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Neelesh K J Jain wrote: for e.g., xFFFF should utilize only 2 bytes, instead of 4 bytes.
What? How the hell is that going to happen?
Run the following code and see if you get a clue.
char buf[5];
itoa( 0xf, buf, 16);
cout << buf << endl;
itoa( 0xff, buf, 16);
cout << buf << endl;
itoa( 0xfff, buf, 16);
cout << buf << endl;
itoa( 0xffff, buf, 16);
cout << buf << endl;
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Hi all
A quick question,
I have built an MFC application and embedded a web browser control. How do I know the type of the webpage accessed, whether animated or html based?
Thanks
llp00na
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llp00na wrote: I have built
"have" as in past tense?
llp00na wrote: How do I know the type of the webpage
Don't you think that might have been something to study before developing the application?
You could parse the HTML to find any information you require. Also there are HTTP headers that might contain information you require. If either of those are something you don't understand then you should consider starting to read (about them) and leave off the internet forums for a while. Both subjects are well documented and the documentation is freely available on the internet.
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Let me try again
I know what HTML and HTTP headers are.
I am trying to detect this automatically. Let's say the user types in the URL of a website, I want the application to report back to him:
The website you entered is "Fully nnimated"
Or
The website you entered is "HTML-Based"
You got my question now???
llp00na
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llp00na wrote: You got my question now???
Maybe. And maybe I don't care a bit about.
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong.
-- Iain Clarke
[My articles]
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What do you mean by 'animated'?
Also, pretty much all web-pages have at least an outer layer of HTML, no matter what their content.
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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I meant, flash-based. I.e. they heavily use flash animation for interactivity.
llp00na
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Right - in that case, you probably want to parse the HTTP response (which is overwhelmingly likely to be HTML) and see if it has an instance of the Flash player object embedded in it.
How do you identify the Flash object? I'd suggest looking at the HTML for pages that use Flash (load them in your browser and view the page source - the Flash object instance should be reasonably easily detectable).
How do you differentiate between pages that use Flash for the majority of their content and pages that just have Flash adverts? Good question - I don't know.
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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My main concern really is to detect the pages that use Flash for the majority of their content.
Thanks for the try though
llp00na
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llp00na wrote: Thanks for the try though
Thanks for the try? Really? That is the answer to your question, period. Not surprisingly it's the same one I gave you. You seem to want us to believe that you have a clue about what you are doing. The problem is that your post don't indicate that in any way.
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What is an animated web site ? a fully flash (or silverlight) site ? or something else ?
This signature was proudly tested on animals.
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An animated website is a flash-based website. All/ Major content is flash.
llp00na
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After parsing the html source, how can you decide that the major content of a page is in flash or not ?
This signature was proudly tested on animals.
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How can you do that?
llp00na
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Website is a display. While some people unfortunately use diagonals to measure displays, I prefer width and height attributes. Fortunately, so do <object>s in webpages, usually.
All that's left to do is pick a "total area" number, & compare.
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Thats good idea which I started to implement now
Thanks
llp00na
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llp00na wrote: Thats good idea
Really, it's a good idea now, it just wasn't a good idea the first two times people gave it to you? What a frakin monkey.
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Given this...
class CTopDlg : public CDialog {
...
then this works...
HBRUSH CTopDlg::OnCtlColor(CDC*,CWnd*,UINT){
HBRUSH ret = CDialog::OnCtlColor(...)
...
return ret
}
but if I try this...
class CDerivedDlg : public CTopDlg {
...
then this does _not_ work...
HBRUSH CDerivedDlg::OnCtlColor(CDC*,CWnd*,UINT) {
HBRUSH ret = CTopDlg::OnCtlColor(...)
...
return ret
}
OnCtlColor is declared virtual in my CTopDlg class, and is also in a protected: section. It is _not_ virtual and _is_ protected in CDialog. The error is based on the rules of C++, but how did CTopDlg compile?
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brain fart.. here's why in case you wasted your time with my first post, or you looked this up:
make OnCtlColor not virtual in CTopDlg. Then it isn't overwritten by CDerivedDlg::OnCtlColor, and CTopDlg::OnCtlColor(...) is a valid reference inside the CDerivedDlg version.
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CTopDlg::OnCtlColor should be a valid reference within CDerivedDlg even if it is declared virtual. It tells the compiler explicitly to call OnCtlColor as if this had type CTopDlg.
It certainly works in VS2008 and g++4.0.1
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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The message indicates the compiler can't get a CTopDlg object pointer from the CDerivedDlg object pointer you get using this (BTW - what error number are you getting?).
Your scenario, as presented, (OnCtlColor declared virtual and protected in CTopDlg, OnCtlColor declared virtual (or non-virtual) and protected in CDerivedDlg) compiles under VS2008. So...what compiler are you using (VC6? I'm thinking it might get confused easier than VS2008), are you absolutely sure you've derived CDerivedDlg publicly from CTopDlg?
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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(busted!) Yes, I'm using VC6, since for some reason that's what our partners chose to code in originally.
I thought it was a blessing in disguise, as if CDerivedDlg::OnCtlColor ever got executed, with a valid call to this->OnCtlColor, the program would almost certainly hang, right? (I can't try it on this machine)
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bulg wrote: I thought it was a blessing in disguise, as if CDerivedDlg::OnCtlColor ever got executed, with a valid call to this->OnCtlColor, the program would almost certainly hang, right?
No, it'll do the right thing - when you use a class namespace specifier like that (i.e. something like CTopDlg::OnCtlColor ), it determines what method to call statically at compile-time (i.e. the compiler works out what to call) rather than dynamically at run-time (i.e. looking up what to call in the v-table).
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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Hi, I'm looking for large opensource C++/g++ Eclipse projects to test and build in Eclipse, any suggestions?
Preferably where the workspace .cproject has been provided.
(I'm using Windows, did I post this in correct forum?)
Thanks
Beth
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I don't know of any, but I'd suggest searching Google (both Web and Google Code[^]) for something like "cproject cdt" or "cproject cdt eclipse" - that found a few when I had a look.
Searching SVN repositories for ".cproject" might help as well - an example[^].
Java, Basic, who cares - it's all a bunch of tree-hugging hippy cr*p
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