Web Forms :: Converting Text To Format For Google Calendar?
Aug 14, 2010
I have embedded a Google Calendar Reminder button into an aspx page. It assumes the date is in a yyyyddmm format. So that 08/14/2010 in my text box needs to be converted to 20101408 What would be the format to take a date (string) from a textbox and convert it into a string will be in the desired format for Google?
i'm developing a website. i have a registration form where user can registered with this website. this have a birthdate field for store user's birthdate.that is a textbox. here is my code.
I have searched a few pages on this (including MSDN) but have not quite reached a solution. I need to convert "16/04/2010 22:39:06" to "2010-04-16 22:39:06.034" (for example).
I have already written an SQL function to do this, but would rather do this in VB.NET if possible. The date value is coming from the Date Created information of a newly uploaded file:
I have a text field that users enter information into a database (SQL Server). They are entering as little as a few sentances to multiple paragraphs. I can successfully display the data on my webpage, but the text field is not formatted very nicely. The output is all smashed together like one big paragraph. Ironically, when I also display the text as a tool tip it outputs as multiple paragraphs like it was entered. How can I format the output in the datalist to create a more readable text field? My datalist field is as follows:
Imports System.IO Partial Public Class MyexcelPage Inherits System.Web.UI.Page Protected Sub Page_Load(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Me.Load Response.Clear() Response.Buffer = True Response.ContentType = "application/vnd.ms-excel" Dim stringWriter As StringWriter = New StringWriter() Dim htmlTextWriter As HtmlTextWriter = New HtmlTextWriter(stringWriter) Me.RenderControl(htmlTextWriter)
Not sure what to do after this or if the above will do anything.
I'm looking to build a Google like calendar from scratch. I need it to be flexible, so if someone has an appointment scheduled and is running 15 minutes let, I need to be able to click a button and move that appointment and all the other appointments underneath it down by 15 minutes.
integration of Google Calendars in the website? I need to replace the existing calendar control in the website with the Google calendar. I am trying to merge the events with Google Calendar so that events are posted/ tracked in Google Calendar, and events added to the Google Calendar would be shown in my website. I want some working sample which will provide me some idea to integrate the Google calendar in the website.
I have been racking my brain for a few days trying to get a list of calendars from Google using DotNetOpenAuth. I can successfully get a list of contacts using the DotNetOpenAuth Samples. I have integrated it with my domain using the OpenId+OAuth. Everything works great to get a list of contacts.
So from there I modified the code to try to retrieve a list of Calendars and I keep getting a 401 Unauthorized error. I know it is authorizing because I can get the contact list. Does anyone have a code example how they are retrieving calendars or calendar events using the DotNetOpenAuth with Google???
How to use pattern replacement in the RTF?. For example you can add a placeholder like {USER_FIRST_NAME} in the RTF document. When the user clicks the download button, your application can take the information from the database and replace every instance of {USER_FIRST_NAME} with the data from the database....
I have this example and it gives me exception "Conversion from string x to dateTime is invalid"
here is my method to validate Datetime.
Example Date string : "27/03/1985"
Public Function validateDateColumn(ByRef FieldName As String) As Boolean
Try If IsDate(FieldName) Then Dim actualDate As DateTime = CDate(FieldName) Dim DtLicExp As DateTime = CDate(actualDate.ToString("d", Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture)) FieldName = DtLicExp.ToString("MM/dd/yyyy") Return True End If Catch ex As Exception 'FieldName &= "Format must be MM/dd/yyyy" Return False End Try End Function
validate this date string formate to datetime.
I want to convert this date "27/03/1985" to datetime.
I have an AJAX Calendar extender that puts the date in the textbox in this format: MMMM d, yyyy. I also have a compare validator control that does at DataTypeCheck for DATE. However, when the Calendar Extender enters the date as MMMM d, yyyy (eg. November 2, 2010) the compare validator doesn't like it. It only seems to like the date in the format MM/dd/yy. Not sure how to get this compare validator to accept the input format from the calendar extender?
I have the following code for use in my asp.net website:
CalendarService service = new CalendarService("mycalendar"); EventQuery query = new EventQuery(); query.Uri = new Uri(group.GroupEventsURL); query.SingleEvents = true; query.SortOrder = CalendarSortOrder.ascending; query.ExtraParameters = "orderby=starttime"; query.NumberToRetrieve = 50; query.TimeZone = "America/Chicago"; EventFeed feed = service.Query(query);
Which produces the following URL:
[URL]
According to the documentation (emphasis mine), I expect the Times in each EventEntry to be in the Central time zone:
The current timezone. If not specified, times are returned in the calendar time zone.
Times in the resulting feed will be represented in this timezone.
Replace all spaces with underscores (e.g. "ctz=America/Los_Angeles").
But my server is hosted in Arizona, so (for now) all of the dates on the calendar are two hours earlier than they should be. Am I doing something wrong? How do I get the dates in the feed to be in the Central time zone even though the server is in Arizona?
I do not plan on moving my hosting any time soon, but since Arizona does not participate in Daylight Savings Time, I cannot simply add two hours to every date.
I've written a entry form for our company employees to enter marketing courses into the DB and at the same time add them to a Google Calendar. The Calendar is accepting the events, but the coloration of the event is different from a "manually" entered event using Google's interface. This leads me to believe that there is some property I am not setting that is causing the events not to be show on the calendar once it is embedded in our other company web pages.
The code used to enter events:
// Create a CalenderService and authenticate CalendarService myService = new CalendarService("exampleCo-exampleApp-1"); myService.setUserCredentials("xxx@gmail.com", "xxxxxx"); CalendarQuery query = new CalendarQuery();
[Code]....
And this is the resulting calendar:
The "test event jasdf event" is the manually entered event, and the two events: "Test event 234" are the programmatically entered events. In any case, once I embed the calendar, the only event showing up is the "test event jasdf".
Anyone faced this issue before or had success with google calendar? If so, I'd like to see what you might have used to successfully create events and publish them.
I am working on globalization project.In some scenario I want to convert date in european format and sometimes in US format.I have developed method as follow.
public static string ToCultureDate(object oValue,string culture) [code]...
i have a textBox and i set it to MultiLine.i want to know is there some way to get the text inside of text box with a format like, user will type some text in it and mack some brack in text and i want to get the text as like as inside of textBox with those bracks.normaly all with textBox1.Text i get the text in one line
I have database that stores events (EventName, EventStartDate, and EventEndDate). I'm able to add events to the database using LINQ to SQL and that works fine. I would like to have a calendar control that has the EventName under the daY if an event falls on that day. I know I need to use the DayRender event, but not sure where to go from there. I'm new to ASP.NET.
Does anyone know if there is a way of specifying the Format of a calendar extender with a dynamic value from the aspx?I tried this but it doesnt seem to set the format at all. Does anyone see anything wrong with it: