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    Texture from url?

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    • V Offline
      Viskiz
      last edited by

      I could not find such function, that save file without interruption. I don't think it's possible.

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      • thomthomT Offline
        thomthom
        last edited by

        How about:

        • Download the image using HTTPRequest
        • Put the data into a hidden input field. (possibly base64 encoded? - since you are dealing with binary data)
        • Use WebDialog.get_element_value to fetch the data
        • Save to a temp file with the Ruby File class

        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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        • B Offline
          ben.doherty
          last edited by

          Hi, I'm trying to do something similar.
          I'm not too fussed about using non sketchup ruby libraries, so I just want to do it in the most elegant way possible.

          I tried adding:
          $LOAD_PATH << "C:/Ruby186/lib/ruby/1.8/net"
          $LOAD_PATH << "C:/Ruby186/lib/ruby/1.8/i386-mingw32"
          to my load paths as a way to crunch through the error messages that I got (couldn't find socket etc.)

          Is there an easy way to do this that is nice and easy and clean?

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          • N Offline
            NatBridge
            last edited by

            Maybe you could just open the webdialog to the image url and screenshot it? (If it isn't bigger than the screen.)

            http://code.google.com/apis/sketchup/docs/ourdoc/webdialog.html#write_image

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            • B Offline
              ben.doherty
              last edited by

              That would probably work, but wouldn't win any prizes for elegance.
              Given that ruby can access things on the internet as part of it's core library does anyone have any idea how to point it at those standard libraries?

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              • TIGT Offline
                TIG Moderator
                last edited by

                Here's a discreet way of downloading an image file from a url on Windows only - using vbs...

                strFileURL = "http://www.it1.net/images/it1_logo2.jpg"
                strHDLocation = "C;\Temp\it1_logo2.jpg"
                Set objXMLHTTP = CreateObject("MSXML2.XMLHTTP")
                objXMLHTTP.open "GET", strFileURL, false
                objXMLHTTP.send()
                If objXMLHTTP.Status = 200 Then
                  Set objADOStream = CreateObject("ADODB.Stream")
                  objADOStream.Open
                  objADOStream.Type = 1 'adTypeBinary
                  objADOStream.Write objXMLHTTP.ResponseBody
                  objADOStream.Position = 0    'Set the stream position to the start
                  Set objFSO = Createobject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
                If objFSO.Fileexists(strHDLocation) Then objFSO.DeleteFile strHDLocation
                  Set objFSO = Nothing
                  objADOStream.SaveToFile strHDLocation
                  objADOStream.Close
                  Set objADOStream = Nothing
                End if
                Set objXMLHTTP = Nothing
                

                Make a copy of this text in a file that's called say
                C:\Temp\urldownloader.vbs
                or another Temp folder etc...
                Change the first two lines of the text to be the url [I've used a known image_file simply to show that it works] and the folder+filepath to save that file to - in this example I put it into C:\Temp\ too using the same file_name...
                Now run it from within Ruby
                UI.openURL("C:\\Temp\\urldownloader.vbs")
                In Ruby wait till the file arrives - timeout after a while ?
                To tidy up you can delete the temp file...
                It works - I have run it successfully...

                TIG

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                • J Offline
                  Jim
                  last edited by

                  @ben.doherty said:

                  Is there an easy way to do this that is nice and easy and clean?

                  Nothing is easy. πŸ˜†

                  You have the right idea, but I think you may need to add more locations to make it complete. If you check the $LOAD_PATH of your installed Ruby, you'll find it has more locations than just those you listed. See Dan's post on the subject. We should have more success using the installed Ruby since we now have 1.8.6 in SketchUp and an installable 1.8.6

                  Hi

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                  • J Offline
                    Jim
                    last edited by

                    @tig said:

                    Here's a discreet way of downloading an image file from a url on Windows only - using vbs...

                    VBScript will run in the WebDialog, so you could eliminate the external file. But I would still try to follow Thom's advice, use JavaScript, and pass the data to the Ruby plugin to save it on disk.

                    Hi

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                    • TIGT Offline
                      TIG Moderator
                      last edited by

                      My 'vbs' method means you don't actually need a web-dialog running at all.
                      You can download images from a url with it [on PC] irrespective of what the Ruby script is doing or has as an interface... πŸ˜•

                      TIG

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                      • J Offline
                        Jim
                        last edited by

                        @tig said:

                        [on PC]

                        Exactly.

                        The most beneficial result from this thread would be a cross-platform download library which could be used for images or anything, really.

