I want to display post view in localize number. I add these function in function.php to do so
function make_bangla_number($str)
{
$engNumber = array(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0);
$bangNumber = array('১','২','৩','৪','৫','৬','à§','৮','৯','০');
$converted = str_replace($engNumber, $bangNumber, $str);
return $converted;
}
add_filter( 'the_views', 'make_bangla_number' );
But I am unable to show the number in localize. Whenever i call the_views it shows the english number. Any idea how to show the post view number in localize language?
For further info here is my post view function:
// function to count post views.
function setPostViews($postID) {
$count_key = 'views';
$count = get_post_meta($postID, $count_key, true);
if($count==''){
$count = 0;
delete_post_meta($postID, $count_key);
add_post_meta($postID, $count_key, '0');
}else{
$count++;
update_post_meta($postID, $count_key, $count);
}
}
// function to display number of post views.
function the_views($postID){
$count_key = 'views';
$count = get_post_meta($postID, $count_key, true);
if($count==''){
delete_post_meta($postID, $count_key);
add_post_meta($postID, $count_key, '0');
return "0 View";
}
return $count.' বার';
}
Parvez,
There is support available for Bangla Language in WordPress, please refer http://codex.wordpress.org/WordPress_in_Your_Language#Bangla_-Bengali.28bn_BD.29
You must required to install Bangla Language Pack to your WordPress, which you can found from below links...
http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress-i18n/bn_BD/trunk/messages/
http://www.shadhinbangla.com/wordpress-bangla-language-pack-beta-3/2011/10/
Also, you must check CHARSET must set to UTF-8 in your HTML code and your MySQL DB must be create with Collation CHARSET UTF-8 to store Bangla value in DB.
Also I found one old WordPress Plugin to show Date & Time in Bangla, you can refer their code also to solve your problem. Here is plugin link...
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/bangla-numbers-in-date-and-time/
Or you can ask for help to WordPress Support team.
Hey, I recently found detailed draft to setup Bangla Language in WordPress, please refer this link...
http://www.lavluda.com/2008/11/08/wordpress-with-full-bangla-language-support/
Related
I've tryed this solution here Jsoup set Accept-Language to make my JSoup connection only accept pages that come in english. Unfortunately it didn't work and my output was still:
I don't know if this happened because when the user agent says ("Accept-Language", "en") is to rather take english pages version instead of other languages or really for just accept the english ones. Anyway, the question speaks for itself, if there is a way to, how may I set the JSoup connection to only accept english pages?
Is it possible for you to write a language check method
public String languageCheck(String page){
String result = ""
List<String> pagesArray= new ArrayList<String>();
pagesArray.add(page);
if(pagesArray.get(0)!=null){
char []test = pagesArray.get(0).trim().toCharArray();
if(Character.isLetter(test[0]))
{
System.out.println("ok");
result = "okay"
}else{
System.out.println("Nok");
result = "Not Okay"
}
}
return result;
}
use this method to remove non English pages, hope it helps you
I'm using the Laravel Lang class for localization of my web app. I've added two languages to the languages array in application/config/application.php. This changes the default language it uses for localization to whatever the first part of the URI indicates (e.g. bla.com/en/bla and bla.com/co/bla). Now I need to be able to check what the current default language is in my view. However, the Lang class provides no way of checking this as far as I've been able to figure out, as the Lang::$language variable is protected. Is there any way of checking this apart from manually parsing the URI?
The cleanest way to know the current language of your website in Laravel appears to be :
Lang::locale();
https://laravel.com/api/5.8/Illuminate/Translation/Translator.html#method_locale
It's different than this command that will return the default language of your website :
Config::get('app.locale');
An alternative, a bit shorter way could be using something like this:
app()->getLocale()
The advantage of this is that IDEs such as PHPStorm recognize this function and can help you develop much faster.
BenjaminRH's answer is very good, and his suggested approach works perfectly. I've improved the snippet a bit. Now it detects the browser language and checks if that language is supported according to the application's config file.
