makes use of huge volume of javascript and other resources that are downloaded via XHR. Given the sheer number of components and browser simultaneous request limits, we're thinking for ways to deliver our resources in a more efficient manner. A method we're considering is bundling several resources that logically form a coherent group into a single file; thus reducing down to only one XHR (per group). Furthermore to make it more responsive, we'd like to constantly inspect the partial responseText during the LOADING state, determining if a usable chunk (atomic resource) has already been downloaded, and make it available for deserialization/processing even before the XHR is DONE. (a stream-like experience) We're thinking surely somebody else would've considered roughly the same approach before, but haven't really come across any library/framework or container file format that is suitable for our scenario. Anybody else know of something similar?

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  • Servlet 3.1 Early Draft Now Available

    - by arungupta
    JSR 340 has released an Early Draft of the Servlet 3.1 specification. Other than the usual clarifications and javadoc updates, ProtocolHandler and WebConnection are new classes that encapsulates the protocol upgrade processing. This will typically be used for upgrading an HTTP connection to a WebSocket. Section 2.3.3.5 in the specification provide more details on it. Section 3.7 explain non-blocking request processing by the Web container. ReadListener and WriteListener are new interfaces that represents a call-back mechanism to read and write data without blocking. As with other Java EE 7 specifications, progress can be tracked at servlet-spec.java.net. The Expert Group discussions are archived and you can participate by sending an email to [email protected].

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  • Algorithm for determining grid based on variably sized "blocks"?

    - by Lite Byte
    I'm trying to convert a set of "blocks" in to a grid-like layout. The blocks have a width of either 25%, 33%, 50%, 66%, or 75% of their container and each row of the grid should try to fit as many blocks as possible, up to a total width of 100%. I've discovered that trying to do this while leaving no remaining blocks in the original set is very hard. Eventually, I think my solution will be to upgrade/downgrade various block sizes (based on their priority or something) so they all fit in to a row. Either case, before I do that, I thought I'd check if someone has some code (or a paper) demonstrating a solution to this problem already? And bonus points if the solution incorporates varying block heights in to its calculations :) Thanks!

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  • Size of an image imported with FreeImage

    - by KaiserJohaan
    I'm having abit of a brainfart and I can't quite grasp what I'm doing wrong. It's quite simple, I am importing an image with FreeImage (http://freeimage.sourceforge.net/) which has a method FreeImage_GetBits that returns a pointer to the first byte of the image data. I then try to load all the data into memory using (bitsperpixel / 8) * pixelsWidth ' pixelHeight, like this: uint32_t bitsPerPixel = FreeImage_GetBPP(bitmap); // resolves to 24 uint32_t widthInPixels = FreeImage_GetWidth(bitmap); // resolves to 1024 uint32_t heightInPixels = FreeImage_GetHeight(bitmap); // resolves to 1024 // container is a std::vector<uint8_t> pkgMaterial.mTextureData.insert(pkgMaterial.mTextureData.begin(), FreeImage_GetBits(bitmap), FreeImage_GetBits(bitmap) + ((bitsPerPixel/8) * widthInPixels * heightInPixels)); I have a jpg which is 31 kilobytes in size on disc. Yet when I load it using the above formula, I see the vector is then filled with 3145728 bytes, which is approx 3145 kilobytes. What am I doing wrong?

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  • confusion understanding the fluid 2 column navigation layout

    - by Jason Madux
    I'm trying to understand the following cross-browser layout: http://matthewjamestaylor.com/blog/perfect-2-column-left-menu.htm but I'm having some confusion with some of its parts and there isn't enough information on the page or in the css comments to help me. What is the purpose of the .colleft div? Why can't the 2 columns be directly under the .colmask container? Why does the .colleft div have a right 75%? I don't understand its purpose/benefit. Why don't the widths of .col1 and .col2 add up to 100%? How was left:102% calculated for .col1 and left:6% for .col2? The comments for this are not very clear to me. How is it any different from not even specifiying a left/right css property?

