Can someone point me in the right direction of how to use embed .NET controls into a progress application. thanks!!
edit: I'm using 10.2b
If you're trying to do any .NET programming with OpenEdge, I highly recommend that you start with the excellent video series from John Sadd that covers exactly this. In fact, I recommend that you go through these videos BEFORE you even bother to start reading any of the manuals (and there are a bunch!) that Progress provides.
Run - don't walk - to http://communities.progress.com/pcom/docs/DOC-101140 and start watching!
Hope this helps (I know it will!)
I want to build a website using Joomla. My target is something like this http://www.training.my/. My question is how to achieve the functionality like that website?(The course pricing table, the download menu)
If you know some extension that is useful for this, please recommend for me.
Thank you.
You need DT register. It's commercial but well worth the price.
http://extensions.joomla.org/extensions/calendars-a-events/events/events-registration/2037
Anyone know of free overlay extensions for the Prototype API?
Lightview is great, but it costs money.
The goal is to create attractive, simple overlays quickly for our client at http://www.panabee.com.
Thanks!
Have you looked through [Scripteka][1]?
[1]: http://www.scripteka.com Scripteka
I've googled around but couldn't find a working MongoDB viewer or data browser.
An ideal (for my needs) tool would be a web based viewer with dead simple features (browsing and doing queries).
You have :
Mongo3
futon4mongo
See: http://nosql.mypopescu.com/post/334469038/a-couple-of-nice-gui-tools-for-mongodb
Hopefully it'll be updated frequently when new tools are available!
EDIT:
Better overview: http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Admin+UIs
I just tried MongoVUE and it works like a charm!
Check it out: http://www.mongovue.com/
MongoHub is moved to a native mac version, please check http://github.com/bububa/MongoHub-Mac.
genghisapp is what you want.
It is a web-based GUI that is clean, light-weight, straight-forward, offers keyboard shortcuts, and works awesomely. It also supports GridFS.
Best of all, it's a single script!
To install it
$ gem install genghisapp bson_ext
(bson_ext is optional but will greatly improve the performance of the gui)
To run it (this will automatically open your web browser and navigate to the app as well)
genghisapp
To stop it
genghisapp --kill
https://github.com/Imaginea/mViewer
I have tried this one and as a viewer it's awesome with tree and document views.
Im just testing Rock_Mongo
It's a nice tool, written in PHP.
MogoVue is the best option I found so far, it has great features I did not see in other viewers, plus it gives few options to look at the data, as json, tables and hierarchy, which is extremely useful.
Avoid MongoExplorer, it has major issues, which can cause you huge headaches. When viewing records using this tools, it may change fields which are MongoId's to plane string, it does not give any indication on this, just does it when you focus on the id field, this bug cost me lots of time and effort trying to find "what and where in my code i'm doing this silly thing"...
RoboMongo
Genghis
And entire list from here http://docs.mongodb.org/ecosystem/tools/administration-interfaces/
While the built in Http Interface of MongoDB isn't exactly what you are asking for, but it is available and supports a REST interface to do simple queries, etc. This is built-in to the mongo instance with a default of port 28017.
Documentation: http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Http+Interface
As well as those mentioned by shingara, there's also:
Opricot
PHPMoAdmin
MongoHub (I've heard mixed reviews on this one, not sure if it's maintained)
Just pushed mongoclikker to GitHub. It's a dead simple MongoDB viewer written in Node.
There a lot of UIs on official mongo site http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Admin+UIs
To add to the list :)
I just made a simple Mongo browser based on a hierarchical JQueryTreeview and implemented in Sinatra and Ruby.
The reason for another viewer was that I wanted something that was fast and easy (both to use and the code base), that would let me peek at what was going on my MongoDB. Also, I wanted some nice Ajax effects. and could be the base of a more complete browser.
https://github.com/tomjoro/mongo_browser
I just released a simple web-based data viewer called Mongs. It isn't a server admin GUI, it's focused on data browsing, which sounds like what you're interested in. Mongs is implemented in Python using the Aspen web framework.
JMongo is nice db viewer using on fedora linux
I started work on small project: https://github.com/lucassus/mongo_browser
It's a mongodb browser based on ruby's sinatra framework.
here is the better tool for sql as well as No-Sql viewer and also you can query in gui mode with this tool.
"RoboMongo" is easy to use and cross platform, using on centos 6.2 but no option for data import/export which can be found in "umongo" but not easy to use as RoboMongo.
For web: genghis is simple and have much more fashion interface.
For desktop: robomongo: Shell-centric cross-platform MongoDB management tool
I'm using MongoDB Compass. You can download the community edition by entering valid information.
I using Robomongo, in version 0.8.3 implemented multiply inserting documents, for more details https://github.com/paralect/robomongo/issues/173. Robomongo also have builtin mongodb-shell may be usefully for your purposes.
Does anyone know where I can get some samples/resources on 4GL language for Progress Database OTHER THAN THE PROGRESS DATABASE WEBSITE?
Thanks
Here's a copy of the 4GL handbook from the Progress website.
http://www.progress.com/progress/products/documentation/docs/dvhbk/dvhbk.pdf
http://www.peg.com
http://www.oehive.org
http://www.progresstalk.com
http://www.psdn.com (maintained by Progress Software)
What kind of samples do you exactly need? If you want to improve 4GL skills, then 4GL Handbook is a very nice way to get known to the language, it comes with Progress Documentation.
I found several reference books for Progress, ProDatasets, etc. on Scribd which I went to when the links on the Progress official communities were broken.