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The accelerator effectively suppresses the need to scroll, target the Next button, and click, which was to me a useless repetitive task when navigating the threads.
There is no standard and effective HTML way of declaring a trigger to go next page (I am not talking about the page down scroll of course). I see it as a major lack, especially on forums.
Of course, I could change the CP thread folding option, so I see more threads in one page, but I don't want to use something else than the dynamic option.
Adding a keyboard shortcut to go next page is from what I have tested : seamless (does not change the look), handy (your left hand typically does nothing (hum... )).
On top of that, using only the mouse for interaction is boring after a while : alternating with keyboard makes it better : while we are talking about that, may be that's the reason we see off-topic messages sometimes : those who are bored with their mouse start new threads with offtopic messages, just a self-massage.
if you start putting in too manay features, it no longer remains useful for beginners
quote in a CP article comment, shiraz baig
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What actually always confuses me is that there are two version of the lounge. The one at www.codeproject.com/lounge.asp and the www.codeproject.com/script/comments/forums.asp?forumid=1159
Wouldnt it be nice when both looked and worked the same way? (I prefer the later one anyway)
...make it about Visual C++, and don't ever mention Visual Basic. Nick Hodapp (MSFT) in Semicolon[^]
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but the contents is the same, so what?
perhaps some people like the "Question time", and others the message board list - so keep the variety.
Auch den Schatten will ich lieben weil ich manchmal lieber frier' Rosenstolz [sighist]
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peterchen wrote:
but the contents is the same, so what?
The answer to that is that it's really annoying when you use the Lounge from the main forums.asp and reply to a message which then throws you into lounge.asp. It's slightly confusing for new members that the whole format at the top changes and it often blows your "new" markers out.
Not a major complaint but worth fixing.
Paul
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ok, that's a point
Auch den Schatten will ich lieben weil ich manchmal lieber frier' Rosenstolz [sighist]
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Thats a good point
Regards,
Brian Dela
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Well, that was not my major concern. I just hate the droplist which doesnt show any counts and is bad to use. But, yes, thats a point too
...if you're under 8 or younger. Chris Maunder, the Lounge
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Already we can change our name color for posted names usin a bit of hTmL,
But would it be any use if your name color was in the preferences ?
Regardz
Colin J Davies
Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin
You are the intrepid one, always willing to leap into the fray! A serious character flaw, I might add, but entertaining.
Said by Roger Wright about me.
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But then everyone will have horribly coloured names, rather than just the knowledgable people doing it (and hopefully they've got enough sense to not pick horrible colours)
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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hopefully they've got enough sense to not pick horrible colours.
this is my signature for forums quoted from shog*9:
I can't help but feel, somewhere deep within that withered, bitter, scheming person, there is a small child, frightened, looking a way out.
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Yes,I like the idea.
Sometimes I hate almost everyone has the same black name.
this is my signature for forums quoted from shog*9:
I can't help but feel, somewhere deep within that withered, bitter, scheming person, there is a small child, frightened, looking a way out.
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Good idea, as long as it's restricted to gold members.
Let Q = the set of all quotes, ever S = {a: a € Q : a is funny, a is nerdy } a1 a2...an
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any chance of RSS feeds for codeproject (preferably one for new articles, and one for lounge topics!)
In case you're wondering, Trillian Pro[^] has a RSS plugin, that monitors feeds and gives you a little MSN style popup when new content appears, which I think is brilliant!
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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benjymous wrote:
any chance of RSS feeds for codeproject (preferably one for new articles, and one for lounge topics!)
You could always tap into the CP webservices (like the ones I used in my CP+ article) and generate an RSS feed which Trillian then points to.
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Hmm, that might be a neat little project - an app you run on your computer that can be configured to read in web data from one source (a service, or just a normal web page), and convert it into an RSS feed.
Is there an easy way of using web services from VC6 (I can't afford .NET yet)
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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benjymous wrote:
an app you run on your computer that can be configured to read in web data from one source (a service, or just a normal web page), and convert it into an RSS feed.
Is there an easy way of using web services from VC6 (I can't afford .NET yet)
You don't need to even go to all the trouble of using SOAP and the webservice proxy etc. etc. All you need to do is call the URL of the web service with the required parametres and it returns an XML document.
So you could actually have a simple app which transforms (using XSL naturally) the returned XML document into a RSS document.
Wow, actually that sounds great Let me go and do it quick
btw. you can see how to use a web service directly (without soap etc.) in my CP+ article, though it does use .NET classes, you could use the HTTPResponse objects in "normal" C++ I am sure. It is just XML doc over HTTP.
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To work from trillian pro, it'll need to run as a mini web server (of course all it'll serve is the RSS feeds). Trillian lets you set the port, so it doesn't have to run on port 80
Do you think you could create some sort of simple query language to make it easy to parse any input data (such as html pages)
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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Yes - it will happen.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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yay, thanks
Just as a point of reference, it only took me about half an hour to make a perl script to generate the rss feed for my site (as I just hacked apart the code that generates the html for the main page and modified it to format in the rss xml format instead)
http://www.grapefruitopia.com/cgi-bin/blogfeed.cgi[^]
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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Cool - I'll give it a try when I get home
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Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
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That was fast!!!
Regards,
Brian Dela
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Brian Delahunty wrote:
That was fast!!!
Well considering all it involves is two files, it was fast
The ASPX file simply takes an XSL file and transforms the returned XML file (which CP gives me on a silver platter) into an RSS compliant XML file. Funnily enough I first tried to do it in normal ASP, but it proved to be very unreliable (MSXML through ASP does not like loading remote XML docs strangely) and then in ASP.NET. ASP.NET was far better and fewer lines of code.
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Paul Watson wrote:
The ASPX file simply takes an XSL file and transforms the returned XML file (which CP gives me on a silver platter) into an RSS compliant XML file. Funnily enough I first tried to do it in normal ASP, but it proved to be very unreliable (MSXML through ASP does not like loading remote XML docs strangely) and then in ASP.NET. ASP.NET was far better
To be honest I know very little about XML and ASP.NET... only starting in those areas now. So.. Any suggestions on where to start???
Regards,
Brian Dela
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