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  • Yet another Java EE 6 book

    - by alexismp
    We have a new Java EE 6 book in store! This one from Packt Publishing is called "Java EE 6 Development with NetBeans 7" by David Heffelfinger who is also author of Java EE 5 and GlassFish books. This book holds a step-by-step book documention all of the Java EE 6 features and APIs (including CDI) using the IDE with the best Java EE out-of-the-box experience : NetBeans 7. It uses GlassFish as the default container and PrimeFaces as a JSF component suite. We've covered several Java EE and GlassFish books before and I can't help but think that given writing books never helped authors retire early, having so many good books on Java EE 6 says something about its success among developers.

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  • What's a good way to store a series of interconnected pipe and tank objects?

    - by mars
    I am working on a puzzle game with a 6 by 6 grid of storage tanks that are connected to up to 4 tanks adjacent to them via pipes. The gameplay is concerned with combining what's in a tank with an adjacent tank via the pipe than interconnects them. Right now I store the tanks in a 6x6 array, vertical pipes in a 5x6 array, and horizontal pipes in a 6x5 array. Each tank has a reference to the object that contains both tanks and pipes and when a pipe needs to be animated filling with liquid, the selected tank just calls a method on the container object telling it to animate the pipes it is connected to (subtract 1 from row or column to find connected pipes). This feels like the wrong way of doing it, as I've also considered just giving each tank references to the pipes connected to it to access directly.

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  • New to Maven-- Creating Java EE Projects

    - by M.C.
    Greetings-- I've been developing Java EE web apps with Eclipse for about a year. My employer doesn't use Maven, but the more I read about it, the more convinced I am that Maven + Hudson will be greatly beneficial for us. First, though, I have to become comfortable with those technologies in my spare time, so that I can create a proof-of-concept. Right now, I'm still a Maven newbie. Is there a set of best practices for creating Java EE web apps with Maven? For example, I could create a project with a basic archetype and then add all of the necessary JARs by putting dependencies in the POM for the servlet container, EJB, EclipseLink, etc... That might work, but it might not be the best way to do it. I'd greatly appreciate any guidance that you could provide on this topic. Thank you very much!

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  • CDI 1.1 Public Review and Feedback

    - by reza_rahman
    CDI 1.1 is humming along nicely and recently released it's public review draft. Although it's just a point release, CDI 1.1 actually has a lot in it. Some the changes include: The CDI class, which provides programmatic access to CDI facilities from outside a managed bean Ability to veto beans declaratively using @Vetoed Conversations in Servlet requests Application lifecycle events in Java EE Injection of Bean metadata into bean instances Programmatic access to a container provided Producer, InjectionTarget, AnnotatedType Ability to override attributes of a Bean via BeanAttributes Ability to process modules via ProcessModule Ability to wrap the InjectionPoint Honor WEB-INF/classes/META-INF/beans.xml to activate WEB-INF/classes in a bean archive Global ordering and enablement of interceptors and decorators Global selection of alternatives @New deprecated Clarify interceptors and decorators must be implemented using proxying Allow multiple annotated types per Java class Allow Extensions to specify the annotations that they are interested in The CDI 1.1 expert group has a number of open issues that they would like immediate feedback on. These include critical issues like bean visibility, startup events and restricting CDI scans. Read the details here and let your voice be heard!

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  • Tweaking Hudson memory usage

