old JSFiddle not working in new JSFiddle - jsfiddle

I open this Fiddle: working Fiddle
And run it and it works
I create a new jsFiddle under my account and copy the "HMTL", CSS and "Javascript" from this jsFiddle into my newly created fiddle.
I insert the latest jQuery link into External Resources Save and run.
It shows the 2 hyperlinks, but not styled.
I click the Grow link and I get the error message:
{"error": "Please use POST request"}
So what do I need to do to get anything to work in fiddle

First, make sure your version uses the same version of jQuery that this example is using (i.e. jquery-1.11.1.min.js):
Next, check that your HTML DOCTYPE is HTML 5 and that your Javascript uses AngularJS 1.2.1.

Related

Is there a way to create a link that will execute a YouTrack command such as clone issue?

The "Generate Issue Template URL" functionality is clunky, and I'm try to work around it. I have a webpage outside of YouTrack with a list of links containing different templates for ticket writers. Any time a template changes we have to click the "generate issue template" then go update that link on our other web page. It would be nice to simply link to a template, by ID, that when saved will create a new issue or instead link directly to the clone command. The intent is that we won't have to update our template links going forward, and ticket writers will always get the latest version of the template they need.
Ideally it would be best if the entire call to YT could be in the href attribute of a link, but using AJAX is an option as well.
YT Version: 2021.3.22256
I've tried this, and a couple of variations, with no luck:
Template 1
In YouTrack there's no link you can pass a command into to get get it executed.
What you can do is to compose a workflow script to autofill issue fields as required. The only remaining bit is some kind of trigger to get script started. For that you can still use "Generate Issue Template URL" functionality with a single fields or any other marker to let the script recognize the right change to react to.

vue bootstrap page size issue

I have a simple vue app based on this official example
What I've added is this template for the login page. When displaying the login page directly by URL it is being rendered correctly:
But when I got it via the link from another page it is being sized incorrectly:
How could it be fixed? Thanks!
ps: sorry, I could not make an online example, just the entire source code on github

Change column to HTML type with import.io web extractor

I see several tutorials showing how to change the column type when creating a new extractor with import.io, however none of them seem to match the newest version. I was able to change the column type using the legacy desktop app, however wasn't able to ever publish the extractor. I assumed because the desktop app is now deprecated.
In the new web extractor I see no way to change the column type. Thus I get the content of the div I'm trying to scrape, but I'm wanting the div contents including all HTML. Thanks for any help.
Thanks to #andrew-fogg for pointing out that this is not yet available. http://support.import.io/forums/199278-ideas-forum/suggestions/13381848-data-type-support-in-new-version-of-import-io

Rally 2.0 example provided will not load

So I've recently decided to upgrade to Rally SDK 2.0. I'm using the starter kit and following the directions on the website. All I've done so far is added:
launch: function() {
this.iterationCombobox = this.add({
xtype: 'rallyiterationcombobox'
});
}
To the js file. Ran the rake command, loaded App.html into a browser. It is blank. According to the website, there should be a small combobox on the top left of the screen. I don't know what I missed, I assumed the example would work as the website displayed.
edit I should add that this isn't the only thing contained in the HTML file. I just meant that rake generates an HTML file at the beginning that adds //Add Code Here to the javascript function. I meant that the above code is the only tihng I've changed.
I tested your code snippet and it works in my testing. Did you paste the App code into a Custom HTML App in Rally? Or are you running outside of Rally?
If the latter, you'll need to modify the src attribute of the script tag in App.html:
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://rally1.rallydev.com/apps/2.0p5/sdk.js"></script>
So that it contains a fully-qualified reference to the AppSDK2 JS library.
The AppSDK API Docs have some good Examples of simple starter Apps. The Grid examples are good places to start. You can click on the "View Source" link within any of the Example apps and see the source code.

Is there a download function in jsFiddle?

Is there a download function in jsFiddle, so you can download an HTML with the CSS, HTML and JS in one file, so you can run it without jsFiddle for debug purposes?
Ok I found out:
You have to put /show a after the URL you're working on:
http://jsfiddle.net/<your_fiddle_id>/show/
It is the site that shows the results.
And then when you save it as a file. It is all in one HTML-file.
For example:
http://jsfiddle.net/Ua8Cv/show/
for the site http://jsfiddle.net/Ua8Cv
New answer to an old question:
Method 1:
Step 1: You have to put /show after the URL you are working on:
http://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle_id>/show/
It shows the output with a result header.
Step 2: Right click the bottom frame and select View Frame Source. That's it. You got the html code with online JS links, CSS.
Just Save it.
For Example:
http://jsfiddle.net/YRafQ/20/show/
for the site http://jsfiddle.net/YRafQ/20/
Note: View Frame Source and not View Page Source
Method 2:
You can use this code: view-source:http://fiddle.jshell.net/<fiddle_id>/show/light/
For Example: For my fiddle_id: YRafQ/20
view-source:http://fiddle.jshell.net/YRafQ/20/show/light/
Step 1:
Go to a fiddle page like jsfiddle.net/oskar/v5893p61
Step 2:
Add '/show' at the end of the URL, like jsfiddle.net/oskar/v5893p61/show
Step 3:
Right click on the page and click on the View frame source. You will get the HTML code including CSS in tag and Javascript (js) in tag. [Also source link of all library will be added].
See screenshot
Step 4:
Now you can save the source code in a .html file.
Adding /show does not present a pure source code, it's an embedded working example. To display it without any additional scripts, css and html, use:
http://fiddle.jshell.net/<fiddle id>/show/light/
An example:
http://fiddle.jshell.net/Ua8Cv/show/light/
No, JSFiddle doesn't have a download feature. However, it's not very difficult to get around that and save the contents of a fiddle anyway.
Since the time the accepted answer was posted, JSFiddle has made some recent UI and backend changes that affect the way a fiddle should be downloaded. Note the updated procedures below.
Simple Commandline Method
This method only downloads the fiddle's HTML, JavaScript, and CSS as a single file. The fiddle's external resources are not saved.
In the commandline shown below, fiddle_id refers to the ID number of the fiddle. For a fiddle with the URL "http://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle_user>/<fiddle_id>" or "http://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle_id>", only the fiddle_id is needed. The fiddle_user is unimportant.
At a shell prompt, enter the single commandline:
fiddleId=fiddle_id; curl "http://fiddle.jshell.net/${fiddleId}/show/" -H "Referer: http://fiddle.jshell.net/${fiddleId}/" --output "${fiddleId}.html"
The fiddle will be saved to a file named "fiddle_id.html".
Longer Browser Method
This method downloads the fiddle as well as its external resources. The steps given are based on using Google Chrome. Using other web browsers should work as well, but they may use different filenames.
Select the "Share/Embed" menu/link at the top of the JSFiddle edit page. In the dialog box that appears, copy the URL shown in the "Share full screen result" field. It will be of the form "http://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle_user>/<fiddle_id>/embedded/result/" or "http://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle_id>/embedded/result/".
Open a new browser window and paste in the URL copied in the previous step. Load that page.
Use your browser's save feature to save the page and all of its resources to your local computer. To save all the resources using Google Chrome, for example, be sure to select "Webpage, Complete" in the "Format" menu. Be sure to specify a name for the page. Let's say it's named "fiddle.html" for this example.
After the page is saved to your computer, you will have the "fiddle.html" file and a directory named "fiddle_files". The file "fiddle.html" is the wrapper page that JSFiddle uses to display a header with a "Result" title and other links. It will load your fiddle in an iframe element. For the most part, this file can be ignored or even deleted. Your fiddle's HTML, JavaScript, and CSS content will all be saved in the "fiddle_files" directory as a single file named "saved_resource.html".
