Javascript Array to String





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9
Date Submitted Wed. Oct. 25th, 2006 9:57 AM
Revision 1
Helper fastmike
Tags C | File | Java | String
Comments 12 comments
What is Dijkstra Algorithm? click on the link above and first understand what the algorithm is all about. in short it calculates the shortest path from A to F or vise versa. This code i can guarantee is the simplest and easiest code to understand. just search on google and try to compare this code and other dijkstra code and you will see what i am talking about. i spent alot of time myself and my instructor to guide me on the rite path.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dijkstra%27s_algorithm(Description)
to see how the algorithm really works go on this website it tells you step by step how to update the cost and which path to choose.
http://renaud.waldura.com/doc/java/dijkstra/
Please give some time to understand the algorithm first and then you can see my code. if you done understand the algorithm it is very useless. i know alot of people need Dijkstra algorithm in java for their HW assignment or Test. i am giving you the solution step by step. anyone who wants to understand please go to the url i have posted above and once you have understand then run the code and for those people who just want to copy so that they can get 90% in their test No Problem Here it is .
First open a notepad and name that file anything like data.txt or datas.txt and make sure the file looks something like this and in this format.
0 3 100 5 100 100 (100 represents infinity)
3 0 6 7 7 100
100 6 0 5 5 3
5 7 5 0 1 100
100 7 5 1 0 2
100 100 3 100 2 0
i name this file as a data.txt file. i have 6 nodes. and A is always the starting node which has the cost of 0 so by looking at the first line i
know that A to A have distance 0, A to B is 3, A to c is Infinity, A to D is 5, A to E is Infinity(means no edge connected with A), A to F is Infinity.
for second line(B to A is 3, and then vise versa) and for the 3rd line it starts for C and etc..
save the txt file by any name and then copy the code which i have posted and then to run type this:
javac routing.java
java routing data.txt
you will get the output. i will say this one more time understand how the algorithm works or ......................
-10
Date Submitted Tue. Oct. 17th, 2006 3:25 PM
Revision 1
Helper jeremec
Tags Attribute | div | JavaScript | Name
Comments 7 comments
One way to group elements in HTML is to assign them a name attribute. Multiple elements can share a name, then you can easily access them as an array using the getElementsByName() method.

The problem is that some DOM parsers aren't keen on, or are ignorant to, this use of the name attribute, so a simple object.name returns undefined. In my case, it was a DIV in Firefox 1.5 that was behaving this way.

There is a simple work around for this that works in Firefox, I haven't tested it in others. It is to use the getAttribute method that is an extension of any element object.

This ability can be useful if you have a function that performs a transformation on the active element, and another transformation on closely related elements.
5
Date Submitted Wed. Oct. 11th, 2006 7:58 AM
Revision 1
Scripter ctiggerf
Tags PHP | String
Comments 3 comments
Two very usefull functions to have around.

(note: dollarfy requires commify to work)
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
16
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 9th, 2006 2:58 PM
Revision 1
Scripter wiz1705
Tags Array | PHP | XML
Comments 1 comments
I've seen XML 2 Array functions done in other ways but this is the shortest implementation I've seen yet. I didnt write it myself though, but I thought I'd submit it for common good of this site. It uses regex and works prefectly.
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
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:




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