Below are the top ranked snippets.
12
Here's a simple JavaScript solution to hide your e-mail from many spam scripts while still providing clickable hyperlinks to your visitors.
Web crawlers and visitors with JavaScript disabled will see: me [at] mydomain [dot] com. I've seen a lot of people that just leave it at this, but it seems a bit unprofessional in my opinion. With the following code, we can replace that with a fully functional hyperlink.
Web crawlers and visitors with JavaScript disabled will see: me [at] mydomain [dot] com. I've seen a lot of people that just leave it at this, but it seems a bit unprofessional in my opinion. With the following code, we can replace that with a fully functional hyperlink.
12
A simple Tooltip for you web pages with minimal code.
Images , Text and HTML code can be shown inside the tootip
Images , Text and HTML code can be shown inside the tootip
12
This is a class for generating HTML tables. It's kind of rough, but I thought somebody might want to do something with it.
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.
12
Fade in/out multiple images like a slideshow.
12
Here's a little snippet I got from SitePoint that I now use all the time. Add the code below to the start of each script.
Basically, what this does is checks to see if magic_quotes_gpc() is enabled on the server, and if it is, then it gets rid of all the slashes that magic_quotes_gpc() adds to input from $_GET, $_POST and $_COOKIES globals.
It's a good snippet to use, because it negates the bad programming practices that having magic_quotes_gpc() lets you get away with, and means that you don't really on PHP to validate your input; you get to do it all yourself ;-)
Basically, what this does is checks to see if magic_quotes_gpc() is enabled on the server, and if it is, then it gets rid of all the slashes that magic_quotes_gpc() adds to input from $_GET, $_POST and $_COOKIES globals.
It's a good snippet to use, because it negates the bad programming practices that having magic_quotes_gpc() lets you get away with, and means that you don't really on PHP to validate your input; you get to do it all yourself ;-)
12
Over the summer, I worked on a project in which I needed to parse logfiles which were in the following format:
IP|USE|TIME>IP2|USE2|TIME2>
and so on.
When I parsed them to display the log file in a user-friendly fashion, I used the following code:
IP|USE|TIME>IP2|USE2|TIME2>
and so on.
When I parsed them to display the log file in a user-friendly fashion, I used the following code:
12
This is a mysql php pager class that I found online somewhere and modified.
12
Using the Termios library, we can have the user enter a character on the keyboard, without it being displayed on the screen.
12
Allows you to hide all elements on an HTML page by their tag name. Extremely handy in getting around the "Windowless Elements" problem in IE, which is a bug that puts certain elements, most commonly select boxes, on top of any other element, no matter what. As you can imagine, this causes real problems with DHTML drop-down menus and such like. This is the simplest and quickest fix I've come up with, I simply set this function to run alongside the drop-down and all of the select tags vanish before a menu drops, then I run the show function when the menu retracts.