It's a quick hack, but it works on my app. Note that the application language is also set now. Feel free to use ore improve it.
Route::filter('before', function()
{
// current uri language ($lang_uri)
$lang_uri = URI::segment(1);
// Set default session language if none is set
if(!Session::has('language'))
{
// use lang in uri, if provided
if(in_array($lang_uri, Config::get('application.languages')))
{
$lang = $lang_uri;
}
// detect browser language
elseif(isset(Request::server('http_accept_language')))
{
$headerlang = substr(Request::server('http_accept_language'), 0, 2);
if(in_array($headerlang, Config::get('application.languages')))
{
// browser lang is supported, use it
$lang = $headerlang;
}
// use default application lang
else
{
$lang = Config::get('application.language');
}
}
// no lang in uri nor in browser. use default
else
{
// use default application lang
$lang = Config::get('application.language');
}
// set application language for that user
Session::put('language', $lang);
Config::set('application.language', $lang);
}
// session is available
else
{
// set application to session lang
Config::set('application.language', Session::get('language'));
}
// prefix is missing? add it
if(!in_array($lang_uri, Config::get('application.languages')))
{
return Redirect::to(URI::current());
}
// a valid prefix is there, but not the correct lang? change app lang
elseif(in_array($lang_uri, Config::get('application.languages')) AND $lang_uri != Config::get('application.language'))
{
Session::put('language', $lang_uri);
Config::set('application.language', $lang_uri);
}
});
In the newer Laravel versions, you can get the current language with:
Config::get('app.locale');
This would work fine
lang="{{ app()->getLocale() }}"
I've figured out a solution to the language problem (thanks to nickstr on the IRC and the accepted answer to this question). It involves storing the current language as a session variable, which is updated when the language uri segment is changed.
Route::filter('before', function()
{
// Do stuff before every request to your application...
// Default language ($lang) & current uri language ($lang_uri)
$lang = 'he';
$lang_uri = URI::segment(1);
// Set default session language if none is set
if(!Session::has('language'))
{
Session::put('language', $lang);
}
// Route language path if needed
if($lang_uri !== 'en' && $lang_uri !== 'he')
{
Return Redirect::to($lang.'/'.URI::current());
}
// Set session language to uri
elseif($lang_uri !== Session::get('language'))
{
Session::put('language', $lang_uri);
}
});
This might help.
Config::get('application.language')
You can use
https://github.com/mcamara/laravel-localization
Laravel Localization uses the URL given for the request. In order to achieve this purpose, a group should be added into the routes.php file. It will filter all pages that must be localized.
// app/routes.php
Route::group(array('prefix' => LaravelLocalization::setLanguage()), function()
{
/** ADD ALL LOCALIZED ROUTES INSIDE THIS GROUP **/
Route::get('/', function()
{
return View::make('hello');
});
Route::get('test',function(){
return View::make('test');
});
});
/** OTHER PAGES THAT SHOULD NOT BE LOCALIZED **/
Once this group is added to the routes file, an user can access to all languages added into the 'languagesAllowed' ('en' and 'es' for default, look at the config section to change that option). For example, an user can now access to two different languages, using the following addresses:
http://laravel.com/en
http://laravel.com/es
http://laravel.com
I use App::getLocale() which is probably the most supported way as the App::setLocale('EN') method is used in the documentation.
You can use this method everywhere. If it throughs an error somewhere, you can use \App::... to make it work.
I'm using Laravel 5.0.
Your can get current language in laravel blade by:
{{Lang::locale()}}
The Lang class is specifically for outputting the correct language and as you say manages the language internally.
Looking through the API there is no method to help you directly with this and parsing the URI to get the language would seem the appropriate course of action.
You can always just do this to retrieve the language string in the URI:
$language = URI::segment(1);
Examining Laravel Requests
I have a problem with a magento installation. I used Magento ver. 1.5.0.1, community edition to develop this website http://cissmarket.com/.