    - by rovarghe
    Hudson 3.1 has some performance optimizations that greatly reduces its memory footprint. Prior to this Hudson used to always hold the entire data model (all jobs and all builds) in memory which affected scalability. Some installations configured heap sizes in excess of 1GB to counteract this. Hudson 3.1.x maintains an MRU cache and only loads jobs and builds as they are required. Because of the inability to change existing APIs and be backward compatible with plugins, there were limits to how far we could go with this approach. Memory optimizations almost always come with a related cost, in this case its additional I/O that has to be performed to load data on request. On a small site that has frequent traffic, this is usually not noticeable since the MRU cache will usually hold on to all the data. A large site with infrequent traffic might experience some delays when the first request hits the server after a long gap. If you have a large heap and are able to allocate more memory, the cache settings can be adjusted to take advantage of this and even go back to pre-3.1 behavior. All the cache settings can be passed as options to the JVM container (Tomcat or the default Jetty container) using the -D option. There are two caches, independant of each other, one for Jobs and the other for Builds. For the jobs cache: hudson.jobs.cache.evict_in_seconds ( default=60 ) Seconds from last access (could be because of a servlet request or a background cron thread) a job should be purged from the cache. Set this to 0 to never purge based on time. hudson.jobs.cache.initial_capacity ( default=1024 ) Initial number of jobs the cache can accomodate. Setting this to the number of jobs you typically display on your Hudson landing page or home page will speed up consecutive access to that page. If the default is too large you may consider downsizing and using that memory for the Builds cache instead. hudson.jobs.cache.max_entries ( default=1024) Maximum number of jobs in the cache. The default is large enough for most installations, but if you find I/O activity when always accessing the hudson home page you might consider increasing this, but first verify if the I/O is caused by frequent eviction (see above), rather than by the cache not being large enough. For the builds cache: The builds cache is used to store Build objects as they are read from storage. Typically this happens when a user drills down into the details of a particular Job from the hudson hom epage. The cache is shared among builds for different jobs since in most installations all jobs are not accessed with the same frequency, so a per-job builds cache would be a waste of memory. hudson.job.builds.cache.evict_in_seconds ( default=60 ) Same as the equivalent Job cache, applied to Build. hudson.job.builds.cache.initial_capacity" ( default=512 ) Same as equivalent Job cache setting. Note the smaller initial size. If your site stores a large number of builds and has frequent access to more builds you might consider bumping this up. hudson.job.builds.cache.max_entries ( default=10240 ) The default max is large enough for most installations, the builds cache has bigger sized objects, so be careful about increasing the upper limit on this. See section on monitoring below. Sample usage: java -jar hudson-war-3.1.2-SNAPSHOT.war -Dhudson.jobs.cache.evict_in_seconds=300 \ -Dhudson.job.builds.cache.evict_in_seconds=300 Monitoring cache usage The 'jmap' tool that comes with the JDK can be used to monitor cache performance in an indirect way by looking at the number of Job and Build objects in each cache. Find the PID of the hudson instance and run $ jmap -histo:live <pid | grep 'hudson.model.*Lazy.*Key$' Here's a sample output: num #instances #bytes class name 523: 28 896 hudson.model.RunMap$LazyRunValue$Key 1200: 3 96 hudson.model.LazyTopLevelItem$Key These are the keys to the Jobs (LazyTopLevelItem$Key) and Builds (RunMap$LazyRunValue$Key) in the caches, so counting the number of keys is a good indicator of the number of items in the cache at any given moment. The size in bytes can be ignored, they are just the size of the keys, not the actual sizes of the objects they hold. Those sizes can only be obtained with a profiler. With the output above we can conclude that there are 3 jobs and 28 builds in memory. The 28 builds can all be from 1 job or all 3 jobs. Over time on an idle system, these should get evicted and memory cache should be empty. In practice, because of background cron threads and triggers, jobs rarely fall down to zero. Access of a job or a build by a cron thread resets the eviction timer.

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  • How can I bind an interface to a class decided by an xml or database configuration at the launch of the application?

    - by ipohfly
    I'm re-working on the design of an existing application which is build using WebForms. Currently the plan is to work it into a MVP pattern application while using Ninject as the IoC container. The reason for Ninject to be there is that the boss had wanted a certain flexibility within the system so that we can build in different flavor of business logic in the model and let the programmer to choose which to use based on the client request, either via XML configuration or database setting. I know that Ninject have no need for XML configuration, however I'm confused on how it can help to dynamically inject the dependency into the system? Imagine I have a interface IMember and I need to bind this interface to the class decided by a xml or database configuration at the launch of the application, how can I achieve that?

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  • jQuery setTimeout delay for an element

    - by Trouble
    Is there an easier way to wait for an element to load ( by independant script/mootools/other ). For example: I am waiting for a google map to load, but I don't want to use its API for checks. So I made two functions: function checkIfexist() { if(jQuery('#container').length) return 0; else reload(1); } function reload(mode) { setTimeout(function(){ do stuff . . . if(mode==1) checkIfexist(); }, 400); } I am starting it with reload(1); Is there an easier way to use setTimeout in such a way? I don't want to use delay, wait or whatever.

