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pagetribe .

About this site - News Mixer - 0 views

  • Developers News Mixer is free and open source software, coded in Python with the Django Web development framework, and uses Facebook Connect for authentication. You can read more about our development process in our report, and find our source at Google Code.
  •  
    Developers News Mixer is free and open source software, coded in Python with the Django Web development framework, and uses Facebook Connect for authentication. You can read more about our development process in our report, and find our source at Google Code.
pagetribe .

Re: [Swftools-common] PDF2SWF and getTextSnapShot() - 0 views

  • that said, here there is my ActionScript code to highlight the text inside a PDF page. It works with Flash 8 or previous ONLY because the new Flash 9 has a different AVM interpreter (AVM2) and many things have changed. Please note: - ``txt`` is the text to search and highlight inside your page - ``mc`` points to _root.text that's where I was keeping my swf/pdf page you should change that so it references yours. Here is the code: function hltext ( txt ) { var mc = _root.text; var my_snap:TextSnapshot = mc.getTextSnapshot(); var start_pos:Number = 0; start_pos = my_snap.findText ( start_pos, txt, false ); while ( start_pos > 0 ) { trace ( start_pos ); my_snap.setSelected( start_pos, start_pos + txt.length, true ); start_pos += txt.length; start_pos = my_snap.findText ( start_pos, txt, false ); } }
  •  
    that said, here there is my ActionScript code to highlight the text inside a PDF page. It works with Flash 8 or previous ONLY because the new Flash 9 has a different AVM interpreter (AVM2) and many things have changed. Please note: - ``txt`` is the text to search and highlight inside your page - ``mc`` points to _root.text that's where I was keeping my swf/pdf page you should change that so it references yours. Here is the code: function hltext ( txt ) { var mc = _root.text; var my_snap:TextSnapshot = mc.getTextSnapshot(); var start_pos:Number = 0; start_pos = my_snap.findText ( start_pos, txt, false ); while ( start_pos > 0 ) { trace ( start_pos ); my_snap.setSelected( start_pos, start_pos + txt.length, true ); start_pos += txt.length; start_pos = my_snap.findText ( start_pos, txt, false ); } }
pagetribe .

Stir it up - News Mixer - 0 views

shared by pagetribe . on 23 Dec 08 - Cached
  •  
    click on title to see how comments are applied. It also uses a comment per facebook login to see what comments your friends have left.
pagetribe .

XML for PHP developers, Part 2: Advanced XML parsing techniques - 0 views

  •  
    $xml = new SimpleXMLElement($xmlstr); foreach ($xml->book as $book) { echo $book->plot, '
    '; }
mesbah095

Guest Post Online - 0 views

  •  
    Article Writing & Guestpost You Can Join this Site for Your Article & guest post, Just Easy way to join this site & total free Article site. This site article post to totally free Way. Guest Post & Article Post live to Life time only for Current & this time new User. http://guestpostonline.com
pagetribe .

A tour of git: the basics - 0 views

shared by pagetribe . on 19 Feb 09 - Cached
  • ~ suffix
  • HEAD~
  • HEAD~2" refers to two commits back
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • refers to the previous commit
  • $ git log HEAD~3..
  • git show 13ed136b
  • git status" tells us that the current branch is "master"
  • It’s a little bit helpful to know that we’ve modified hello.c, but we might prefer to know exactly what changes we’ve made to it.
  • git diff
  • To set your name and email address, just use the following commands:
  • git config --global user.name "Your Name" git config --global user.email "you@example.com"
  • --author option to the “git commit”
  • a blank line, and then one or more paragraphs with supporting detail. Since many tools only print the first line of a commit message by default, it’s important that the first line stands alone.
  • git commit --amend
  • misspelling in it
  • It's worth emphasizing the value of minimal, independent commits. The smaller the changes are the more useful the history will be when actually using the history, not just viewing it.
  • Just run "git pull" everytime you want to pull in new changes that have landed in the upstream repository.
  • Again, you'll see that this precisely matches the final portion of the output from "git pull". Using "git fetch" and "git merge" let us achieve exactly what "git pull" did, but we were able to stop in the middle to examine the situation, (and we could have decided to reject the changes and not merge them---leaving our master branch unchanged).
  • For now, let's return back to the tip of the master branch by just checking it out again: $ git checkout master
  • $ git --bare init --shared The --shared option sets up the necessary group file permissions so that other users in my group will be able to push into this repository as well.
  • Now, generally the purpose of pushing to a repository is to have some "collaboration point" where potentially multiple people might be pushing or pulling.
  • git clone
pagetribe .