The problem appears when I change the language from the EU version to French and after that to German. The change to french is ok, but when in the same page i change to German i receive a 404 error. Also this is generation 404 errors in the Google webmaster tools and when i try for example to take this link and paste it in the browser it gives me also a 404 error. I have there some 50 products and ~550 404 errors in Google Webmaster tools. I understand that the problem is from what I described.
Moreover I have a SEO problem since I have this page in french:
http://cissmarket.com/de/cartouches-refilables.html
And when I switch to the german version of the website it takes me to this link
http://cissmarket.com/de/cartouches-refilables.html?___from_store=fr (if i try now to switch to uk I will get the 404 mentioned above)
instead of going to this one:
http://cissmarket.com/de/nachfullpatronen.html
Already checked this 404 error when switching between stores when in a category on magento but it does not relate to my problem.
About settings:
I use the caching service and also I did index all the content.
The product or category I am trying to access is available and set active for all the languages.
System > General > Web > URL options > Add Store Code to Urls is set
to yes.
System > General > Web > Search Engines Optimization > Use Web Server
Rewrites is set to yes.
No other changes has been made to the .htaccess file except for the
ones that the system itself made.
So to conclude: the problem is the 404 given by 2 succesive changes of the language and the bad url address when I switch from one page to another.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
UPDATE: tried this http://www.activo.com/how-to-avoid-the-___from_store-query-parameter-when-switching-store-views-in-magento but it results in a 404 at the first language change
Edit #1:
Found the problem: file languages.phtml contained this code <?php echo str_replace ("/fr/","/de/",$_lang->getCurrentUrl()); ?> and actually did replace only the language code and not the whole url according to the corresponding translation.
So applied to this
http://cissmarket.com/fr/cartouches-refilables.html
it will return
http://cissmarket.com/de/cartouches-refilables.html
So does anyone know how to get the corresponding URL of the current page for the other languages available in the store?
Edit #2 (using #Vinai solution):
It works on the product pages but not on the category yet.
There is no such thing in the native Magento as far as I know.
That said, you can use the following code to get the current page URL for each store.
$resource = Mage::getSingleton('core/resource');
$requestPath = Mage::getSingleton('core/url')->escape(
trim(Mage::app()->getRequest()->getRequestString(), '/')
);
$select = $resource->getConnection('default_read')->select()
->from(array('c' => $resource->getTableName('core/url_rewrite')), '')
->where('c.request_path=?', $requestPath)
->where('c.store_id=?', Mage::app()->getStore()->getId())
->joinInner(
array('t' => $resource->getTableName('core/url_rewrite')),
"t.category_id=c.category_id AND t.product_id=c.product_id AND t.id_path=c.id_path",
array('t.store_id', 't.request_path')
);
$storeUrls = (array) $resource->getConnection('default_read')
->fetchPairs($select);
This will give you an array with the array key being the store IDs and the array values being the request path after the Magento base URL, e.g. assuming your French store has the ID 1 and the German one has the ID 2, you would get:
Array
(
[1] => cartouches-refilables.html
[2] => nachfullpatronen.html
)
Then, in the foreach loop where the URL for each store is output, use
<?php $url = isset($storeUrls[$_lang->getId()]) ? $_lang->getUrl($storeUrls[$_lang->getId()]) : $_lang->getCurrentUrl() ?>
The call to $_lang->getUrl() will add the base URL, so you will get the full URL for each store (e.g. http://cissmarket.com/de/nachfullpatronen.html). If no store view value is found in the core_url_rewrite table it will revert to the default behaviour.
You still need the ___store=fr query parameter because otherwise Magento will think you are trying to access the new path in the context of the old store. Luckily, the getUrl() call an the store model adds that for you automatically.
The code querying the database can be anywhere of course (since its PHP), even in the template, but please don't put it there. The correct place to have code that access the database is a resource model. I suggest you create a resource model and put it in a method there.