Copy "fiddle_files/saved_resource.html" to wherever you'd like to use it. If your fiddle included items under "External Resources", those will also appear in the "fiddle_files" directory. Be sure to copy those files to the same place to which you copied "saved_resource.html", because the HTML file will refer to those resources using relative URLs.
As mentioned earlier, other browsers may name the files differently when they are saved. For example, Firefox names the combined HTML/JS/CSS file "fiddle_files/a.html".
Still no download functionality supported.. BUT.. you can use the jsfiddle-downloader node script.
Installation:
npm install jsfiddle-downloader -g
To download a single fiddle from its id:
jsfiddle-downloader -i <fiddle-id> [-o <output file>]
To download a single fiddle from its url:
jsfiddle-downloader -l <url> [-o <output file>]
jsfiddle-downloader -l jsfiddle.net/<user>/<fiddle-id>
jsfiddle-downloader -l https://jsfiddle.net/<fiddle-id>
jsfiddle-downloader -l https://jsfiddle.net/<user>/<fiddle-id>/show/ -o myfiddle.html
To download all scripts of a determinated 'user' from jsFiddle.net:
jsfiddle-downloader -u <user> [-o <output file>]
It'll download all backups in the currrent directory, the jsFiddles scripts will be named as:
[<output-folder>/]<id-fiddle>.html
The best way is:
Right-click on the output panel.
Choose view frame source, then the whole code will appear.
After that you can copy that code, and paste it in your computer.
You have to put /show a after the URL you're working on:
For example:
"http://jsfiddle.net/rkw79/PagTJ/show/"
for Field URL :
"http://jsfiddle.net/rkw79/PagTJ/"
after that save the file and go to the show folder(or the file name you have saved with) under that folder u will get a html file show_resource.HTML .that is your actual file.now open it in browser and view the source code. Best of luck--------Ujjwal Gupta
In a recent work I had to download a list of fiddle urls and create separate folder for each fiddles having separate html css js file for each, i have created the following crawler program for this.
https://github.com/sguha-work/FiddleCrawler
.It will create folder name with counter value and each folder will have a html, a css, a js and a details file. (The details file will holds the links of external resources).
I found an article under the above topic.There by I could take the full code .I will mention it.
Here are steps mentioned in the article:
Add embedded/result/ at the end of the JSFiddle URL you wanna grab.
Show the frame or the frame’s source code: right-click anywhere in the page and view the frame in a new tab or the source right-away
(requires Firefox).
Finally, save the page in your preferred format (MHT, HTML, TXT, etc.) and voilà!
also you can find it : https://sirusdark.wordpress.com/2014/04/10/how-to-save-and-download-jsfiddle-code/
You can download using this package in node js,
https://www.npmjs.com/package/jsfiddle-downloader
There is not such a proper way to download all the things all together from JSFiddle but there is a hack way to do just that.
Simply add "embedded/" or "embedded/result/" at the end of your JSFiddle URL!, and then you can save the whole page as an HTML file + the external libraries (if you wants).
If you want to download all of your fiddles to an offline folder, there is a script available for this:
https://github.com/isonno/DownloadJSF
Try copying and pasting your code into WebDen and then downloading it from there. Only drawback is that it only supports pure JS, html, and css, so any other code may need to be downloaded another way.
Okay, the easiest way, I found out was just changing the url (jsfiddle[dot]net) to fiddle[dot]jshell[dot]net/
There u have a clear html code, without any kind of iframe...
Example:
https://jsfiddle[dot]net/mfvmoy64/27/show/light/ -> http://fiddle[dot]jshell[dot]net/mfvmoy64/27/show/light/
(Must change the '.''s to "[dot]" because of stackeroverflow... :c)
PS: sry 4 bad english
There is npm-package jsfiddle-downloader.
Use http://jsfiddle.net//show/light/
then just use inspect element function of browser. you will get code in iframe tab. . in chrome just right click and cick on edit as html tab. and copy the html content. that is your actual code.
Ctrl + S, saves the entire fiddle, inside the files folder there is the clean page you are looking for