I'm having the same problem.
Vista Ultimate SP1; CF 8.0. iiS 7 NOT enabled by default on my Sony
Laptop and hence not working when I enabled it.
Installation works better when logged in as the actual administrator
(not merely a user in administrators group).
When that is done, CF (Administrato
"And getting the containers size (The div element that containers your
content scroll area, sorry can't recall the property off the top of my
head), and then use"
the property you are looking for is scrollHeight
you may get some strange results in older versions of safari though.
On Thu, May 8,
As sometimes happens, I've answered my own question...
Most of the problems appear to be caused in iiS7.
- When iiS7 enabled, not creating the default (anonymous) web user
(IUSR_ and not making it a member of the group IISIUSRS.
- Same user needs to have permission to at very least Read the file
Sounds like to me that you have a serious issue, one Coldfusion 8 as far as
I am concerned has only had problems with IIS7 (and this is my experience)
when the right components for IIS are not installed correctly to start with.
However, under SP1 for Vista one has to install it as administrator.
They need to fix it, people don't want to have to go through that crap.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://learncf.com
http://flexcf.com
-Original Message-
From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of CyberAngel
Sent: Thursday, 8 May 2008 7:37 AM
To: cfaussie@googlegro
All,
During some post-conference discussion, there was talk of doing a
cf.Objective() Australia.
If this is something you guys would be interested in, I would suggest
making some noise over at:
http://www.adrocknaphobia.com/post.cfm/cfobjective-in-australia-and-europe
Where some of the details
Best of luck with that...
Realistically - I don't think it would be a good idea - as much
as I'd love to see a dedicated ColdFusion conference. As Andy
was correctly stating in one of his comments - both Europe
and ANZ are significantly different markets for CF compared to
the US and I'm still
- data entry form looking for possible previous entries when adding a
new one, possibly causing duplicates
I call it "soft duplicates" (ie: can't use "hard evidence" like a tax
file number or in this case, case number)
the idea is for the data entry operator to be flagged of a possible
match, s
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 8:27 AM, Kai Koenig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Best of luck with that...
>
>
> I haven't been at CFUnited Europe so can't really say a lot about
> it, but my impression from bloggers and voices I've heard from
> Europe was that it apparently turned out to be much smaller
Barry,
To find matching rows you can create a row hash and match against that. But
to find near matches you can use the SOUNDEX or DIFFERENCE functions in MS
SQL.
*PS. Don't forget, we launched our Aussie innovation competition today!
Check it out, great prizes to be won
http://www.clickfind.com.a
I left a comment on Adam's blog - but essentially the more quality CF
content, the better. If Adam/Adobe think it's a possibility based on
what he saw when he was here for the CFCAMP events, then I'm all for
it.
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 6:51 AM, Mark Mandel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Ma
Hi Mark,
>Just to point out here - cf.Objective() is about as community driven
>as it comes, and most of the people on the steering committee and who
>help out, are pure volunteers.
>
>I have to also point out that cf.O is specifically tailored to being a
>intimate conference, and have had severa
> And yes, I'm aware that it might be a different target audience,
> different people attending etc. but still, it's a concern. That's
> why I like the idea of the extra track or extra day attached to our
> existing major
> conference.
I just get a bit concerned that people pin their whole PD ont
> But to find near matches you can use the SOUNDEX or DIFFERENCE
> functions in MS SQL.
I'd completely forgotten about them. that'd certainly simplify things
with name and address.
thanx for the reminder, Taco.
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message beca
No worries.
On 5/9/08, Barry Beattie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> > But to find near matches you can use the SOUNDEX or DIFFERENCE
> > functions in MS SQL.
>
> I'd completely forgotten about them. that'd certainly simplify things
> with name and address.
>
> thanx for the reminder, Taco.
>
> >
All,
I see where Kai is coming, I was thinking along the same lines too,
but after thinking abit more about it I think cf.objective in AU will
be a good thing.
it brings exposure to CF in Australia. Considering there are numerous
Java/.Net/PHP/Linux dedicated Conferences held regularly in Austr
@Chong
I see where you're coming from - broaden it a bit to include
situations you'd see in the enterprise (or at least cover more than
the 12 most commonly used tags). Integrating CF with .NET DLL's could
possibly fit there too, I guess.
@Kai.
I'm game and I still reckon a practical guide to
Hi guys,
Hopefully a quick and easy one for someone - I'm sure this is going to
be one of those things with an easy fix I'm just not seeing!
I'm pulling in an XML file via an RSS feed. It has some &'s which are
not encoded as & and some which are (as well as a smattering of
"'s and other entitie
is the "&" sourounded by spaces?
so you could do replace(myXML, " & ", "&")?**
or if not
// park all legit ones with a sentinal value
replace(myXML, "&", "X_SENTINALVALUE_X")
// replace all breaking & with the real thing
replace(myXML, "&", "&" )
// return the real things from the sentinal val
I forgot to mention
you're going to have to park all the other HTML entities as well under
other sentinal values (eg "'s ) before getting rid of the nasty
single "&"
but I'm sure you get the idea.
On 5/9/08, Barry Beattie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> is the "&" sourounded by spaces?
>
> so you
Seona Bellamy wrote:
>
> I'm pulling in an XML file via an RSS feed. It has some &'s which are
> not encoded as & and some which are (as well as a smattering of
> "'s and other entities). Apparently, those unencoded &'s are what
> is preventing me running this data through xmlParse().
>
> Is the
You could use
REReplace(str, "&([^A-Za-z0-9])", "&\1", "all")
On Fri, 2008-05-09 at 11:30 +1000, Seona Bellamy wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> Hopefully a quick and easy one for someone - I'm sure this is going to
> be one of those things with an easy fix I'm just not seeing!
>
> I'm pulling in an XML f
A big thank you to Barry Kym and Joel for your suggestions.
As it turns out, when I did a bit more digging I discovered that the
problem was in the way the data was being compiled in the first place.
Once I fixed that up, the problem went away entirely. *sigh*
On the other hand, I now have a hos
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