Hi all, would the following Jquery selector get all of the 4th td elements of all the tables on the current page, and return their text as an array?:
var isbn = $.makeArray($("table tr td:nth-child(4)").text());
I've just noticed when loading my client's page (http://habbopfm.com/) in Firefox, that it renders what looks like a rectangle is pushed down a few pixels.
It's difficult to describe, but imagine you took a screenshot of the page, opened it in Photoshop, selected a rectangle and moved it down a bit.
IE and Safari don't appear to do this - I'm assuming this is a browser glitch, not a problem with the code. Can anyone confirm what causes this?
Below is a screenshot taken of the issue:
http://habbopfm.com/problem.png
One other thing is that it only does this once the page has finished loading. While it is loading, it looks fine.
`*the midvile park maintains records containing info about players on it's soccer teams . each record contain a players first name,last name,and team number . the team are
team number team name
1 goal getters
2 the force
3 top gun
4 shooting stars
5 midfield monsters
design a proggram that accept player data and creates a report that lists each player along with his or her team number and team name
I have a very big table with a lot of rows, every row has stats for every user for certain days. And obviously I don't have any stats for future. So to update the stats I use
UPDATE Stats SET Visits=@val WHERE ... a lot of conditions ... AND Date=@Today
But what if the row doesn't exist? I'd have to use
INSERT INTO Stats (...) VALUES (Visits=@val, ..., Date=@Today)
How can I check if the row exists or not? Is there any way different from doing the COUNT(*)?
If I fill the table with empty cells, it'd take hundreds of thousands of rows taking megabytes and storing no data.
What I'm trying to do is to print my two-dimensional array but i'm
lost.
The first function is running perfect, the problem is the second or maybe the way I'm
passing it to the "Print" function.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define ROW 2
#define COL 2
//Memory allocation and values input
void func(int **arr)
{
int i, j;
arr = (int**)calloc(ROW,sizeof(int*));
for(i=0; i < ROW; i++)
arr[i] = (int*)calloc(COL,sizeof(int));
printf("Input: \n");
for(i=0; i<ROW; i++)
for(j=0; j<COL; j++)
scanf_s("%d", &arr[i][j]);
}
//This is where the problem begins or maybe it's in the main
void print(int **arr)
{
int i, j;
for(i=0; i<ROW; i++)
{
for(j=0; j<COL; j++)
printf("%5d", arr[i][j]);
printf("\n");
}
}
void main()
{
int *arr;
func(&arr);
print(&arr); //maybe I'm not passing the arr right ?
}
I'd like to be able to generate a compiled expression to set a property, given the lambda expression that provides the "get" method for a property.
Here's what I'm looking for:
public Action<int> CreateSetter<T>(Expression<Func<T, int>> getter)
{
// returns a compiled action using the details of the getter expression tree, or null
// if the write property is not defined.
}
I'm still trying to understand the various types of Expression classes, so if you can point me in the right direction that would be great.
How can I select only distinct elements for the XML document using XPATH?I've tried to use the 'distinct-values' function but it didn't work for some reason..
d = {'apple':9,'oranges':3,'grapes':22}
How do I return the largest key/value?
Edit: How do I make a list that has this sorted by largest to lowest value?
Suppose I have a span:
<span class="myspan"></span>
.myspan{
background: url(image.png) top left no-repeat;
}
How do I make it so that when people hover my span, it shows "image_hover.png"?
The title explains it well. I have set up Notepad++ to open the python script in the command prompt when I press F8 but all Swedish characters looks messed up when opening in CMD but perfectly fine in e.g IDLE.
This simple example code:
#!/usr/bin/env python
#-*- coding: UTF-8 -*-
print "åäö"
Looks like this.
As you can see the output of the bath file I use to open Python in cmd below shows the characthers correctly but not the python script above it. How do i fic this?
I need to find the amount of updated rows
UPDATE Table SET value=2 WHERE value2=1
declare @aaa int
set @aaa = @@ROWCOUNT
It doesn't work. How can I do that?
MYMESSAGE = "<div>Hello</div><p></p>Hello"
send_mail("testing",MYMESSAGE,"[email protected]",['[email protected]'],fail_silently=False)
However, this message doesn't get the HTML mime type when it is sent. In my outlook, I see the code...
Basically, this question with a difference...
Is it possible to capture print output from a TSQL stored procedure in .NET, using the Entity Framework?
The solution in the other question doesn't work for me. It works with the connection type from System.Data.SqlClient but I'm using the one from System.Data.EntityClient which does not have an InfoMessage event. (Of course, I could just create an SQL connection based on the Entity connection settings, but prefer to do it directly.)
I notice my query doesn't behave correctly if one of the like variables is empty:
SELECT name
FROM employee
WHERE name LIKE '%a%'
AND color LIKE '%A%'
AND city LIKE '%b%'
AND country LIKE '%B%'
AND sport LIKE '%c%'
AND hobby LIKE '%C%'
Now when a and A are not empty it works but when a, A and c are not empty the c part is not excuted so it seems?
How can I fix this?
To clearly separate the Controller and View layers, I do not longer want to pass full objects to my views. Instead I want to pass only arrays and objects that contain the data but do not have any methods. Otherwise a view script would be able to delete Doctrine records or traverse in the object tree to data that was not intended for the view.
Originally I though I'll just take a screenshot of my app on the iPhone then tweak it in Photoshop.
The images should be 480 x 320 according to Apple doc, and the dimensions of my screenshot are 480 x 320. But, the screenshot contains notification area (where reception bars, battery life, etc. are displayed)
So, if I chop that part off my image will be a bit shorter and not 480px high.
What do I do? Submit a shorter image? Stretch it up so it's 480px but without the notification bar? Submit it with the notification bar in the image?
How did you create your Default.png?
I know that the android plattform is open source. What I am interested in is the share of open source Android apps, thus developers that realease their own apps under a open source license.
Does anybody have an idea, how to get this information?
i have a server application with a richtextbox as the console text basically. The problem is, i have start, restart and stop buttons - But my restart button doesn't work.
Heres my code for the restart button:
consoletxt("RESTART", "Restarting Server...");
statuslabel1.Text = "Restarting";
statuslabel1.ForeColor = Color.Orange;
statuslabel2.Text = "Restarting";
statuslabel2.ForeColor = Color.Orange;
command("stop");
//The performclick just starts the server
startbtn.PerformClick();
statuslabel1.Text = "Online";
statuslabel1.ForeColor = Color.DarkGreen;
statuslabel2.Text = "Online";
statuslabel2.ForeColor = Color.DarkGreen;
consoletxt("RESTART", "Restart completed, server online!");
However, the output is this:
2012-04-01 11:32:12 [RESTART] Restarting Server...
2012-04-01 11:32:12 [RESTART] Restart completed, server online!
2012-04-01 11:32:12 [INFO] CONSOLE: Stopping the server..
2012-04-01 11:32:12 [INFO] Stopping server
So, it says that the restart has finished in the text - but it hasn't - all it has done is stop the server.
Please can sombody explain to me how to do this properly?
Thanks!
I have just seen this in code
var thisYear = (new Date()).getFullYear();
See it live on JSbin.
This is cool, as I've always done something like that in 2 lines, i.e. create the new object instance and assigned it to a variable, then called the method on it.
Is this new method fine to use everywhere? Any gotchas?
This simple test, of course, works as expected:
scala var b = 2
b: Int = 2
scala b += 1
scala b
res3: Int = 3
Now I bring this into scope:
class A(var x: Int) { def +=(y:Int) { this.x += y } }
implicit def int2A(i:Int) : A = new A(i)
I'm defining a new class and a += operation on it.
I never expected this would affect the way my regular Ints behave.
But it does:
scala var b:Int = 0
b: Int = 0
scala b += 1
scala b
res29: Int = 0
scala b += 2
scala b
res31: Int = 0
Scala seems to prefer the implicit conversion over the natural += that is already defined to Ints. That leads to several questions...
Why? Is this a bug? Is it by design?
Is there a work-around (other than not using "+=")?
Thanks