Has anyone tried running codedui scripts on Non-English Applications.
I am trying to run coded ui scripts on Spanish, Portuguese, French & the German version of my windows based Application(Silverlight)
I wanted to know if this is a possiblity & are there any challenges, pre-requisites achieving this.
Could anyone please let me know.
Thanks
First and foremost requirement is to code using Automation IDs. That would reduce your effort drastically in maintenance as well.
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I've been using Azure form recogniser for about a month now, and I've tried with with a variety of forms and European languages. However recently I've run into what I believe is a bug. That's when I use their UI through the dockerized label tool mcr.microsoft.com/azure-cognitive-services/custom-form/labeltool which exposes a web app for labelling and training.
I am working on a German document, and for some reason the UI will ignore umlauts and danish O, even before training and most definitely after.
Is this something anyone has run into before, is there a solution or a compromise to be made? I know this is a long shot, but I thought it's worth asking.
The current version of service doesn't fully support those European languages yet.
My goal is to use adminLTE (adminLTE) interface in a corporate setting which allows for VBA scripts to run to automate task which my non-tech savy team can accomplish much quicker than by doing them by hand. (pre-filling emails, providing inventory information, creating and printing forms automatically, integrating with stamps.com, reference and display a lot of excel data). From my understanding, the execution of VBA scripts in a web browser is not allowed.
What are my options for accomplishing my goal?
Do this in an HTA file?
Am I wrong about web browser executions of VB scripts?
Do I need to build an application in Visual Studio?
I have a team of three which need to access this and share data, so it's not like an entire enterprise spread across the nation or anything like that. Thanks.
Any and all thoughts are welcome.
This question is pretty broad - it's the same as asing "what are my options for executing an arbitrary EXE on an end user's computer from a browser." The whole point of browser based applications is to prevent this from happening for security reasons.
If your goal is to deploy VBA scripts to everyone in your organization - that's actually pretty easy - just create an automatically updating Excel addin. This approach is very common and easy to do (more info if needed).
To answer your questions:
Too broad
Yes you can do this in a HTA file but I don't recommend it and I don't think it does what you want.
You cannot run VBA within a browser in the traditional sense. An HTA from what I understand is essentially a desktop app that is written using HTML i.e. you couldn't deploy an HTA to example.com.
You can build a ASP.NET web app in Visual Studio and have your front end (e.g. Admin LTE) call an end point on the backend which then calls an EXE but that would be an EXE on the server and not the client.
I got Developer Account of Netsuite. And Know Javascript well. Downloaded SuiteCloud in Eclipse (Though my first Suitelet code is showing errors when I ran it on eclipse as shown in the help centre). Can use Help Centre and Also I have register for the Forum.
Now I need to learn Netsuite, so what should be my first few steps that needs to be taken so that I can proceed properly with learning.
Your guidance will be valuable.
Thanks in Advance.
Regards
Glad
As mentioned above you already owned a Dev account and have eclipse setup with you, so I guess you might have already learnt the essentials of using eclipse plugin for Netsuite. I would rather recommend to play with some client and user event script samples (NS help center) and the deployment process to have an idea how the whole process works in conjunction with record objects. Learning Suitelet involves a lot of learning curves. So better off you jump into Suitelet once you have enough knowledge on the script types and their usages.
Currently I am coding my google-chrome-extensions using a combination of notepad and the chrome console. I am 100% sure that there is a better way of programming these extensions. What environments are people using?
I'm using Notepad++ which works beautifully.
You might consider trying the crossrider beta to build cross-browser extensions. I've found the experience on Chrome superb so far.
Your preferred IDE (eg. NetBeans) and Google Chrome (you have to test on something, right?).
You might want to check:
NetBean 7.0 (They have a great version for web development that let you write HTML,CSS and JS with all the great code sniff/highlight/complete stuff)
Eclipse got some good version for web dev (PDT and others).
Notepad++ , UltraEdit, TextPad or any other good editor you like.
As for the debug, profile and test mode - you have the developers tool in Chrome that are excellent. You might want to check out this short video that give lots of useful tips:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOEw9iiopwI
Good luck!
Hello recently I've been a bit curious and wanted to make a browser. I'd like to use an existing engine though such as Gecko or Webkit. Are there any resources on the web for how to get started and any examples? Language choice doesn't really matter(but no VB please. That was the only example code I found)
Chromium is an open-source browser project that aims to build a safer, faster, and more stable way for all Internet users to experience the web. This site contains design documents, architecture overviews, testing information, and more to help you learn to build and work with the Chromium source code.
Or study some applications using Webkit for example. Chances are, these projects are not as complex as chromium.
I'd recommend you build a browser in Java with Swing or SWT. They have all the components you'll need, so you need to put them together and start figuring out the tougher problems. The documentation is good, and you may even find tutorials that get you most of the way there.
I recently downloaded the code for Firefox or Chrome, and this seems like a much more difficult place to start. There's lots of setup and overhead to get a build working on your machine compared with a Java app.