I add a lot of links to the document (Google Docs) every day. Then I click "Replace URL with its title" for each link. It is very uncomfortable.
Is it possible to automate this process using a script or something else? Please help me
Yes it is possible!
What you can do in this situation is to gather all the links you have in an array and then use string manipulation (such as regEx for example) in order to extract the title from the link.
For this task you can benefit from Apps Script - Apps Script is a powerful development platform which can be used to build web apps and automate tasks. What makes it special is the fact that it is easy to use and to create applications that integrate with G Suite.
Reference
Google Apps Script;
Text Class Apps Script;
Document Class Apps Script;
Document Class Apps Script - replaceText(searchPattern, replacement).
Related
I am developing a WebExtension for Firefox. In order to post my extension, it must not have any remote scripts in it.
In order to display some tweets in my extension's menu, I have used the Twitter-Post-Fetcher library, but I can't post my extension with it because the library uses remote scripts from twitter.com.
I prefer not to use the Twitter API if possible, because the requests would come from the extension's users.
No remote scripts means that if you are going execute code in the context of your extension, then the code must be included in the extension package, not hosted on some server. While there may be other ways to accomplish this (e.g. running the code in the page context, which may be acceptable, but may not), the default way to accomplish this is to: download the code that you are executing and use a copy that you include in the extension package.
This is the case for all code, including libraries such as jQuery. It is highly recommended that the code be an exact byte-by-byte copy of code that can be downloaded from a public repository, and that you indicate within your extension package the exact URL you used to obtain the code.
The reason for this is security. If downloading code at runtime was permitted, then that code could be trivially changed at any time. It would mean that having the add-on reviewed by Mozilla would be of no benefit.
Please see the Review Policies page on MDN, and all the pages linked from there, for more details.
Online Addon Builder - How to display custom icon for the extension inside Firefox's Addon Manager?
I know that's a more general question and before I can even submit this someone is going to throw a link at me but I've been there trust me...
I've built my addon using the online addon builder but I'm not ready to submit it to AMO for review quite yet as I feel it needs more to be complete. I can't find specific information relevant to exactly what I want to do using to online addon builder. I've installed and configured the localized SDK that is utilized using a tool called cfx and of course theres tons of documentation!
The Question: What all notable values can be set using the package.json that determine how the addon is displayed inside Addon Manager? What notable material/configurations can't be set using package.json and how do I implement them?
I've removed all warning and errors from my code but I'm using a hardcoded path to a image whereas before I was passing it as an arguement within the PageMod object to a content script. Why? I'm not sure but I know one of you know how to configure the extension where I can specify chrome://ez-magnetz/data/icon16.png or somehing similar. Which is better than using a JUID in the path name that can change.
My widget has an icon but how do I specify a primary icon for the extension to be displayed in the AM? (package.json||chrome.manifest)
Using the latter of the two(chrome.manifest) how do I include that inside my addon so that its detected?(For the purpose of an Extension Icon using the online addon builder if possible)
Will someone please provide me with a chrome.manifest template for a basic addon?
Do I need the install.rdf and what has precedence over configuration is it like:
install.rdf>>>chrome.manifest>>>package.json
I noticed very similar settings amongst them.
I've been to XUL school I see that there is useful information it just seems outdated in the context of my addon.
I've read the basic info on the package.json and implemented simple prefs and of course the addon's description.
My understanding is that I've created a bootstrapped addon using
Mozilla's Online Addon Builder. Is that correct? The only thing I
wish to do now is to have a personal icon displayed for my extension
in the Addon Manager!
+ I'd like to know how I may have and option for users to donate on AMO!
Thanks for any help in advance
To add an icon, just follow these two steps:
upload the icon you want to use to the data directory of your add-on, eg 'data/icon.png'
Add the relative path to the png file as an extra JSON property in the add-on info dialog, for example this:
{
"icon": "data/icon.png"
}
See this screenshot for an example of what it should look like:
https://dl.dropbox.com/u/44296964/Screen%20Shot%202013-01-07%20at%202.15.49%20PM.png
Aside: please only ask one question per post.
Lets say i want to develop an RSS Reader reusable component for iOS with a configuration file which can me updated by user. So my wish list is as follow:
Add the component to a new project in single click. Just like adding framework.
I also want that my source files are NOT visible to other user (developer).
And yes if there are resources associated with it should also seamlessly be added to new project.
And most importantly I want the developer to be able to adjust few parameters for my component eg specifying the URL for my RSS Reader.
In short after i am done all i want the developer to see are my header files and configuration file. Any ideas ?
You should use a fake framework as described here.
I am trying to build web based file archiving app (like Apple Time Machine) that watches an external hard drive and when ever a file/folder is added it writes the file path to a database that can be searched later. So if user added this folder "My Folder" on this date "04/16/12" to external HD "Drive 1" and needed to find that folder or its contents at a later date they could search the name, date or drive name and the corresponding results would be returned.
Is this possible with RoR or would I have to use another language or a combination of the two?
Ruby can access the local system, see here for some examples of Disk IO operations possible:
http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ruby/ruby_input_output.htm
Obviously, this means the ruby must be running on the local disk. In theory, RoR could be used along with vanilla ruby code for this purpose, so long as it was all running locally. Seems like a hassle to setup a web server simply for some software to use however.
See this question for a discussion of Ruby frameworks that aren't for web apps:
Ruby App MVC framework (not web)
No. Ruby on Rails is a web framework. You'll need to use something client-side such Objective-C, C++, or even Java.
As of now the workflow is something like, I import an SVN or a CVS repository and then compile a document locally on my machine to get either a ps or a pdf file. But I was wondering if there is a Web front-end to do all the stuff, like for instance, an editor using which you can edit the file online and then download just the pdf file by compiling it?
Any suggestions?
http://www.scribtex.com/pages/index
http://code.google.com/p/latex-lab/
latex-lab will build on top of the google apps editor base...
scribtex is hosted only it looks like.
Another to add to the list is TeXonWeb.
If you mean online LaTeX compilers, then there are two I know of - at baywifi.com (to PDF) and at ScienceSoft (to several formats). Haven't seen any full editors, though.
There is a CMS based on Latex out there at www.osreviews.net.
The best site I found to produce PDF from LaTeX online is PC Shows.
Verbosus offers an Online LaTeX Editor that supports PDF preview, HTTPS, syntax highlighting, code completion, templates, etc. (Additionally it offers an editor for Octave/Matlab)
This is less of a web-based interface than a simple drag-and-drop cgi script that converts latex syntax to a graphic... www.forkosh.com/mimetex.html
latex-online is a simple open source web service that compiles latex sources/public git repos and returns pdf's. It has both a simplistic web front-end and a command-line tool for interacting with the service - you might find it interesting.
One rather new possibility is https://texlive.net/
You can either interactively edit your documents or you can pass your document via the url to it. E.g. a simple hello world document can be constructed as
https://texlive.net/run?%5Cdocumentclass%7Barticle%7D%0A%5Cusepackage%7Bamsmath%7D%0A%5Cbegin%7Bdocument%7D%0AHello%20world!%0A%5Cend%7Bdocument%7D