Home
Login
Contact
Articles
Newsletter
Bookmark and Share
XSLT
CSS
Javascript
Java
Linux
Username
Password
Annuler
Connexion

Recent Articles

javascript print partial pages

In developping web applications and designing websites, you've probably come accross a situation where you wanted the user to be able to press a print...

Marquee in javascript

The Marquee Element has been deprecated by the W3C and is commonly ill-advised but nevertheless, if you really want to do it, then javascript is the w...

Sending an email in Java

Sending an email in Java is actually quite simple, as always, there is an API that will do most of the work for you and it becomes just a matter of im...

Opacity in Firefox 3.5

If you've upgraded to Firefox 3.5 and you've been using -moz-opacity in your CSS, then you will see that the transparency or opacity (depending on ho...

Installing Tomcat on Linux in a few minutes

Installing tomcat is actually very quick and easy. Assuming you already have the JDK installed, this will only take a few minutes. In my years of exp...

The "mode trick" for identical XMLs

27 January at 10:09AM published by Matt Castonguay

There is a common problem in XSLT where you have two XML of the same xPath (whether it be absolute or relative) that end up taking the same template. In many scenarios you do not have the ability to modify the XML so that it suits your XSLT and you must therefore turn to the mode trick to create seperate templates.

Random Tags

xml    caching    opacity    tomcat    marquee    apache    position    optimization    firefox    float    apache    tinymce    ie6    svn    offsettop    email    double negation    mode    weakhashmap    bash    uniques    print    css classes    wysiwyg    textarea    library    css classes    clear    svnant    hashmap    position    iframe    math    hashmap    ant    offsetleft    min-width    javamail    offsettop    proxypass   
MG2 Media Inc. - A Web Development Company
Top