I've found an ugly patch until a better approach comes up.
In the admin section, i've added the following javascript inside the wysiwyg in CMS > PAGES > (My 404 pages) (at the beginning of the wysiwyg) :
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">// <![CDATA[
var lang = "en";
var rooturl = "{{config path="web/unsecure/base_url"}}"
var url = document.location.href;
if(!(url.match("/"+lang+"/")))
{
var newUrl = url.replace(rooturl , rooturl+lang+"/" );
window.location.href = newUrl;
}
// ]]></script>
(Note: you need to do this for all of your translated 404 pages. In each 404 page you need to modify lang="en" for your storeview url value)
Because the wysiwyg (tiny_mce) does not allow javascript to be threated, you'll have to modify js/mage/adminhtml/wysiwyg/tinymce/setup.js. Add the following code under line 97 (under "var settings = "):
extended_valid_elements : 'script[language|type|src]',
For Magento 1.7.0.2 and 1.8.0.0 this is the bugfix:
Starting from line 251 of /app/code/core/Mage/Core/Model/Url/Rewrite.php
:
Mage::app()->getCookie()->set(Mage_Core_Model_Store::COOKIE_NAME, $currentStore->getCode(), true);
// endur 02-03-2013 fix for missed store code
// $targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/' . $this->getRequestPath();
if (Mage::getStoreConfig('web/url/use_store') && $storeCode = Mage::app()->getStore()>getCode()) {
$targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/' . $storeCode . '/' .$this->getRequestPath();
} else {
$targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/' . $this->getRequestPath();
}
// endur 02-03-2013 end
Make sure to create a custom copy of the file in:
/app/code/local/Mage/Core/Model/Url/Rewrite.php or:
/app/code/local/YourTheme/Mage/Core/Model/Url/Rewrite.php
source:
It looks like a bug in Magento 1.7. Here is a hack that worked for me.
It should work for a two language store with store code in URL
in var/www/html/shop1/app/code/core/Mage/Core/Model/Url/Rewrite.php
remove this line
// $targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/' . $this->getRequestPath();
and add these:
$storecode = Mage::app()->getStore()->getCode();
if ($storecode='en')
{
$targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/'.$storecode.'/' . $this->getRequestPath();
}
else
{
$targetUrl = $request->getBaseUrl(). '/' . $this->getRequestPath();
}
Here a another solution for this problem. Just add this code after "$this->load($pathInfo, 'request_path');" in app/code/core/Mage/Core/Model/Url/Rewrite.php:
if (!$this->getId() && !isset($_GET['___from_store'])) {
$db = Mage::getSingleton('core/resource')->getConnection('default_read');
$result = $db->query('select store_id from core_url_rewrite WHERE request_path = "' . $pathInfo . '"');
if ($result) {
$storeIds = array();
if($row = $result->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)) {
$storeId = $row['store_id'];
$storeCode = Mage::app()->getStore($storeId)->getCode();
header("HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently");
header("Location: http://" . $_SERVER['HTTP_HOST'] . "/" . $pathInfo . "?___store=" . $storeCode);
exit();
}
}
}
guys. For this error there is magento module. It have rewrite 2 models
http://www.magentocommerce.com/magento-connect/fix-404-error-in-language-switching.html
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How can i select the fragment after the '#' symbol in my URL using PHP?
The result that i want is "photo45".
This is an example URL:
http://example.com/site/gallery/1#photo45
If you want to get the value after the hash mark or anchor as shown in a user's browser: This isn't possible with "standard" HTTP as this value is never sent to the server (hence it won't be available in $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"] or similar predefined variables). You would need some sort of JavaScript magic on the client side, e.g. to include this value as a POST parameter.
If it's only about parsing a known URL from whatever source, the answer by mck89 is perfectly fine though.
