Transparent HTML nodes without affecting content





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9
Date Submitted Thu. Feb. 8th, 2007 10:05 AM
Revision 1
Helper dohpaz
Tags "web safe colors" | JavaScript
Comments 0 comments
I had searched high and low for a way to generate a palette of web-safe colors. Despite Google's best efforts, what I had found was lacking for my needs. So, I decided to write a library that would generate all 216 web safe colors, and then allow me to manipulate those colors in any way that I chose.

If anybody is curious as to why I would want to do something so... simple, it is because I needed a very light-weight color picker, and didn't want to mess with any fancy options.
12
Date Submitted Wed. Aug. 30th, 2006 5:06 AM
Revision 1
Helper dohpaz
Tags entities | HTML | PHP
Comments 2 comments
This function is useful in helping to deter spam bots by obfuscating things such as e-mail addresses and URLs that are displayed on a web page. While it's not 100% fool proof, it does offer some protection.

Example:
$email = html_entitize('foo@baz.org');
/*
Outputs foo@baz.com
*/
21
Date Submitted Thu. Aug. 31st, 2006 1:36 PM
Revision 1
Helper dohpaz
Tags debug | HTML | PHP | Variable
Comments 0 comments
A quick and simple function to dump a variable (array, object, string, int, etc) out into -formatted output for a web browser.

If the variable is an array or an object, you can have it returned into the another variable for later processing (i.e., through templates or e-mail). Due to lack of free time, if the variable is not an array or an object, it will ignore the $return value and print directly to output.

Future revisions will add the above mentioned functionality.
12
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 2nd, 2006 11:59 AM
Revision 1
Beginner drench
Tags escape | HTML | JavaScript | String
Comments 0 comments
Similar to Perl's CGI::escapeHTML(), though (because we can!) this adds it as a method to all String objects.
13
Date Submitted Mon. Oct. 2nd, 2006 1:05 PM
Revision 1
Beginner drench
Tags Array | JavaScript | List | Random | shuffle
Comments 3 comments
It works with Array types. The example is a simple list of numbers, but the array could contain anything; lists of strings, functions, DOM nodes, whatever. Unfortunately, a lot of things that seem like arrays in the DOM aren't really, so you can't shuffle the images on a page with just document.images.shuffle() all by itself.
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:




15
Date Submitted Tue. Nov. 7th, 2006 12:41 PM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags ajax | http | JavaScript | XML
Comments 0 comments
This is a simple script to provide basic cross-platform XML request functionality in Javascript. It's meant to be the core component in any AJAX style framework. It is not an instantiable object, but instead is a namespaced microlibrary.

Calling is easy:
XMLRequest.GET(uri, query, callback, fallback)
uri: The location you're after
query: an associative array of form data to provide via the URL
callback: callback function of the form myCallbackFunction(objXMLHttpRequest), which is called upon successful (response = 200 OK) retrieval of the XML data
fallback: myFallbackFunction(objXMLHttpRequest), which is called upon failed (response != 200 OK) retrieval of the XML data.

XMLRequest.POST(uri, query, form, callback, fallback)
Similar, but does the query using the POST method. 'query' is the URL-appended data, still in associative array form, and 'form' is the same for the POST data.
17
Date Submitted Tue. Nov. 7th, 2006 9:04 PM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags ajax | JavaScript | XML
Comments 1 comments
This is a brief revision to my previous snippet. It is still what it was: a small, simple system for using XMLHttpRequest without using globals.

I'll put the API spec in the code this time, so as not to clutter the front page further.

Changes:

Changed name to HTTPRequest (far more accurate)
Added HEAD requests
Shortened code by making a GenericRequest function
Used a better method for getting an XMLHttpRequest object (checks multiple MS versions and implements the latest one)
14
Date Submitted Sun. Jan. 28th, 2007 1:18 PM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags JavaScript | json | sort
Comments 0 comments
Flexible sorting algorithm based on Quicksort with extra functionality, such as:
- Direction (ie: ascending or descending)
- Sort-by-path (eg: item.name, item.name.firstName or item[5])
- Sorting function (returns true if two items are already sorted)
- Type checking
- All constants and support functions are members of the Sort() function
- Testsuite with hooks for cscript and in-browser javascript, so you can tweak and optimize, and make sure it still works
- Environment agnostic (can use with, say, SpiderMonkey or .Net's jsc)
8
Date Submitted Thu. Mar. 8th, 2007 11:37 PM
Revision 1
Scripter Fordiman
Tags ajax | browser-independent | JavaScript | Library | XML
Comments 0 comments
libNog is a 9k library to provide somewhat easier browser-independence. It is not yet complete, and will be continuously revised. It grew from this snippet, and is still growing as I find things I use often.
Presently, libNog features:

A way to browser-independently get an XMLHttpRequest object.
A set of simple methods for GET, POST, HEAD, and to include other Scripts.
Simple methods for className control
A completely abstracted form of getElement*
Browser-independent methods for attaching and detaching event handlers
An event-normalization routine
A simple one-command 'Stop the Event' routine
And the big one: A simplified Class object by which classes can be built in JavaScript.

The above link will point you to the API documentation and history of libNog, as well as where to download the library.
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