                        Hi

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                        • TIGT Offline
                          TIG Moderator
                          last edited by

                          But the original inquiry was 'for PC' ?
                          A pure Javascript version can't work [?] - because of security issues there is no plain 'save' - only 'save_as', to you ensure you know what's going on with downloading things off the www onto your PC...
                          The 'vbs' method will work for PC - there's probably an equivalent AppleScript [type] method for the MAC... but I can't see how a 'cross-platform' version might work πŸ˜•
                          Java is inherently 'limited' as I said...

                          TIG

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                          • J Offline
                            Jim
                            last edited by

                            @tig said:

                            A pure Javascript version can't work [?]

                            I think it can. There is no save or save as in JavaScript. You can save to disk using JavaScript, but there isn't a cross-platform solution. On Windows, you would use a FileSystem activex object. The same scripting host that rtuns the .vbs can run .js also.

                            But, the XHR is available on all (important) browser platforms. So a cross-platform solution is to use a WebDialog, fetch the file using the XHR, then pass it to the ruby plugin for saving to disk.

                            This small library is a good example of using a XHR cross-platform:
                            http://code.google.com/p/microajax/

                            
                            if (window.ActiveXObject)
                            return new ActiveXObject('Microsoft.XMLHTTP');
                            else if (window.XMLHttpRequest)
                            return new XMLHttpRequest();
                            return false;
                            
                            

                            Hi

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                            • TIGT Offline
                              TIG Moderator
                              last edited by

                              What's this then ?
                              <a href="java script&#058;void(0);" onclick="document.execCommand('SaveAs',true,'http://fileden.com/somefolder/some file.mp3');">download</a>
                              There's just not a 'Save' version ???

                              TIG

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                              • J Offline
                                Jim
                                last edited by

                                I've never heard of "execCommand" before, but I'd be surprised if it were cross-platform. If it existed, we probably wouldn't be having this discussion.

                                Hi

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                                • TIGT Offline
                                  TIG Moderator
                                  last edited by

                                  Perhaps a MAC users could confirm...

                                  TIG

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                                  • B Offline
                                    ben.doherty
                                    last edited by

                                    While the JS debate rages, I've been playing with what can be done with ruby (being single-minded/stubborn/lazy)

                                    I've updated my !loadpaths file to match dan's latest http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=29412&hilit=load+path#p257058
                                    and when I try a couple of things I get this response:
                                    require 'net/http' Error: #<LoadError: C:/ruby186/lib/ruby/1.8/net/protocol.rb:21:inrequire': No such file to load -- socket>
                                    C:/ruby186/lib/ruby/1.8/net/protocol.rb:21
                                    require 'date/format'
                                    true`

                                    Any ideas on why net/http fails, but date/format works?

                                    I'm sure it will take some clever file management, and refresh cycle control etc, but it'd be cool to be able to specify a url to get a texture from. That'd open up a load of opportunities for data vis etc.

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                                    • J Offline
                                      Jim
                                      last edited by

                                      That means it couldn't find the file (socket.so) in the load path.

                                      For a short-term solution, you could try to copy socket.so to the Plugins folder.

                                      Hi

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                                      • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                        Dan Rathbun
                                        last edited by

                                        @jim said:

                                        I've never heard of "execCommand" before, but I'd be surprised if it were cross-platform. If it existed, we probably wouldn't be having this discussion.

                                        It's HTML 5 me thinks. And seems Microsoft may have added a bunch of standard CommandIDs without getting them approved by the web community (as usual.) The spec implies browser specific IDs should have a prefix like "IE-", but MS has been doing this 'arm-twisting' for years.

                                        See: http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/author/dom.html#execCommand

                                        MSDN: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms536419(v=VS.85).aspx
                                        and MS' command IDS: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms533049(v=VS.85).aspx
                                        ~

                                        I'm not here much anymore.

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                                        • B Offline
                                          Ben_M
                                          last edited by

                                          Hello!

                                          Has anyone made any progress on a simple, cross platform solution to this in the past few months?

                                          Thanks,

                                          Ben

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                                          • V Offline
                                            Viskiz
                                            last edited by

                                            I solved in on Windows platform.
                                            In my script installation I included ruby lib files needed for http, so users will have them after installing script.
                                            The code followed in script:

                                            $LOAD_PATH << File.join(MY_PLUGIN_HOME, "bin", "rblib")
                                            Sketchup::require 'uri'
                                            Sketchup::require 'net/http'

                                            Installer for MAC OS should have different ruby library files I think. I haven't MAC yet, so I can't tell any more. Let me know if you solve it.

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