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I've tried react-native-file-picker, react-native-file-chooser, react-native-document-chooser etc, but none of them are working properly. Can anyone suggest me a good functional file picker for choosing files from device storage?
On a personal opinion, I use react-native-document-picker.
The installation and the usage is well mentioned in their docs
Right now it supports most general use cases required for file upload
All type of Files 'public.allFiles' or
DocumentPickerUtil.allFiles()
Only PDF 'public.pdf' or DocumentPickerUtil.pdf()
Audio 'public.audio' or DocumentPickerUtil.audio()
Plain Text 'public.plainText' or DocumentPickerUtil.plainText()
The rest of the restrictions can be modified based upon your file type option as it provides with the following file res options
res.uri,
res.type, // mime type
res.fileName,
res.fileSize
I use react-native-file-picker, because It can select all the files in the phone.
But react-native-document-picker has a very limited selection of files
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I'm looking for a library/code snippet that would allow the creation of a very basic HTTP server, that works on Windows.
I've seen the Ktor project, but it doesn't
support Windows unfortunately. Is that something that can easily be done without using an entire framework?
I only need to serve some generated text on one or two routes, I don't care too much about the headers, status codes etc. :)
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Does any one know where can I get Mule latest version documentation in PDF format? I have been searching for it, I found chapert-6 Mule entry point resolver sets in PDF format. That means other chapters are also should be there but I couldn't fine myself. Any help is appreciated.
There isn't a pdf version of the documentation yet. If you want you can either save the documentation pages to download the different sections or you can look at the book Mule in Action. For more information you can check out here.
If you have an enterprise license, you can download the complete used guide from customer support portal in PDF format.
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I am making an application and would like for this application to be able to retrieve data from Mozilla Thunderbird. However, I have only been able to find an API for Thunderbird extensions. Is there an API that will allow native applications, outside of Thunderbird to interact with Thunderbird's databases?
No. But you could create a Thunderbird extension and communicate with it via TCP sockets (see nsIServerSocket). That extension would do the "dirty work" for you. If you want to get the data while Thunderbird isn't running then the only solution will be redoing the database reading logic in your application (Thunderbird is open-source of course but reusing its code will be hard). Btw, the .msf files use the infamous Mork file format.
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I need a simple library or tool with which I can upload arbitrary files (other than the explicitly supported formats, like .doc, .docx, .xls, .pdf, .txt, .ppt etc.) to Google Docs. The Perl module WWW::Google::Docs::Upload doesn't work, I get an exception (Link not found at /usr/local/share/perl/5.8.8/WWW/Google/Docs/Upload.pm line 39; it's from 2008). Any programming language which is easy to run on Linux should be fine.
The responses How to programatically upload document on Google Docs? suggest using the API directly. Is there a tool or library which is a convenient wrapper around the API?
You can upload arbitrary files by automating the Web UI.
See how to do this here: http://code.google.com/a/eclipselabs.org/p/googledocs-rse/wiki/UploadAnyFileToGoogleDocs
The project you want is called googlecl - see http://code.google.com/p/googlecl/wiki/Manual
The googlecl (google command line) tool allows you to upload docs.
http://code.google.com/p/googlecl/
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I want to write a tool that helps me search pdf/chm/djvu files in linux. Any pointers on how to go about it?
The major problem is reading/importing data from all these files. Can this be done with C and shell scripting?
Tracker ships with Ubuntu 8.04 -- it was a significant switch from Beagle which users believed was too resource (CPU) intensive and didn't yield good enough results. It indexes both pdf and chm and according to this bug report it also indexes djvu.
Note that djvu is an image compression format (optimized to compress 'pictures of text', typically the results of scanning). As such, you won't be able to search for text, except in the metadata -this is what the link sent by cdleary refers to-, or if you first use OCR on the document to convert it into text.
The same is true for PDFs which content are scanned articles/books.
How about a plugin for Beagle ?
It already searches PDFs but you can add other file types.
Here is the relevant wikipedia page : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beagle_(software)