so i was have a MHTML file someone gave me, i looked it up figured out what it holdsm it holds all the assets of a webpage, how do i decompress this (i use linix just incase if you need to know) i dont know if i would just run a script on my device or would use a website to do it for me (either works)
i am hoping do decompress a mhtml file using either shell commands or a website
I am using google colab GPU to run an open source vehicle counting system on the darknet/yolov3 framework. I was able to get yolov3 running perfectly for video object detection. I cannot get this second repository to run and I think it is a google colab issue because I am new to it. Ivy-master and darknet-master are cloned under content, I also tried saving these in drive but it did not make a difference.
I have my .env file set up as vars.env and installed the colab-env. When I run !python -m main in colab, I get the error Path to video or camera input not set. My variable in my vars.env file looks like so:
VIDEO="./content/vehiclesystem/data/demodata/videos/sample.mp4". The path is correct, so why is colab telling me the path is not set? I have tried asking owner for help but no luck.
I think the path should not contain the . (dot). But for certain results, try to go to the files panel on the left side and find the path by right-clicking the mp4 file and selecting Copy Path option.
Paste this path into your variable in my vars.env file. It should work now :)
There's a similarenter link description here It's on the below link.
I have been given a patch on an email and I need to create a patch file. I have just pasted the contents into a text file and saved it as 'All Files' as file.patch. As far as I can tell this is correct.
This patch will apply to multiple files in a library.
I'm not sure how to apply the patch. I'm guessing that this is done using MinGW but I'm not sure how. I have set the above directory to the library in the command line like this..
cd c:\library
I place the patch file in this libraries base director and write the name of the patch.
file.patch
When I do this (I have tortoise svn installed on my pc) a the patch file opens up with a bunch of colors (Red/Yellor/Green) highlighting some of the text in the file.
Does this mean the patch automatically applies or am I going about this completely the wrong way?
I can't put the patch on the internet but the explanation above is clear.
If I have it all wrong would someone mind explaining how I apply a patch using MinGW on Windows? Thanks
The short story: I can generate a CHM file with Doxygen. Launching the CHM file, I observe that the Contents and Index tabs do list the pages, namespaces, classes, and members of those classes. However, clicking on the items in those Contents and Index lists do not display any content.
I am on a computer using Windows 7 Professional SP1, 64-bit.
I use Doxywizard to run Doxygen version 1.8.9.1 on my code. It correctly generates the HTML output; the pages, namespaces, classes, and members appear in the documentation.
I then further want to convert the HTML into a compressed HTML (CHM) file.
I downloaded the Microsoft HTML Help Workshop version 1.31 (i.e., htmlhelp.exe version 4.74.8703 ) from the Microsoft website ( https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms669985(v=vs.85).aspx ). I ran the installer. As the installer was proceeding, a popup message appeared:
This computer already has a newer version of HTML Help.
However, installation completed successfully. And, the hhc.exe program is there where I told it to install.
I now specify these relevant Doxygen settings:
Wizard --> Output:
HTML is checked
"prepare for compressed HTML (.chm)" option is selected.
Expert --> HTML:
GENERATE_HTMLHELP = YES
CHM_FILE = Foo.chm
HHC_LOCATION = C:\Program Files(x86)\Microsoft\HTML Help Workshop\hhc.exe
When I run Doxygen again, it reports an error:
error: failed to run html help compiler on index.hhp
The Foo.chm file is generated where expected. But, as described above, it is missing a lot of content.
I tried running hhc.exe manually on the HHP file generated by Doxygen. It does not indicate any errors.
C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\HTML Help Workshop>hhc c:\test\html\index.hhp
Microsoft HTML Help Compiler 4.74.8702
Compiling c:\test\html\Foo.chm
Compile time: 0 minutes, 3 seconds
292 Topics
3,855 Local links
83 Internet links
0 Graphics
Created c:\test\html\Foo.chm, 259,580 bytes
Compression decreased file by 1,077,915 bytes.
However, the result is the same: a Foo.chm file that is missing content.
I subsequently found that I had another installation of the HTML Help Workshop on my computer. But, the hhc.exe was the exact same version. So, that is not likely the problem.
Can you suggest what else I can try to get all the documentation content to display in the CHM file?
When I have seen this problem (the html exists and the chm has content but that content is not visible), it has been because windows security has "blocked" the chm file. To see if this is what you are encountering try the following:
From windows explorer, Right click the generated .chm file and select properties.
On the General tab, if you see an Unblock button, click it.
Close the dialog and open the .chm file.
(I have not encountered this problem with locally generated doxygen .chm files, but I am hopeful from your description that this may fix your problem.)
The essential problem was that the CHM file was on a mapped network drive.
When I copied the CHM file to a physical drive on my computer, all the content displays.
In your doxyfile, put the path to hhc.exe in double quotes, since it contains spaces.
Or even better, do not use paths with spaces.
I am using Fedora 18 on Virtual Box on my Windows XP desktop to learn Django. After going through the .txt documentation files, I discovered these files were written using restructuredText. I've been spending the last day or so trying to figure out how to convert the files into something readable (HTML, Latex, PDF, etc.). First thing I did, was install docutils (from source - download page) and used rst2html.py to convert the files to HTML to be readable.
When I used this tool, I was getting the Unknown interpreted text role "doc", Unknown interpreted text role "ref", Unknown interpreted text role "term" errors, and more when opening the docs/intro/index.txt, docs/intro/install.txt and docs/intro/tutorial01.txt files. I was able to find very little on Google describing the exact problem I was having so I tried to use a different option.
Naively thinking the errors were native to docutils I decided to search for another tool and found this page and installed restview. Well, I didn't realize restview used docutils so I ended up back at square one.
How do I get rid of these and other errors? Did I install docutils and restview correctly?
Please tell me if I need to add more info
You need to use Sphinx. This tool is used by the Django project and it defines additional reStructuredText constructs to complement those defined by docutils. Such as
http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/inline.html#role-doc
http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/inline.html#role-ref
http://sphinx-doc.org/markup/inline.html#role-term