URL Parameters for Dynamic JS and CSS
8
I like to have these two methods in my toolbelt, even though it's syntactic sugar, I think it aids clarity.
9
Rather than have standalone functions rtrim, ltrim, and trim (as in http://www.bytemycode.com/snippets/snippet/397/) why not have them as methods of all string objects?
7
A websafe colour palette generator in JavaScript. Coded this after looking at http://www.bytemycode.com/snippets/snippet/585/ and wanting to do it differently.
It's been refactored so that:
* can pass generateColourPalette an arbitrary array of colour codes and it'll generate a palette.
* it hooks into the page through the external file
* uses an internal stylesheet instead of inline styles
It's been refactored so that:
* can pass generateColourPalette an arbitrary array of colour codes and it'll generate a palette.
* it hooks into the page through the external file
* uses an internal stylesheet instead of inline styles
12
Don't know if anyone will find this handly, but here's a CSS processor that I wrote that allows me to nest CSS Blocks, and various other things, making for an easier to maintain CSS file.
Warning: I'd recommend caching the results since I didn't have a need to optomize it for speed.
Things that it includes:
*Nested CSS Rules
*Removes Whitespace
*Allows for // comments
*Removes comments (so put them in at no cost)
Please let me know what you think
Warning: I'd recommend caching the results since I didn't have a need to optomize it for speed.
Things that it includes:
*Nested CSS Rules
*Removes Whitespace
*Allows for // comments
*Removes comments (so put them in at no cost)
Please let me know what you think
12
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.
9
Set the read-only attribute of a file to true or false.
-9
Write a set of bytes into a so-called binary file. The point is that we use BinaryWriter here and we have a byte array as input.
-8
A function to determine if the input filename is valid on Win32 platforms (that is, it does not include invalid characters, such as :\?...)
6
Write a set of bytes into a 'so-called' binary file. The point is that we use BinaryWriter here and we have a byte array as input.
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