I had a doc shared with my collaborators. So I commented my part on the google doc sheet itself. Later when I downloaded the same on Microsoft word I can see all the comments etc on the doc. I can also accept it, but the box/border remains around the text still remains. Even I try to click the No markup option the box still remains there. How do I can remove it
Related
I have a large number of existing MS Word documents I want to import into tiki-wiki, but some of these include images that don't carry over into the editor (including the WYSIWYG editor).
I'm looking for some plugin or setting that would allow me to copy-paste images into the tiki-wiki editor that automatically uploads images to the file gallery and insert the image in place. Converting the documents to HTML code is one solution I have found to retain the images and Word documents, but removes the ability to easily edit the wiki pages.
I have looked and cannot seem to find anything like this. In fact, many members of the wiki community seem to be against such a feature. Has anyone found a plugin or workaround for this issue?
Sorry, that's not a feature in Tiki currently, it would be great if it was (i'm surprised anyone seemed to be against it, we always welcome volunteers and sponsors if you're willing to code or commission it!)
We are planning to migrate to markdown over the next few versions, so maybe add this as a feature request as part of that? The planning page is here https://dev.tiki.org/WYSIWYG-and-Markdown
Since I know Cypress, I offered to help a friend screen scrape data out of a legacy system for which he no longer has database access, but I seem to be at a dead-end.
The PHP code fills the form fields somehow, and I can cut'n paste from them into an editor but, when I try to automate that, the input field's innerText is always empty strings. I can use Dev Tools to search the DOM and find the text of the field labels, but searching for the input field text turns up nothing.
Is there really no way to get at that data?
How can Chrome be unable to find data that it is actually displaying?
Is this some kind of security barrier?
I am trying to get the HTML for a Google Doc's contents. The methods I have found all seem to use deprecated items. I ultimately want to use the Doc as a template for an email. I have everything working except getting the HTML version of the text. Yes, I want the full HTML version including tables, images, and anything else I can place in the Doc.
Is there any way to get this?
Regards,
Karl S
I believe the following method works:
Open up the Google Doc you want to work with
Click File-->Publish to the web
Click Link and then Publish
Copy the link into another tab
View the source for the page and copy everything inside and including <div id="contents">
This should be the complete HTML for that document. I just verified that it works with a document of mine. Let me know if it doesn't.
How to change the Moodle logo which will be displayed at the footer page and change to some other logo? As per the given link 1 I have tried but I could not find the footer.html file in my themes folder.
So please help me with some other method (which does not use local machine because I'm working with a remote machine where I could access only the Moodle site, and nothing more than that) to change the logo and link of Moodle.
This depends on your theme - So you're not going to get a precise answer unless you post more details. But here's the gist:
Every theme is made in parts. Normally, you have a header, a content, a sidebar (or two) and a footer.
You want to be editing the footer file.
The footer file is going to be something within the lines of footer.html or footer.php... Something like that. Again, every theme is different so it could be called something completely different. Sometimes, you just need to dig around.
Please also consider that your footer file may also be contained in a sub-directory in your theme folder. So make sure you have a proper look before deciding to "call off the search".
Anyway, once you've found your footer file (Whatever it's called), you'll want to open it and find the image.
If the image is inserted as a HTML reference of location, you can find it by Ctrl+F and typing in the name of the image file. E.g. "footer.jpeg" or whatever.
If the image is inserted as a PHP relative reference, e.g. "$FooterImage" then don't change that, instead, find out where the variable is pointing to in terms of the file-path, and go and edit that image file via FTP instead. You don't have to keep the PHP variable, but I'd keep it in for code-integrity purposes.
Tip for the future: Please include information like name of theme and Moodle version. It enables us to help you better.
Clean Theme:
Things are a bit different with Clean Theme as it doesn't have a single footer file.
You need to go into all layout files one at a time.
Look for this div:
<footer id="page-footer">
...
</footer>
In this footer, you will find a PHP command that says:
echo $OUTPUT->home_link();
To remove the logo, remove this line.
To replace the logo, you can either:
Replace the "home_link" reference in PHP to point to the new image file.
Or
Remove the PHP line and replace it with
?><img src="link_to_your_image" alt="Logo"><?PHP
Remember, you will need to do this for all layout files.
Have a look at Footer replacement at the official Moodle Documentation. Hope that helps.
Making a word document of our network set-up.
We have about 7 servers and I need to include screenshots and other info on each.
Is it possible to have a pic of the server that when clicked will open up another word doc that reveals all of the other info. Can this then be mailed to someone easily?
I think that you should have actually tried to do it in Word before asking. The answer is trivial. For completeness sake:
Right-click on the image, choose "Hyperlink..." from the menu. Select the document you want from the resulting standard file selection dialog.
That's it. Doing ctrl-click on the pickture will open up the document selected though you will probably get a security warning first.
You can also do it from a VBA macro. First select the desired image and then:
ActiveDocument.Hyperlinks.Add Anchor:=Selection.Range, Address:= _
"C:\Users\me\Documents\a-document.doc", SubAddress:=""
So you could automate the process of server discovery (or maybe you have the data in a spreadsheet that you could use), adding images and hyperlinks automatically. Probably not worth it for just 7 servers.
I'm not clear what you mean by the last part about emailing. Do you want to email the Master word document or the one opened after clicking on the hyperlink? Either way, Word has a menu option for doing this.
If you are wanting to send the document that is opened from the hyperlink - do you actually need the user to open that document or would you rather email it directly? A simple macro can be written that will ask you for the target email address and send the document directly without having to open it. There are really too many possibilities to write down here - we need more information.