Three ways to create Web-accessible calendars on your intranet
12-18-2008 07:00 AM
Let's take a look at three projects that are aimed at showing calendar information through a Web interface: WebCalendar, VCalendar, and CaLogic. These projects run on a LAMP server and provide a Web interface to calendar events.
Very new to this.....
What I would like to do:
Create a simple GUI/Web portal with 3 buttons and 1 text field
The three buttons need to take the input into the text field and use that as the variable to execute scripts located on a server
Problem:
How can i get the buttons on the... (3 Replies)
How can we create a background process programmatically?
One way I know of is to fork() and exit from the parent process, leaving the child running. It will run as a background process.
I would like to know if there are any other ways.
In perticular how are daemon processes created? (1 Reply)
hello
I would like to create an internal web site, but how do i make it with Aix ?
I must to install apache and send my http pages in the declared repertory ?
There are some configuration files to modify ??
thank you (2 Replies)
Hi all! I'm a web developer with a question.
We have a contractor that is working on a project that requires the user to access a ton of files on the clients Unix server. He has plans to built a VB interface for on site windows users to access those files and wants us to develop a web based... (4 Replies)
Web::Scraper::Filter(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Web::Scraper::Filter(3pm)NAME
Web::Scraper::Filter - Base class for Web::Scraper filters
SYNOPSIS
package Web::Scraper::Filter::YAML;
use base qw( Web::Scraper::Filter );
use YAML ();
sub filter {
my($self, $value) = @_;
YAML::Load($value);
}
1;
use Web::Scraper;
my $scraper = scraper {
process ".yaml-code", data => [ 'TEXT', 'YAML' ];
};
DESCRIPTION
Web::Scraper::Filter is a base class for text filters in Web::Scraper. You can create your own text filter by subclassing this module.
There are two ways to create and use your custom filter. If you name your filter Web::Scraper::Filter::Something, you just call:
process $exp, $key => [ 'TEXT', 'Something' ];
If you declare your filter under your own namespace, like 'MyApp::Filter::Foo',
process $exp, $key => [ 'TEXT', '+MyApp::Filter::Foo' ];
You can also inline your filter function without creating a filter class:
process $exp, $key => [ 'TEXT', sub { s/foo/bar/ } ];
Note that this function munges $_ and returns the count of replacement. Filter code special cases if the return value of the callback is
number and $_ value is updated.
You can, of course, stack filters like:
process $exp, $key => [ '@href', 'Foo', '+MyApp::Filter::Bar', &baz ];
AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa
perl v5.14.2 2009-03-24 Web::Scraper::Filter(3pm)