This site is remote loading the Italian wikipedia:
http://wikipedia.sapere.alice.it/wikipedia/wiki/Special:RecentChanges
and adding a topbar (it's not an html frame).
Incidentally, it's a subsite of a major Italian telecom company... do
they have some kind of agreement?
Ciao,
Alfio
Dear all, thank you for your feedback. I have been sick for a few
days, but I'm back :) And I just released 0.22 of the software, which
is a bit more robust - the 7zip issue is still unresolved though.
(http://houshuang.org/blog/wikipedia-offline-server).
7Zip blocksize: Initially I was looking into whether this was the
problem (suggestion from Igor Pavlov, the developer), but I think we
can conclude that this is not the problem, since the block size is
already quite small. Also, this doesn't make sense since the time it
takes to uncompress files is proportional to the number of files - on
my old computer, 15 seconds for Indonesian (60MB), 30 seconds for
Norwegian (120MB), 150 seconds for Chinese (250MB), too long for
French (500MB)! Whereas I tried to zip a GB of 1MB pictures, and
unzipping just one of them, even if it was in the 700th MB, was
snappy.
I tried looking at the 7zip code again, but it's still too
complicated, with too many files involved, for me to understand
anything. However, it makes all the sense in the world to me that
building up an index beforehand of file names and blocks (possibly
using 7za l -slt), and then feeding the block number to the 7z
extracter, and having it jump directly there. (or if it needs more
specific information, making a lister that outputs that information,
and then feeding that).
Platonides: I don't know if having 7z run constantly is a good idea.
While I am not wedded to Ruby, it makes it very easy to do regexps,
add small features, and the built-in webserver is very nice (includes
threading)! However, if you got this to work, I'd love it. Personally
I think it's all about building an index. By putting 2 million
filenames + block locations into for example an indexed mysqlite3
database, it should be able to extract one of them in milliseconds.
However, what 7zip does does not seem optimized - what I saw was a
simple for-next loop of all the filenames (and this is being done by
looping the data on disk, not on a model in memory)...
If you had any chance to have a look at this and try it out, I would
be eternally grateful! Try downloading a bigger dump file
(Chinese/Norwegian whatever), and you should very clearly see the
speed hit. Try manually inserting what information it needs (for
example block location) for a specific file, and see if it then
extracts that file very fast - if yes, we can make it a cmd-line
argument.
Thanks a lot
Stian
Tels wrote:
> On Friday 02 March 2007 22:35:52 Jim Wilson wrote:
> > "The Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) is a standardized
> > *graphical notation* for drawing business processes in a workflow. "
I am not definitively an expert on this field, so take my opinion for
just an opinion. Moreover I have found difficult to understand what it
is written in the Wikipedia article. For instance after saying what
was quote above (from hence one can conclude that it is a workflow),
it is stated that "it is not a data flow"
> >
> > Thus it would seem that BPMN is already an image file of some kind.
Following the external links on the article, I arrived to some pages
that let me think that BPMN only give the semantic, but not the
graphic format, and for the graphic format you should better refer to
BPEL4WS (Business Process Execution Language for Web Services)
and web page
http://content.europe.visual-paradigm.com/media/documents/bpva10BPMNSpec/ht…
told you to refer to
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-bpel/
I have just give a quick gaze to that and I think that it define an
XML format for the content/image.
So if you have a file in that format the problem is to find an handler
for that, in the same way you need an handler to handle SVG file.
Onother way would be to find a way to convert into SVG format (which
sounds to be a better choice than JPG for such type of image). (or if
you want a bitmapped format and not a vector format, PNG format
should be better than JPG, anyway)
> You could try to use Graph::Easy for it:
> http://bloodgate.com/perl/graph/
> http://bloodgate.com/wiki/Graph
If what I have understood is correct, BPMN has more items than a
flowchart. And the differences means not only more semantic
declarations, but also more graphics item types. So I wonder if Graph
has already all this graphics types required for that format. Even if,
you would have to convert from the BPMN or BPEL4WS to Graph format to
have it to work for such a format.
But, before trying to get a way to do the thing technically, it should
be clear what you are looking for. Have you already a file in that
format (in the same way if you had an image in svg or jpg format, in a
separate file) and you want a way to have it displayed (as an image
and as a thumbnail) or do you want a way to insert the code in the
wiki page, to generate an image (in a way similar, for example, to the
Graph extension or the EasyTimeline one)?
All the best
AnyFile
An automated run of parserTests.php showed the following failures:
This is MediaWiki version 1.10alpha (r20118).
Reading tests from "maintenance/parserTests.txt"...
Reading tests from "extensions/Cite/citeParserTests.txt"...
Reading tests from "extensions/Poem/poemParserTests.txt"...
18 still FAILING test(s) :(
* URL-encoding in URL functions (single parameter) [Has never passed]
* URL-encoding in URL functions (multiple parameters) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Table security: embedded pipes (http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikitech-l/2006-April/034637.html) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Link containing double-single-quotes '' (bug 4598) [Has never passed]
* TODO: message transform: <noinclude> in transcluded template (bug 4926) [Has never passed]
* TODO: message transform: <onlyinclude> in transcluded template (bug 4926) [Has never passed]
* BUG 1887, part 2: A <math> with a thumbnail- math enabled [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML bullet list, unclosed tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML ordered list, unclosed tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML nested bullet list, open tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML nested ordered list, open tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Inline HTML vs wiki block nesting [Has never passed]
* TODO: Mixing markup for italics and bold [Has never passed]
* TODO: 5 quotes, code coverage +1 line [Has never passed]
* TODO: dt/dd/dl test [Has never passed]
* TODO: Images with the "|" character in the comment [Has never passed]
* TODO: Parents of subpages, two levels up, without trailing slash or name. [Has never passed]
* TODO: Parents of subpages, two levels up, with lots of extra trailing slashes. [Has never passed]
Passed 493 of 511 tests (96.48%)... 18 tests failed!
Hi guys,
I was wondering if there is a BPMN (Business Process Modelling Notation) to
Image convertor. So a user can upload an BPMN file, which is translated to a
thumnail image which can be shown on the page (as can be done with normal
images). I looked on the extension page, but I could find any.
Could someone help me out?
Thanks,
With regards,
Paul van Erk
I've been working on making a set of extensions to make a table
editing helper, which I'm tentatively calling TableEdit. The help
page for the prototype is at:
http://colimod.org/colipedia/index.php/Special:TableEdit
...with screen captures!
The basic idea is that you can put <newTableEdit/> in your markup,
and an extension will replace it on save with a link to a special
page that can create the table by adding and deleting columns and
rows. These are stored in an external mysql db with two tables. One
keeps track of the tables in each page and the other keeps track of
the content of each row. The row data is just a string of values
delimited by '||' so it can be dropped right into the table markup.
In the prototype, you can put a list of column headings between
<newTableEdit>list</newTableEdit>, or you can specify a location for
a list of column headings in a Template page.
Individual rows can be editable by all or only by the creator and
admins. This doesn't stop editing in the page itself unless you
combine it with ProtectSection or some other protection mechanism.
What I don't have working yet is:
- Sorting
- Inserting between existing rows and columns
- Parsing the data back out of the wiki text.
and as usual, the code could probably be cleaned up a lot. I'll try
to post it to mediawiki as experimental this weekend, but I wanted
people to see the doc page.
Jim
p.s. The wiki it's on doesn't allow anonymous registration or
editing, so you won't be able to test drive it in place.
=====================================
Jim Hu
Associate Professor
Dept. of Biochemistry and Biophysics
2128 TAMU
Texas A&M Univ.
College Station, TX 77843-2128
979-862-4054
Please check and try to create an account on one of the two sites setup
with 1.9.3
http://chr.wikigadugi.orghttp://en.wikigadugi.org
Even though $wgLogo is setup correctly, the images fail to render on the
default page with no user logged in. When you switch to a login
panel or some other panel other than main display, the images then show
up properly. They disappear completely when either logged out
or when sitting on a main page for editing.
Jeff
An automated run of parserTests.php showed the following failures:
This is MediaWiki version 1.10alpha (r20113).
Reading tests from "maintenance/parserTests.txt"...
Reading tests from "extensions/Cite/citeParserTests.txt"...
Reading tests from "extensions/Poem/poemParserTests.txt"...
18 still FAILING test(s) :(
* URL-encoding in URL functions (single parameter) [Has never passed]
* URL-encoding in URL functions (multiple parameters) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Table security: embedded pipes (http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikitech-l/2006-April/034637.html) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Link containing double-single-quotes '' (bug 4598) [Has never passed]
* TODO: message transform: <noinclude> in transcluded template (bug 4926) [Has never passed]
* TODO: message transform: <onlyinclude> in transcluded template (bug 4926) [Has never passed]
* BUG 1887, part 2: A <math> with a thumbnail- math enabled [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML bullet list, unclosed tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML ordered list, unclosed tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML nested bullet list, open tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: HTML nested ordered list, open tags (bug 5497) [Has never passed]
* TODO: Inline HTML vs wiki block nesting [Has never passed]
* TODO: Mixing markup for italics and bold [Has never passed]
* TODO: 5 quotes, code coverage +1 line [Has never passed]
* TODO: dt/dd/dl test [Has never passed]
* TODO: Images with the "|" character in the comment [Has never passed]
* TODO: Parents of subpages, two levels up, without trailing slash or name. [Has never passed]
* TODO: Parents of subpages, two levels up, with lots of extra trailing slashes. [Has never passed]
Passed 493 of 511 tests (96.48%)... 18 tests failed!
HI,
I don't know why my Mediawiki 1.9.3 looks "fat" in IE 6/7, but in
Firefox is just all right.
All the tables separated. Attached picture, please help.
Thanks!
--
---BiGreat---
www.Liang-Chen.com
I have integrated the wikix program that extracts image files and
analyzes image template usage in the enwiki dumps into the AI engine I
use for machine translation projects. I use wikix to sync up with the
Wikipedia Image repository. It has yielded some useful results as a
side affect which may be useful for the Wikipedia community on the
English Wikipedia.
During analysis of the last dumps posted as enwiki-20070206, the program
identified all tag usages in templates for image tagging in use on the
English
Wikipedia as well as all suspect image files which may be trojans,
viruses, and other types of content which has been uploaded as images to
the site.
The image files and data are grouped into the following output logs from
the English Wikipedia. Not all the files are trojans and some of them
are probably ok , but a some may not be, particularly files named
"spoof" and MS word files which can contain VB5 virus code if downloaded
from Wikipedia. At any rate, the list of files and the articles which
they link to are provided and it may be useful for someone to review
these files since they appear to be file types which can harbor viruses
and trojans. They are files I will not be hosting or pulling into
Wikigadugi since they may contain malicious code.
images.log - all image files referenced in the last enwiki dumps
reject.log - all suspect files which may be viruses or trojans listed by
article title which link to the image files
fragment.log - all templates and image tags used in templates which
alias to the Image: directive as some point through the website logic
and the first article title in which they appear. (this is interesting
to see how many tags people create in templates to map to Image:)
These logs can be downloaded from:
ftp://www.wikigadugi.org/wiki/xml/wikix-logs.tar.gz
Jeff