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  • Database Context and Singleton injection with IoC

    - by zaitsman
    All of the below relates to a ASP.NET c# app. I have a Singleton Settings MemoryCache that reads values from database on first access and caches these, then invalidates them using SQL Service Broker message and re-reads as required. For the purposes of standard controllers, i create my Db Context in a request scope. However, this obviously means that i can't use the same context in the Settings Cache class, since that is a singleton and we have a scope collision. At the moment, i ended up with two db contexts - the Controllers get it via IoC container, whereas a Singleton just creates it's own. However, i am not satisfied with this approach (mostly due to the way i feel about two contexts, the cache doesn't set anything on the db hence concurrency is not an issue as much). What is a better way to do it?

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  • Creating Java EE Projects with Maven

    - by M.C.
    I've been developing Java EE web apps with Eclipse for about a year. My employer doesn't use Maven, but the more I read about it, the more convinced I am that Maven + Hudson will be greatly beneficial for us. First, though, I have to become comfortable with those technologies in my spare time, so that I can create a proof-of-concept. Right now, I'm still a Maven newbie. Is there a set of best practices for creating Java EE web apps with Maven? For example, I could create a project with a basic archetype and then add all of the necessary JARs by putting dependencies in the POM for the servlet container, EJB, EclipseLink, etc... That might work, but it might not be the best way to do it. I'd greatly appreciate any guidance that you could provide on this topic.

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  • Is C# becoming harder to read? [closed]

    - by Avi
    As C# has progressed, many language features have been added. It has come to the point where it's becoming unreadable for me. As an example, consider the following code snip from Caliburn.Micro code here: container = CompositionHost.Initialize( new AggregateCatalog( AssemblySource.Instance. Select(x => new AssemblyCatalog(x)) .OfType<ComposablePartCatalog>() ) ); Now, this is just a small example. I have a number of questions: Is this a common or known problem? Is the C# community finding the same? Is this an issue with the language, or is it the style used by the developer? Are there any simple solutions to better understand others code and avoid writing code in this way?

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  • option page form in my wordpress theme [migrated]

