http://www.chartjs.org/ displays the old documentation of chartjs.
I think the following link was suppose to be the new documenation but it 404's.
http://nnnick.github.io/Chart.js/docs-v2/
Does someone has a link to the new documentation?
The documentation is also hosted in GitHub. So irrespective of where it is actually hosted you can get the content from the relevant folder. Currently it is https://github.com/chartjs/Chart.js/tree/gh-pages/_doc-parts-v2
Edit
Just noticed that the main site (http://www.chartjs.org/docs/) now points to the new documentation
Related
I have developed a collection in postman having a bunch of API Endpoints. I can add team member to my Postman workspace and also can share the Documentation link publicly online.
What I was finding to have a download link to download the documentation as a folder so that I could add them into my project.
Is there anything I failed to find in postman?
You can export the collection as a json as shown in the other answer and then run a tool to convert it into an HTML document that you can host wherever you want.
I created a simple python executable to do just that -
https://github.com/karthiks3000/postman-doc-gen
Hi #Siddiqui currently this feature is not available, I do it by going to my collection documentation and getting it to print when the print prompt is shown I save the document as PDF before finalizing the print options. Once I get it in PDF I have all sorts options to do as I want. This is the closest I have been to downloading my collection documentation.
I have redacted information for privacy.
Hope this helps or leave a comment if I can be of any further assistance.
Postman generated API documentation is meant to be shared and consumed via workspace and URL to help ensure it is kept up to date and does not go stagnant. Because documentation will most likely be regularly updated with examples, new endpoints, and other elements anything downloaded will quickly be out of date. I know that a PDF generated version has been discussed as part of future releases, but keeping API documentation up to date is the priority.
A simple solution to this is to print the page to PDF from the web browser. It's not perfect but it is usable.
https://learning.postman.com/docs/getting-started/importing-and-exporting-data/
to export the doc to json
and then run the script by #karthiks3000 (https://github.com/karthiks3000/postman-doc-gen)
I would like to Optimize the Sitecore Images and I found a documentation but I struck out on the first line itself
Install the packages with the /sitecore/admin/UpdateInstallationWizard.aspx
I found the path but could not find UpdateInstallationWizard.aspx,may I know what should I do to get that aspx page
You should be able to navigate to this page just using the url http://localhost/sitecore/admin/updateinstallationwizard.aspx.
You should first see the login screen and after you login, you should see the wizard.
You can also see the blog post Easy Access to the Update Installation Wizard
I'm trying to create a simple wiki page on gitlab. Anyone knows of any good tutorials that could assist me in achieving that? I tried searching google for any tutorials but could not find any that are relevant.
You can use http://pad.haroopress.com/ as an editor, to see how it will look like in a wiki gitlab page.
In the bottom-left corner is a button, when you hit that button, you will get the markdown help.
I think you are looking for page not the wikipage (if you are looking for wiki page you can create wiki page from the menu wiki)
if you are looking for Page:
Login to your GitLab account and create project under your username git the repo name as yourusername.gitlab.io
create create index.html,cssfiles,js files, and .gitlab-ci.yml push the files to gitlab it will build your page
you can opn you page in browser like yourusername.gitlab.io check this example http://wiki.workassis.com/how-to-create-gitlab-pages/
Are there any plug and play blog APPS for django,if so please point me to the sources for it.
I am actually looking something like word press which is of cousre difficult to integrate with django.
Thanks..
We looked into this a few months ago for our site and found that Mezzanine and Zinnia were the two best options available, and both are regularly-maintained.
Mezzanine gives you a slicker interface than Zinnia and has disqus comment integration, and has recently added Akismet integration for spam filtering on comments.
django-blog-it - complete customization and ready to use with one click installer. You can try it by hosting on your own or deploy to Heroku with a button click.
Features:
Dynamic blog articles
Blog pages
Contact us page (configurable)
google analytics
List item
SEO compliant
Actually I'm not sure but I think you might look at this one.
Also project Pinax contains blog.
We've got a company wiki running Mediawiki on our intranet that has been in use for a while. We just recently installed Redmine and are in the process of getting it configured just the way we like it.
I was wondering if there's any way to use our already existing wiki instead of the built-in one that comes with Redmine. We've got alot of articles & documentation written by non-developers and don't want to lose and/or re-import into another wiki (ie redmine's). The Wiki portion of redmine will not allow me to enter the url for the external wiki as it includes various illegal characters (mainly : and /)
Edit: As a temporary work around, I've just used each project main page on the "external" Wiki as the Projects "Home Page" in Red Mine, so far this is the best I've been able to figure out. You don't get Wiki access from the various issues & what not, but the link to our other Wiki does show under the Overview for each project now.
Btw, both of these are installed on the same physical box, a Windows 2003 Server, where Mediawiki was installed using a WAMP package, and Redmine was installed pretty much manually instead of using a stack like Bitnami.
Did you see this MediaWiki integration patch for Redmine? http://www.redmine.org/attachments/572/redmine-mediawiki.patch and its reference page http://www.redmine.org/issues/617 I have not used it so im not sure if it meets your needs but it might be worth a shot. (Be sure to backup first)
The reference page says this about the patch:
Here's a patch for 0.7 that will add a
MediaWiki tab to your project settings
and integrate it into the issues
pages. You will also need to add:
is_mediawiki tinyint(1) NOT NULL
default '0', mediawikiurl
varchar(255) NOT NULL default '',
mediawikinamespace varchar(255) NOT
NULL default ''
To the projects table for this to
work.
I know you didn't want to import but just in case someone else did here is a rake file for importing MediaWiki pages into Redmine http://www.redmine.org/issues/1224
We looked into this as an option since there are so many tools that work with mediawiki however we decided not to pursue the option since we already had so many issues and wiki pages in redmine. As far as I can tell, this patch replaces the existing redmine wiki input boxes with mediawiki boxes. This is done not only in the wiki section but also for issues and documents. We were afraid of:
Losing all of our existing wiki pages, and issue descriptions.
The whole thing breaking as Redmine updates are posted and installed.
We have found that the newest Wiki Extensions plug in http://www.r-labs.org/projects/r-labs/wiki/Wiki_Extensions_en has given us most of the features we wanted for the wiki part. It has comments, voting, tags, and many other things. It works well with the latest version of Redmine.
We still are trying to find a good way to import into the wiki all of our existing documentation from word.