I expect Gii module generator generate for 'admin' as follows:
modules/admin/AdminModule.php
modules/admin/components
modules/admin/controllers/DefaultController.php
modules/admin/messages
modules/admin/models
modules/admin/views/default/index.php
modules/admin/views/layouts
but it just generate list below:
modules\admin\AdminModule.php
modules\admin\controllers\DefaultController.php
modules\admin\views\default\index.php
Why?
How could I make it generate rest of those?
My first list expectation is according to "Web Application Development with Yii and PHP by Jeffrey Winesett" book.
That book was published a while ago (possibly for v1.0), so things will have changed since. What you are running into may be a good example of that.
IT appears that the missing items are folders without any content. I may be wrong but it makes sense.
Best wishes.
Related
I'm trying to find a way to get all the comments from a particular build in TeamCity via the Rest API. How can one do that?
http://teamcity:port/httpAuth/app/rest/changes?locator=build:(id:77651)&fields=count,change:(version,username,date,href,comment,files)
Via this URL, one can list out in custom fashion exactly the fields they wish to return. I don't think this is documented, i got this from their support folks. Enjoy!
PS - There are other examples out there which iterate over each change, this lists out all the changes for a particular build id in one place, for parsing.
I'm having a problem when trying to A/B test certain nodes in my node-tree in Umbraco.
What I want to do is to copy a node in the node-tree to a specific spot and use that B-structure to see which of the structures works best, using Google analytics.
For example we have two node structures, let's call them "Private" and "Sweden".
Their structure with childnodes and properties are exactly the same. The only difference between them is the propertyvalues (content). The "Private"-URL is www.mysite.com/Private and the "Sweden"-URL is www.mysite.com/Sweden.
What I would like to do is to change every link on the B-structure, so that it points to its match at the A-structure. The problem is that since it's two different structures, it will have two different alternative links.
With other words, it should be a coinsidence that it enters the B-structure, then be moved back to the A-structure in the next click.
We manage what page it should load (either the A-node or the B-node) with scripts, so that it has a 50% chance for each node, and if it lands on the B-node, Google analytics will save data. What we can't manage is that every link on that page will be to the A-node.
I'd appreciate any help I can get.
Regards,
David
There's a couple of ways that seem likely to give you a start at least.
The /config/urlrewriting.config file allows you to set up multiple redirect rules within umbraco so a section like the following might work in sending all requests (whether (/sweden/pagename/ or /private/pagename/) back to the private structure. Not sure how GA will handle it:
rewriteUrlParameter="ExcludeFromClientQueryString" destinationUrl="http://www.mysite.com/private/$1" redirect="Domain" redirectMode="Permanent" ignoreCase="true" />
Secondly a simple httpmodule (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307996) can process all page requests and redirect as required - you could do a gaq_push here directly or indirectly.
I'd be interested to know how you get on - it seems a good area for extension to Umbraco.
I'm not sure I have understood perfectly what you need to do, so please excuse any assumptions that may prove mistaken. Here's what I think:
Since A & B nodes should share the same html content (besides the links of course), why don't you make the link href attribute dynamic by using a bit of razor in the template or macro:
#{var isANode = CurrentPage.Parent.Name == "Sweden"; }
A similar approach would work if you are using web forms.
We finally came to the final decision to use the alternative template-solution. Since there seem to be no generic solution for my case of this problem we had to create an alternative template with specific macros to render the different information for every documenttype we're using.
Creating dynamic links for every page is a hell of a job in this stage in the project, since there are so many pages and links. Also some links are made in javascript, so there's another problem.
I copied the a-structure to another node, only for the reason to be able to change propertyvalues. There might be a problem logging and track the information with Google Analytics though, so that's the next step for us in this project. In our alternative templates we're getting the propertyvalues from the b-structure.
Still, if anyone have some better solution I'd highly appreciate it!
Regards,
David
I am new to unapi.. can anyone let me know how to use unapi with drupal for biliography. what are the steps to accomplish this task.
Follow steps described in http://unapi.info/specs/ . It's straightforward. Implementing unAPI in PHP is trivial. You just need to print a citation (BibTeX, etc) for each document.
see also: Generating bibliographic files (BibTeX, RIS, etc.) from database records
I'd like to create a userguide for the application I'm building using the Kohana framework, and I'm wondering if there's a way I can use the Kohana userguide module for this purpose.
I understand how to add userguide info for new modules that I create, and how to include my classes in the API, but I want to build a second, separate userguide for the actual application user, as opposed to the app developers.
At first, I thought I'd just try adding app help pages to the main userguide at APPPATH/guide. I tried adding a "application/guide" directory, and put a file in there called menu.md, but that just ended up replacing the Kohana menu in the userguide. After renaming the file to menu.myapp.md, it doesn't show up at all.
So then it occurs to me that I could simple edit modules/userguide/guide/menu.md to add sections for my app, and likewise add markdown files for each app component. But really it would be much better to have a completely separate userguide for app users since the Kohana documentation isn't relevant for them.
What's the best way to go about this? Should I create a duplicate of the entire userguide module and modify the routing, &c.? Or is there some way to set up both userguides using the one version of the module? Or am I barking up the wrong tree altogether? Is there some other module/approach that would be better for building "Help" pages for the app?
Thanks in advance for your help!
Yes, you can make docs for your application with the userguide. If you want examples, check out these links:
https://github.com/zombor/Auto-Modeler/blob/master/config/userguide.php
https://github.com/zombor/Auto-Modeler/tree/master/guide/auto-modeler
Note that you'll still get "api docs" and everything else, unless you change the config to hide them.
Once I have my renamed files I need to add them to my project's wiki page. This is a fairly repetitive manual task, so I guess I could script it but I don't know where to start.
The process is:
Got to appropriate page on the wiki
for each team member (DeveloperA, DeveloperB, DeveloperC)
{
for each of two files ('*_current.jpg', '*_lastweek.jpg')
{
Select 'Attach' link on page
Select the 'manage' link next to the file to be updated
Click 'Browse' button
Browse to the relevant file (which has the same name as the previous version)
Click 'Upload file' button
}
}
Not necessarily looking for the full solution as I'd like to give it a go myself.
Where to begin? What language could I use to do this and how difficult would it be?
Check if the wiki you mean to talk to supports XMLRPC, because if it does it should be a snap. I wrote a tool called WikiUp to solve a similar problem (updating a delineated section on a wiki page).
If you're writing in C#, the WebClient classes might be a good place to start. I bet people could give more specific advice if you mentioned which wiki platform you are using, and whether it requires authentication, though.
I'd probably start by downloading fiddler and watching the http requests from doing it manually. Then you could use some simple scripts and regexes to build your http requests for automating the process.
Of course, if your wildly lucky, your wiki would have a backend simple enough that you could just plug them into its db directly. :)
You might find CoScripter useful -- it's a Firefox extension that allows you to automate tasks you perform on websites. I'm not certain how you'd integrate this with the list of files you're changing on your local system, but it can certainly handle the file uploading through a web form.
Better bet is probably using cURL or a similar HTTP library with your programming language of choice. If you're on *nix, you can use the cURL commandline program inside your shell script to get this done fairly easily. (Like #jsight said you will need to analyze the actual forms you're using on the webpage, using Fiddler or just looking at the form elements and re-creating the POST through cURL.)