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19
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 10:39 PM
Revision 1
Helper inxilpro
Tags "Random Generation" | Generator | Password | PHP | Random
Comments 2 comments
This function creates relatively secure random passwords. It's by no means ideal, but it should work in most non-critical situations. The nice thing is the generator attempts to create passwords that people can pronounce and chooses letters that won't be mistaken for others (such as the numeral "1", an upper-case "i" and a lower-case "L"). To keep the code short much of this functionality is very rudimentary, but it's better than nothing.
11
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 6:19 PM
Revision 1
Beginner strykstaguy
Tags firefox | JavaScript | xul
Comments 0 comments
Just a little code to make a window in XUL
-12
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 7:29 AM
Revision 1
Helper BrandonReese
Tags MD5 | Password | PHP | Random
Comments 5 comments
This is a quick and easy method to generate a somewhat random password. This simply generates the MD5 hash for the integer returned by the time() function and then truncates it to the specific length.
11
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 4:57 AM
Revision 1
Helper serpentskiss
Tags Password | Random
Comments 1 comments
Creates a random string, usefull for passwords etc.

Use: $password = makeRandomPassword($Length);

If $Length is not specified (ie $password = makeRandomPassword();) then it will default to 8 characters
18
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 3:36 AM
Revision 1
Syntax Master sundaramkumar
Tags JavaScript
Comments 4 comments
Add dragging to your div elements. just adding class="drag" to the div element will make it draggable.

Here i'm adding an example for a draggable dialog box
7
Date Submitted Sun. Oct. 8th, 2006 9:28 PM
Revision 1
Beginner trevis
Tags Array | JavaScript | setTimeout | String
Comments 3 comments
I use this function when passing an array to a function being called from setTimeout();
12
Date Submitted Sun. Oct. 8th, 2006 9:19 PM
Revision 1
Beginner trevis
Tags Fade | Image | JavaScript | slideshow
Comments 0 comments
Fade in/out multiple images like a slideshow.
12
Date Submitted Sun. Oct. 8th, 2006 11:19 AM
Revision 1
Beginner alp0001
Tags debug | debugging | JavaScript
Comments 2 comments
Basically, you can dynamically ask the webpage to look at a current object's attributes/values or even change the object's attributes/values. As such, running this script on any browser of your choice should show what attributes your particular browser will allow for an object reference you typed in.
8
Date Submitted Fri. Oct. 6th, 2006 2:42 PM
Revision 1
Helper BrandonReese
Tags "swear filter" | JavaScript | xanga
Comments 1 comments
This is a swear filter script I wrote for my xanga blog. I don't know if it has any application anywhere else. This will replace the swear words listed in the array with the character defined in blank_char. This isn't perfect but it works pretty well.
11
Date Submitted Thu. Oct. 5th, 2006 10:26 PM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags "stupid | clock" | JavaScript
Comments 1 comments
This is an analog clock script designed to jump in place of a div element of class 'analogclock'.

The div tag is not replaced in this custom element, but instead is used as a pseudo-document to hold the clock itself. The 'hands' are implemented using arrays of generated divs.

I was actually inspired to write this widget because of an article on About.com's Javascript pages written by a guy named Stephen Chapman. His code was a mess, but I only discovered this after delving through two layers of 'unescape()' obfuscation.

The basics: You control the look of the numbers and the 'box' model of the clock using basic CSS. You control the clock's size (it will always be square) using the 'size' attribute.

The 'seconds', 'minutes', and 'hours' attributes are for the color of the 'hand's. 'numstyle' can be 1, i, I, or '.', each refering to a different type of face-numbering for the clock

The 'localzone' attribute tells the script to use the user's local time zone. If it's '0', 'false' or 'no', the clock will use the 'clockzone' attribute to determine what time it is (the clock zone is relative to GMT, so, for example, US Eastern is -5. The clock automagically figures out if we're in DST, so you don't have to.)

The 'city' and 'country' are for if you want to put in the city/country of origin for your clock. To be honest, you can put anything there.

Lastly, I designed my version of the clock to be able to not 'tick', i.e., work like the old-school analog clocks. If you want ticking, add 'tick=1' to the attribute list

As with all of my widgets, the idea here is that you can just include the .js file and start dropping in tags without needing to know any ECMAScript at all.

Additionally, for you ECMAScripters, I was very careful to keep my pollution of the global namespace to one class: analogClock.

Example of use: