Sponsored Content
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? New Login Button for UNIX.COM Post 303019988 by Neo on Wednesday 11th of July 2018 01:21:41 PM
Old 07-11-2018
Like this OK?

Image
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Remote Login (Unix)

Is there any way I can disallow remote login on a m/c (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: DPAI
3 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Script for using the Back button and the Close button

Here's a question I have for anyone that might be able to help me: I can write a html script that will allow the user to return to the previous page using the back button, and I can write a script that will allow the user to return to the previous page using the close button, but...is there a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mdgibson
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

UNIX Auto-login

I am trying to bypass the login screen when the system boots and auto-login to open windows. I believe I need to modify the S99dtlogin but I don't know what to add/modify. Has anyone ever created an auto-login for Solaris 8? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nvanduyne
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

UNIX login ID

Hello World: I need to have a user ID called devapp in the passwd and shadow file for a certain application to start. The problem is that I do not want users to be able to use the devapp login ID to log directly into the system. The users sometimes need to start and stop the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rambo15
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need UNIX Login ...

Hi, I dont have UNIX os on my pc. I want to learn UNIX system programming. How to get this OS or Can i get any remote login account ? Thanks. Bye... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sakthiu
5 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix Login problem ... help!!!!!

Hi I had asked my system admin to Disable direct login for xxxx id since it was a generic ID. If someone wanted to login to xxxx id on same system, they should initially login with their yyyy id(personal ID) and then su to xxxx userid.(wanted to track who had all logged in, it would be diffult... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rakeshou
6 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Changing middle mouse button for pasting to right mouse button in cygwin rxvt

Hi, I'm using rxvt in Cygwin and I'm wondering how to change my mouse bindings from the middle button for pasting to the right button. The main reason why I want to do this is because my laptop doesn't have a middle mouse button. Thanks for any help! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sayeo
2 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Unix Id from Window Login ID

Hello All, My Problem is -> How can we get UNIX id from open mail authentication (Windows ID) in UNIX. In following command we are using domain name, which may change in your reference. As, if we use following command. ypcat passwd | grep rohitp | cut -d: -f5 | cut -d, -f1 => we get... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: pandey.rohit
0 Replies

9. Web Development

Login in Unix

Can anyone plz share the HTML code for login in UNIX. I am not able to verify the password. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: manish.s
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Login to UNIX from the browser.

Hi All, I need to login to the UNIX server from the browser. can you please tell me the procedure? Thanks Sarwan (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sarwan
5 Replies
HTML::Lint(3pm) 					User Contributed Perl Documentation					   HTML::Lint(3pm)

NAME
HTML::Lint - check for HTML errors in a string or file VERSION
Version 2.20 SYNOPSIS
my $lint = HTML::Lint->new; $lint->only_types( HTML::Lint::Error::STRUCTURE ); $lint->parse( $data ); $lint->parse_file( $filename ); my $error_count = $lint->errors; foreach my $error ( $lint->errors ) { print $error->as_string, " "; } HTML::Lint also comes with a wrapper program called weblint that handles linting from the command line: $ weblint http://www.cnn.com/ http://www.cnn.com/ (395:83) <IMG SRC="spacer.gif"> tag has no HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes. http://www.cnn.com/ (395:83) <IMG SRC="goofus.gif"> does not have ALT text defined http://www.cnn.com/ (396:217) Unknown element <nobr> http://www.cnn.com/ (396:241) </nobr> with no opening <nobr> http://www.cnn.com/ (842:7) target attribute in <a> is repeated And finally, you can also get Apache::HTML::Lint that passes any mod_perl-generated code through HTML::Lint and get it dumped into your Apache error_log. [Mon Jun 3 14:03:31 2002] [warn] /foo.pl (1:45) </p> with no opening <p> [Mon Jun 3 14:03:31 2002] [warn] /foo.pl (1:49) Unknown element <gronk> [Mon Jun 3 14:03:31 2002] [warn] /foo.pl (1:56) Unknown attribute "x" for tag <table> METHODS
NOTE: Some of these methods mirror HTML::Parser's methods, but HTML::Lint is not a subclass of HTML::Parser. new() Create an HTML::Lint object, which inherits from HTML::Parser. You may pass the types of errors you want to check for in the "only_types" parm. my $lint = HTML::Lint->new( only_types => HTML::Lint::Error::STRUCTURE ); If you want more than one, you must pass an arrayref: my $lint = HTML::Lint->new( only_types => [HTML::Lint::Error::STRUCTURE, HTML::Lint::Error::FLUFF] ); $lint->parser() Returns the parser object for this object, creating one if necessary. $lint->parse( $text ) $lint->parse( $code_ref ) Passes in a chunk of HTML to be linted, either as a piece of text, or a code reference. See HTML::Parser's "parse_file" method for details. $lint->parse_file( $file ) Analyzes HTML directly from a file. The $file argument can be a filename, an open file handle, or a reference to an open file handle. See HTML::Parser's "parse_file" method for details. $lint->eof Signals the end of a block of text getting passed in. This must be called to make sure that all parsing is complete before looking at errors. Any parameters (and there shouldn't be any) are passed through to HTML::Parser's eof() method. $lint->errors() In list context, "errors" returns all of the errors found in the parsed text. Each error is an object of the type HTML::Lint::Error. In scalar context, it returns the number of errors found. $lint->clear_errors() Clears the list of errors, in case you want to print and clear, print and clear. $lint->only_types( $type1[, $type2...] ) Specifies to only want errors of a certain type. $lint->only_types( HTML::Lint::Error::STRUCTURE ); Calling this without parameters makes the object return all possible errors. The error types are "STRUCTURE", "HELPER" and "FLUFF". See HTML::Lint::Error for details on these types. $lint->gripe( $errcode, [$key1=>$val1, ...] ) Adds an error message, in the form of an HTML::Lint::Error object, to the list of error messages for the current object. The file, line and column are automatically passed to the HTML::Lint::Error constructor, as well as whatever other key value pairs are passed. For example: $lint->gripe( 'attr-repeated', tag => $tag, attr => $attr ); Usually, the user of the object won't call this directly, but just in case, here you go. $lint->newfile( $filename ) Call "newfile()" whenever you switch to another file in a batch of linting. Otherwise, the object thinks everything is from the same file. Note that the list of errors is NOT cleared. Note that $filename does NOT need to match what's put into parse() or parse_file(). It can be a description, a URL, or whatever. MODIFYING HTML
::LINT'S BEHAVIOR Sometimes you'll have HTML that for some reason cannot conform to HTML::Lint's expectations. For those instances, you can use HTML comments to modify HTML::Lint's behavior. Say you have an image where for whatever reason you can't get dimensions for the image. This HTML snippet: <img src="logo.png" height="120" width="50" alt="Company logo"> <img src="that.png"> causes this error: foo.html (14:20) <img src="that.png"> tag has no HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes But if for some reason you can't get those dimensions when you build the page, you can at least stop HTML::Lint complaining about it. <img src="this.png" height="120" width="50" alt="Company logo"> <!-- html-lint elem-img-sizes-missing: off, elem-img-alt-missing: off --> <img src="that.png"> <!-- html-lint elem-img-sizes-missing: on, elem-img-alt-missing: off --> If you want to turn off all HTML::Lint warnings for a block of code, use <!-- html-lint all: off --> And turn them back on with <!-- html-lint all: off --> You don't have to use "on" and "off". For "on", you can use "true" or "1". For "off", you can use "0" or "false". For a list of possible errors and their codes, see HTML::Lint::Error, or run perldoc HTML::Lint::Error. BUGS, WISHES AND CORRESPONDENCE All bugs and requests are now being handled through GitHub. https://github.com/petdance/html-lint/issues DO NOT send bug reports to http://rt.cpan.org/ or http://code.google.com/ TODO
o Check for attributes that require values o <TABLE>s that have no rows. o Form fields that aren't in a FORM o Check for valid entities, and that they end with semicolons o DIVs with nothing in them. o HEIGHT= that have percents in them. o Check for goofy stuff like: <b><li></b><b>Hello Reader - Spanish Level 1 (K-3)</b> COPYRIGHT &; LICENSE Copyright 2005-2012 Andy Lester. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License v2.0. http://www.opensource.org/licenses/Artistic-2.0 Please note that these modules are not products of or supported by the employers of the various contributors to the code. AUTHOR
Andy Lester, andy at petdance.com perl v5.14.2 2012-04-06 HTML::Lint(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:13 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy