What's the iCal subscription URL? When I publish a Calendar from
iCal, I got two urls:
- first one to display the calendar html page: http://ical.mac.com/
my_account/my_calendar
- second to subscribe to the calendar: webcal://ical.mac.com/
my_account/my_calendar.ics
I tried with both but I
Joel,
1.- which of these urls should I set in the Admin - Event
calendars - my_calendar (I suspect the webcal://)?
Whatever address spits out a .ics file is correct, however, i suspect
the webcal:// prefix is going to cause Ruby net/http to hiccup.
Have you tried:
Pablo Quiroga wrote:
How can I hide some pages, not the tabs (like stylesheets, /style.css). I
don't want that the normal user modifies the stylesheet, and other stuff.
Pablo, sorry for the late response.
If you don't want normal users to be able to modify the stylesheet you
can put it in the
2007/7/4, Pablo Quiroga [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi everybody!
How can I hide some pages, not the tabs (like stylesheets, /style.css). I
don't want that the normal user modifies the stylesheet, and other stuff.
Thanks!
--
Pablo Quiroga
FRM - UTN - Mendoza - Argentina
It's been like a month
Never used this yet, but it might be useful to you:
http://wiki.radiantcms.org/How_To_Set_a_Top_Level_Page_for_User
/AITOR
On 7/27/07, Pablo Quiroga [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2007/7/4, Pablo Quiroga [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hi everybody!
How can I hide some pages, not the tabs (like
I have the following bit of code defining a custom page type. I
define an event and the normal body part. However, when a URL comes
it is getting parsed correctly but the page is rendering with the
body part rather than the event part. Can anyone see something that I
am just missing?
===
Here it is:
undefined method `admin?' for #Page:0x3751734
Dana
Can you do a view source and see what the actual object type is that
is indicated by the # in the error. Since objects are returned as
#ObjectName:124342 they get partially mistaken for HTML tags by
browsers rendering the
Can you do a view source and see what the actual object type is that
is indicated by the # in the error. Since objects are returned as
#ObjectName:124342 they get partially mistaken for HTML tags by
browsers rendering the page.
-James
On Jul 27, 2007, at 5:06 PM, Dana Janssen wrote: