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    Get form data from webdialogs?

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    • jolranJ Offline
      jolran
      last edited by

      Aha! Scene manager 😉

      Glad you sorted it out 👍

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      • D Offline
        draftomatic
        last edited by

        @chris fullmer said:

        
        >   $("select option;selected").each(function () {
        >     str += $(this).text() + ",";
        >   });						
        > 
        

        Be careful that your options don't contain commas.

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        • Chris FullmerC Offline
          Chris Fullmer
          last edited by

          Ah, that did not cross my mind. All my "options" values are scene names. So I'll have to check if scene names can contain commas - if so, I'll have to re-think my delimiter. Thanks!

          EDIT - yes, scene names can contain commas. What delimiter do I use then? I'm stumped. Do I forcibly remove commas from the user's scene names before processing? That seems like a bad idea.

          Lately you've been tan, suspicious for the winter.
          All my Plugins I've written

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          • thomthomT Offline
            thomthom
            last edited by

            @chris fullmer said:

            Do I forcibly remove commas from the user's scene names before processing? That seems like a bad idea.
            No, that's not good. That's making the user work for the computer instead of the computer working for the user.

            How about || ?
            Much more unlikely to appear in a tab.
            Though, there is still a risk of it.

            You could make a escape character scheme. Escape | with | - then off course you also need to escape \ with \ .

            This example is all Ruby, but you can easily port it to JS.

            Escape a string:

            string = page.name string.gsub!('\\', '\\\\') string.gsub!('|', '\\|')

            Restore it:
            string.gsub!('\\\\', '\\') string.gsub!('\\|', '|')

            If you do it for all input - output then you will be safe that there will never be any conflict.

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

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            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              Could you use 'tab' as the delimiter - these are never going to appear in a Scene name ?

                    $("select option;selected").each(function () {
                      str += $(this).text() + "\t";
                    });                  
              
              

              Then on the Ruby side use chosen=str.split("\t") to make an array of the items ???

              TIG

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              • thomthomT Offline
                thomthom
                last edited by

                @tig said:

                Could you use 'tab' as the delimiter - these are never going to appear in a Scene name ?

                Actually they can. Paste a string containing Tab and it'll be there. Or it can be added via some Ruby script... pages[0].name = "Foo\tBar"

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

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                • TIGT Offline
                  TIG Moderator
                  last edited by

                  OK how about 'newline' ?

                            $("select option;selected").each(function () {
                              str += $(this).text() + "\n";
                            });                 
                  
                  

                  then in Ruby chosen=str.split("\n") ?
                  Or even \r or \f ?

                  TIG

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                  • thomthomT Offline
                    thomthom
                    last edited by

                    That would be even more unlikely to appear, but it's still possible - for instance the Ruby API will allow \n. Who knows what an importer for instance might put in there when importing from some random data. Or if it takes input from somewhere without sanitising.

                    I mean, it's unlikely, but still possible. Where as using an escape character scheme would make it 100% safe. And it's a simple thing as well.

                    <span class="syntaxdefault">def escape_pipe</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> string </span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">  string</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">gsub</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">,</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\\\'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">).</span><span class="syntaxdefault">gsub</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'|'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">,</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\|'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">end<br /><br />def restore_pipe</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> string </span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">  string</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">gsub</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\\\'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">,</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">).</span><span class="syntaxdefault">string</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">.</span><span class="syntaxdefault">gsub</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">(</span><span class="syntaxstring">'\\|'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">,</span><span class="syntaxdefault"> </span><span class="syntaxstring">'|'</span><span class="syntaxkeyword">)<br /></span><span class="syntaxdefault">end<br /></span>
                    

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

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                    • B Offline
                      bigcatln
                      last edited by

                      so far there is no elegant solution for it!
                      Javascript may be useful but have problem when handling mutibyte characters

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                      • thomthomT Offline
                        thomthom
                        last edited by

                        @bigcatln said:

                        so far there is no elegant solution for it!
                        Javascript may be useful but have problem when handling mutibyte characters

                        Eh? Javascript is unicode compatible... Ruby on the other hand, the 1.8 branch we're stuck with in SU, only deal with strings as ASCII characters.

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

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                        • B Offline
                          bigcatln
                          last edited by

                          The problem is JSON doen't support Multibyte characters in fact. when you restore Json str from javascript in ruby,it can't be handled correctly

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                          • thomthomT Offline
                            thomthom
                            last edited by

                            @bigcatln said:

                            The problem is JSON doen't support Multibyte characters in fact. when you restore Json str from javascript in ruby,it can't be handled correctly

                            But that's a problem with Ruby 1.8 which only handle ASCII strings - and not a problem with JavaScript...

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

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                            • P Offline
                              Pout
                              last edited by

                              I always do as chris does:
                              collect in one string, send to SU, split there if needed

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