That part is called "fragment" and you can get it in this way:
$url=parse_url("http://example.com/site/gallery/1#photo45 ");
echo $url["fragment"]; //This variable contains the fragment
A) already have url with #hash in PHP? Easy! Just parse it out !
if( strpos( $url, "#" ) === false ) echo "NO HASH !";
else echo "HASH IS: #".explode( "#", $url )[1]; // arrays are indexed from 0
Or in "old" PHP you must pre-store the exploded to access the array:
$exploded_url = explode( "#", $url ); $exploded_url[1];
B) You want to get a #hash by sending a form to PHP? => Use some JavaScript MAGIC! (To pre-process the form)
var forms = document.getElementsByTagName('form'); //get all forms on the site
for (var i = 0; i < forms.length; i++) { //to each form...
forms[i].addEventListener( // add a "listener"
'submit', // for an on-submit "event"
function () { //add a submit pre-processing function:
var input_name = "fragment"; // name form will use to send the fragment
// Try search whether we already done this or not
// in current form, find every <input ... name="fragment" ...>
var hiddens = form.querySelectorAll('[name="' + input_name + '"]');
if (hiddens.length < 1) { // if not there yet
//create an extra input element
var hidden = document.createElement("input");
//set it to hidden so it doesn't break view
hidden.setAttribute('type', 'hidden');
//set a name to get by it in PHP
hidden.setAttribute('name', input_name);
this.appendChild(hidden); //append it to the current form
} else {
var hidden = hiddens[0]; // use an existing one if already there
}
//set a value of #HASH - EVERY TIME, so we get the MOST RECENT #hash :)
hidden.setAttribute('value', window.location.hash);
}
);
}
Depending on your form's method attribute you get this hash in PHP by:
$_GET['fragment'] or $_POST['fragment']
Possible returns: 1. ""[empty string] (no hash) 2. whole hash INCLUDING the #[hash] sign (because we've used the window.location.hash in JavaScript which just works that way :) )
C) You want to get the #hash in PHP JUST from requested URL?
YOU CAN'T !
...(not while considering regular HTTP requests)...
...Hope this helped :)
I've been searching for a workaround for this for a bit - and the only thing I have found is to use URL rewrites to read the "anchor". I found in the apache docs here http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/rewrite/advanced.html the following...
By default, redirecting to an HTML anchor doesn't work, because mod_rewrite escapes the # character, turning it into %23.
This, in turn, breaks the redirection.
Solution: Use the [NE] flag on the RewriteRule. NE stands for No
Escape.
Discussion: This technique will of course also work with other special
characters that mod_rewrite, by default, URL-encodes.
It may have other caveats and what not ... but I think that at least doing something with the # on the server is possible.
You can't get the text after the hash mark. It is not sent to the server in a request.
I found this trick if you insist want the value with PHP.
split the anchor (#) value and get it with JavaScript, then store as cookie, after that get the cookie value with PHP
If you are wanting to dynamically grab the hash from URL, this should work:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/57368072/2062851
<script>
var hash = window.location.hash, //get the hash from url
cleanhash = hash.replace("#", ""); //remove the #
//alert(cleanhash);
</script>
<?php
$hash = "<script>document.writeln(cleanhash);</script>";
echo $hash;
?>
You can do it by a combination of javascript and php:
<div id="cont"></div>
And by the other side;
<script>
var h = window.location.hash;
var h1 = (win.substr(1));//string with no #
var q1 = '<input type="text" id="hash" name="hash" value="'+h1+'">';
setInterval(function(){
if(win1!="")
{
document.querySelector('#cont').innerHTML = q1;
} else alert("Something went wrong")
},1000);
</script>
Then, on form submit you can retrieve the value via $_POST['hash'] (set the form)
You need to parse the url first, so it goes like this:
$url = "https://www.example.com/profile#picture";
$fragment = parse_url($url,PHP_URL_FRAGMENT); //this variable holds the value - 'picture'
If you need to parse the actual url of the current browser, you need to request to call the server.
