I have no idea what this is called, but when you have Text = "TEXT TEXT <br /> TEXT TEXT"
where can I find a list of the "<br />" type of modification symbols?
Sorry for the dumb question, just don't know what this is called.
I think that what you are after is HTML encoding which will convert such string:
TEXT TEXT <br /> TEXT TEXT
To this:
TEXT TEXT <br /> TEXT TEXT
To achieve this, classic ASP has built in method called Server.HTMLEncode which is explained in detail here.
Real use example:
<%
strRawData = "TEXT TEXT <br /> TEXT TEXT"
strEncoded = Server.HTMLEncode(strRawData)
%>
You are using break command.Instead br/ you can use only br (inside <> as a tag) for line break. There are more commands in vbscript which can be used in classic asp. Go To this link
Related
Is it possible with vim/plugin to format/beautify html code, breaking the attributes into separate lines automatically, like:
<input
class="my-class"
attibute-1="value 1"
attibute-2="value 2"
/>
I have been using display.none, for the hid-whens for example, all the hidden fields were kept in a section and section was hidden from web by using Display.none.
This is working for Internet Explorer till IE 9, but for IE 10 all the hidden fields are shown.
Can anyone help in this matter. Any alternative or approach.
Without seeing the page it sis very difficult to guess.
Try validating the html through one of the many online html validators as something may not be closed or Notes might have given you an unwanted code addition .
Try adding a background color to the css #wrapper to make sure the css is being called.
Take a copy of the form and start removing all other elements one section at a time to see if something else is causing the issue.
Add {meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=10;IE=9; IE=8; IE=7; IE=EDGE" /} as the very top meta tag and see if that fixes it. Replace the curly braces obviously.
All the best in finding the issue.
It sounds like just the section element is getting hidden. Without seeing the code I can't tell why that changes between ie 9 and 10 but ie is famous for having varying behavior between versions.
One alternative that comes to mind: You could wrap the section and the fields in a DIV element using pass thru HTML and set that div's style to display:none. That is pretty standard and should work across browsers.
Update: To give you an idea what I'm talking about, check out this jsfiddle.
HTML:
<form>
<div class="wrapper">
<input type="text" name="Field 1" /><br />
<input type="text" name="Field 2" /><br />
<input type="text" name="Field 3" />
</div>
<span>Some text that won't be hidden.</span>
</form>
CSS:
.wrapper {
#display:none;
}
You can remove the # next to the display:none and see the difference, even in IE 10.
You'll need to look closely at the HTML being rendered by Domino and make sure that in fact all the fields you are trying to hide are surrounded by the DIV that is hidden.
I'm just starting out with JavaFX and I'm trying to add a Label element in fxml file with text displaying the registered trademark symbol. (R inside a circle)
<Label styleClass="superscript" text="special_character" />
What would I put in place of "special_character"?
Use the ISO-8859-1 codes. <Label text="®"/>
Or the literal characters. <Label text="®"/>
For a searchable reference to the codes try
ISO-8859-1 Characters Set for HTML
I have a collect task in Sharepoint 2010 with a Enhanced Rich Text box. In the list it shows the p and div tags.
<div class="ExternalClass1458740DC98941C3A3589359A3017AAA"><p>Approved - Rev D</p></div>
This is the field where the text is coming from.
<td width="75%" class="ms-formbody" >
<SharePoint:FormField runat="server" id="ff3{$Pos}" ControlMode="Edit" FieldName="DocCtlAdmin_x0020_Comment1234567" __designer:bind="{ddwrt:DataBind('u',concat('ff3',$Pos),'Value','ValueChanged','ID',ddwrt:EscapeDelims(string(#ID)) , '#DocCtlAdmin_x0020_Comment1234567')}"/>
<SharePoint:FieldDescription runat="server" id="ff3description{$Pos}" FieldName="DocCtlAdmin_x0020_Comment1234567" ControlMode="Edit"/>
</td>
Any insight as to why or how to remove would be appreciated
Simple answer is: In your display view add disable-output-escaping="yes" to your XSL statement like so:
xsl:value-of select="#CMImplPlan" disable-output-escaping="yes"
This will remove character output escaping for HTML characters.
Issue is you are using RichHTMLField to get the input from your end users for this field. So sharepoint adds some HTML tag.
but
when you are displaying you are using FormField, which is text based, so it shows all the HTML tags also.
So solution is :
1. Use RichHTMLField for both input and display
2. Use FormField/ Simple textbox for both input and display
3. Write a custom control / control extender to clean all the HTML before outputting it
4. Also a less recommended solution will be to search this tags on page via jQuery and remove them.
I would like to know how Wikipedia does its search field. What I mean by this is two things: Its gradient and its button.
How does it make a gradient in the field? This can be easily done with CSS cross browser at this point, but when you do the IE CSS code, it aliases the text. Wikipedia has a gradient background, but the text is still anti-aliased! How do they do that?
Also, how did they put a clickable search button INSIDE the text field?
Thanks.
It appears that the actual search input has no styling -- meaning no border and a transparent background. The containing div is styled to look like an input field (border and gradient). The clickable button is inside the div but not inside the actual input element.
You could just look at the code. The search box as it appears is only a div element with a border. This div itself has the gradient set via CSS (background-image). As you can see the button element is also not inside the text field.
<div id="simpleSearch">
<input id="searchInput" name="search" type="text" title="Search Wikipedia [f]" accesskey="f" value="" />
<button id="searchButton" type='submit' name='button' title=""><img src="[x]" alt="Filltext" /></button>
</div>