http://nltk.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/book/ch01.html - 0 views

  • We can count how often a word occurs in a tex
  • Adding two lists creates a new list
  • count the occurrences of a particular word using text1.count('heaven')
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • By convention, m:n means elements m…n-1
  • A consequence of this last change is that the list only has four elements, and accessing a later value generates an error
  • We can join the words of a list to make a single string, or split a string into a list, as follows:
  • 'Monty Python'.split()
  • frequency distribution
  • frequency of each vocabulary item
  • find the 50 most frequent words
  • hese very long words are often hapaxes (i.e. unique) and perhaps it would be better to find frequently occurring long words.
  • Here are all words from the chat corpus that are longer than 7 characters, that occur more than 7 times:   >>> fdist5 = FreqDist(text5) >>> sorted([w for w in set(text5) if len(w) > 7 and fdist5[w] > 7]) ['#14-19teens', '#talkcity_adults', '((((((((((', '........', 'Question', 'actually', 'anything', 'computer', 'cute.-ass', 'everyone', 'football', 'innocent', 'listening', 'remember', 'seriously', 'something', 'together', 'tomorrow', 'watching'] >>>
  • The collocations() function does this for us
  • find bigrams that occur more often than we would expect based on the frequency of individual words.
  • fdist = FreqDist(samples) create a frequency distribution containing the given samples fdist.inc(sample) increment the count for this sample fdist['monstrous'] count of the number of times a given sample occurred fdist.freq('monstrous') frequency of a given sample fdist.N() total number of samples fdist.keys() the samples sorted in order of decreasing frequency for sample in fdist: iterate over the samples, in order of decreasing frequency fdist.max() sample with the greatest count fdist.tabulate() tabulate the frequency distribution fdist.plot() graphical plot of the frequency distribution fdist.plot(cumulative=True) cumulative plot of the frequency distribution fdist1 < fdist2 test if samples in fdist1 occur less frequently than in fdist2
  • it goes through each word in text1, assigning each one in turn to the variable w and performing the specified operation on the variable.
  • The above notation is called a "list comprehension"
  • [f(w) for ...] or [w.f() for ...],
  • Now that we are not double-counting words like This and this
  • by filtering out any non-alphabetic items:   >>> len(set([word.lower() for word in text1 if word.isalpha()]))
  • A collocation is a sequence of words which occur together unusually often. Thus red wine is a collocation, while the wine is not. A characteristic of collocations is that they are resistant to substitution with words that have similar senses — maroon wine sounds definitely odd.
seth kutcher

The Best Remote PC Support I Ever Had - 1 views

The Remote PC Support Now excellent remote PC support services are the best. They have skilled computer tech professionals who can fix your PC while you wait or just go back to work or just simpl...

remote PC support

started by seth kutcher on 12 Sep 11 no follow-up yet
pagetribe .

Lifehacker - Top 10 Obscure Google Search Tricks - Feature - 0 views

  • Using a combination of advanced search operators that specify music files available in an Apache directory listing, you can turn Google into your personal Napster. Go ahead, try this search for Nirvana tracks: -inurl:(htm|html|php) intitle:"index of" +"last modified" +"parent directory" +description +size +(wma|mp3) "Nirvana". (Sub out Nirvana for the band you're interested in; use this one in conjunction with number 7 to find new music, too.) The same type of search recipe can find comic books as well.
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