$url = $_SERVER["REQUEST_URI"];
$fragment = parse_url($url,PHP_URL_FRAGMENT); //this variable holds the value - 'picture'
Getting the data after the hashmark in a query string is simple. Here is an example used for when a client accesses a glossary of terms from a book. It takes the name anchor delivered (#tesla), and delivers the client to that term and highlights the term and its description in blue so its easy to see.
setup your strings with a div id, so the name anchor goes where its supposed to and the JavaScript can change the text colors
<div id="tesla">Tesla</div>
<div id="tesla1">An energy company</div>
Use JavaScript to do the heavy work, on the server side, inserted in your PHP page, or wherever..
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.9.1.min.js"></script>
I am launching the Java function automatically when the page is loaded.
<script>
$( document ).ready(function() {
get the anchor (#tesla) from the URL received by the server
var myhash1 = $(location).attr('hash'); //myhash1 == #tesla
trim the hash sign off of it
myhash1 = myhash1.substr(1) //myhash1 == tesla
I need to highlight the term and the description so I create a new var
var myhash2 = '1';
myhash2 = myhash1.concat(myhash2); //myhash2 == tesla1
Now I can manipulate the text color for the term and description
var elem = document.getElementById(myhash1);
elem.style.color = 'blue';
elem = document.getElementById(myhash2);
elem.style.color = 'blue';
});
</script>
This works. client clicks link on client side (example.com#tesla) and goes right to the term. the term and the description are highlighted in blue by JavaScript for quick reading .. all other entries left in black..
I want to parse a random website, modify the content so that every word is a link (for a dictionary tooltip) and then display the website in an iframe.
I'm not looking for a complete solution, but for a hint or a possible strategy. The linking is my problem, parsing the website and displaying it in an iframe is quite simple. So basically I have a String with all the html content. I'm not even sure if it's better to do it serverside or after the page is loaded with JS.
I'm working with Ruby on Rails, jQuery, jRails.
Note: The content of the href tag depends on the word.
Clarification:
I tried a regexp and it already kind of works:
#site.gsub!(/[A-Za-z]+(?:['-][A-Za-z]+)?|\\d+(?:[,.]\\d+)?/) {|word| '' + word + ''}
But the problem is to only replace words in the text and leave the HTML as it is. So I guess it is a regex problem...
Thanks for any ideas.
I don't think a regexp is going to work for this - or, at least, it will always be brittle. A better way is to parse the page using Hpricot or Nokogiri, then go through it and modify the nodes that are plain text.
It sounds like you have it mostly planned out already.
Split the content into words and then for each word, create a link, such as whatever
EDIT (based on your comment):
Ahh ... I recommend you search around for screen scraping techniques. Most of them should start with removing anything between < and > characters, and replacing <br> and <p> with newlines.
I would use Nokogiri to remove the HTML structure before you use the regex.
no_html = Nokogiri::HTML(html_as_string).text
Simple. Hash the HTML, run your regex, then unhash the HTML.
<?php
class ht
{
static $hashes = array();
# hashes everything that matches $pattern and saves matches for later unhashing
function hash($text, $pattern) {
return preg_replace_callback($pattern, array(self,'push'), $text);
}
# hashes all html tags and saves them
function hash_html($html) {
return self::hash($html, '`<[^>]+>`');
}
# hashes and saves $value, returns key
function push($value) {
if(is_array($value)) $value = $value[0];
static $i = 0;
$key = "\x05".++$i."\x06";
self::$hashes[$key] = $value;
return $key;
}
# unhashes all saved values found in $text
function unhash($text) {
return str_replace(array_keys(self::$hashes), self::$hashes, $text);
}
function get($key) {
return self::$hashes[$key];
}
function clear() {
self::$hashes = array();
}
}
?>
Example usage:
ht::hash_html($your_html);
// your word->href converter here
ht::unhash($your_formatted_html);
Oh... right, I wrote this in PHP. Guess you'll have to convert it to ruby or js, but the idea is the same.