    - by Templategraphy
    here its is my option page code containing no of fields like logo, slider after filling all the information in option page form i want to things After submitting all the form details save information must retain there. Using get_option() extract each input tag value and show that value in front hand like slider image, slider heading, slider description OPTION PAGE CODE: <?php class MySettingsPage { private $options; public function __construct() { add_action( 'admin_menu', array( $this, 'bguru_register_options_page' ) ); add_action( 'admin_init', array( $this, 'bguru_register_settings' ) ); } public function bguru_register_options_page() { // This page will be under "Settings" add_theme_page('Business Guru Options', 'Theme Customizer', 'edit_theme_options', 'bguru-options', array( $this, 'bguru_options_page') ); } public function bguru_options_page() { // Set class property $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_logo' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_vimeo' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_slide_one_image' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_slide_one_heading' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_slide_one_text' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_slogan_heading' ); $this->options = get_option( 'bguru_slogan_description' ); ?> <div class="wrap"> <?php screen_icon(); ?> <h1>Business Guru Options</h1> <form method="post" action="options.php"> <table class="form-table"> <?php // This prints out all hidden setting fields settings_fields( 'defaultbg' ); do_settings_sections( 'defaultbg' ); submit_button(); ?> </table> </form> </div> <?php } /** * Register and add settings */ public function bguru_register_settings() { register_setting('defaultbg','bguru_logo', array( $this, 'sanitize' ) ); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_vimeo', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_slide_one_image', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_slide_one_heading', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_slide_one_text', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_slogan_heading', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); register_setting('defaultbg', 'bguru_slogan_description', array( $this, 'sanitize' )); add_settings_section( 'setting_section_id', // ID '<h2>General</h2>', array( $this, 'print_section_info' ), // Callback 'defaultbg' // Page ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_logo', // ID '<label for="bguru_logo">Logo</label>', // Title array($this,'logo_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id'// Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_vimeo', // ID 'Vimeo', // Vimeo array( $this, 'socialv_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_slide_one_image', // ID 'Slide 1 Image', // Slide 1 Image array( $this, 'slider1img_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_slide_one_heading', // ID 'Slide 1 Heading', // Slide 1 Heading array( $this, 'slider1head_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_slide_one_text', // ID 'Slide 1 Description', // Slide 1 Description array( $this, 'slider1text_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_slogan_heading', // ID 'Slogan Heading', // Slogan Heading array( $this, 'slogan_head_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); add_settings_field( 'bguru_slogan_description', // ID 'Slogan Container', // Slogan Container array( $this, 'slogan_descr_callback' ), // Callback 'defaultbg', // Page 'setting_section_id' // Section ); } public function sanitize( $input ) { $new_input = array(); if( isset( $input['bguru_logo'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_logo'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_logo'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_vimeo'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_vimeo'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_vimeo'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_slide_one_image'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_slide_one_image'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_slide_one_image'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_slide_one_heading'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_slide_one_heading'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_slide_one_heading'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_slide_one_text'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_slide_one_text'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_slide_one_text'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_slogan_heading'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_slogan_heading'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_slogan_heading'] ); if( isset( $input['bguru_slogan_description'] ) ) $new_input['bguru_slogan_description'] = sanitize_text_field( $input['bguru_slogan_description'] ); return $new_input; } public function print_section_info() { print 'Enter your settings below:'; } public function logo_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_logo" size="50" name="bguru_logo" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_logo'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_logo']) : '' ); } public function socialv_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_vimeo" size="50" name="bguru_vimeo" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_vimeo'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_vimeo']) : '' ); } public function slider1img_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_slide_one_image" size="50" name="bguru_slide_one_image" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_image'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_image']) : '' ); } public function slider1head_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_slide_one_heading" size="50" name="bguru_slide_one_heading" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_heading'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_heading']) : '' ); } public function slider1text_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_slide_one_text" size="50" name="bguru_slide_one_text" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_text'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_slide_one_text']) : '' ); } public function slogan_head_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_slogan_heading" size="50" name="bguru_slogan_heading" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_slogan_heading'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_slogan_heading']) : '' ); } public function slogan_descr_callback() { printf( '<input type="text" id="bguru_slogan_description" size="50" name="bguru_slogan_description" value="%s" />', isset( $this->options['bguru_slogan_description'] ) ? esc_attr( $this->options['bguru_slogan_description']) : '' ); } } if( is_admin() ) $my_settings_page = new MySettingsPage(); here its my header.php code where i display all the information of option form $bguru_logo_image = get_option('bguru_logo'); if (!empty($bguru_logo_image)) { echo '<div id="logo"><a href="' . home_url() . '"><img src="' . $bguru_logo_image . '" width="218" alt="logo" /></a></div><!--/ #logo-->'; } else { echo '<div id="logo"><a href="' . home_url() . '"><h1>'. get_bloginfo('name') . '</h1></a></div><!--/ #logo-->'; }?> $bguru_social_vimeo = get_option('bguru_vimeo'); if (!empty($bguru_social_vimeo)) { echo '<li class="vimeo"><a target="_blank" href="'.$bguru_social_vimeo.'">Vimeo</a></li>'; }?> same as for slider image, slider heading, slider description please suggest some solutions

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  • Managing shots of the player

    - by Bitbridge
    I'm currently developing a 2D Jump'n'Run and the situation is the following: The player has different weapons he can collect and is then able to shoot the weapon's projectiles (laser, rockets, whatever). In my previous game (space shooter) I just had a manager class for all the weapon-shots, it stored them in a container and then updates and draws every single one. When the "shoot-event" occurred, the "ProjectileManager" was notified and it added the wanted projectile. The input for player action is handled in the player-class, so the player would have to know the manager to call the function of the manager. I also have a collisionManager, that checks for collisions between, for example, enemies and the projectiles and then notifies these objects. However, I somehow have the feeling, that I shouldn't use this approach and that there might be a better way to handle this. I know, the question is a bit vague, I'm pretty much just looking for input and ideas to improve my design.

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  • What is the most handy function you've ever came across? [closed]

    - by Viniyo Shouta
    Obviously everything is 'handy' when it comes to programming terms, but some get a highlight spot, like containers, matrix trasnformation functions and many others. But in this case please mention the one it was more handy to you, saved you from sparing hours resolving a problem, or even the one you like more, What is it and what does it does? I'll start with an example. Language: C++ Function: std::sort (STL) What does it does: Arranges the elements in a specified range into a nondescending order or according to an ordering criterion specified by a binary predicate. (It arranges a container in decreasing order) Why of this question? Because I want to learn how to if possible make my own implementations of these functions for pure studying purposes, to enhance knowledge

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