Results for "Author: primoris software"
This is meant to be a quick, intuitive menu building javascript code that allows you to add powerful Windows-like menus to your Intranet web application. It runs on IE 5 and later only. It's main feature is native support for cross-frame scripting. Add the menu object code to only your header, and then every document that loads in your main frame can show the menu bars by referencing just the style sheet! You only have to code one page. This saves a lot of time. Menu options are coded as functions, so the options are unlimited. A blank table with no rows must be created for the menu bar, then the menu object created on page load that accepts a numeric input that is roughly the width you want the menu options to be. Then you create each menu and menu item programmatically. This assumes the browser is IE 5 or greater, and that you have a basic knowledge of javascript object oriented programming. It assumes that any page you wish the menus to appear on reference a style sheet.
Support Solution is a complete customer service/tech support issue entry and completion system, which greatly facilitates the use of remote service employees. A call comes in, gets logged by a local user, gets taken by a remote user, resolved or passed on, then can be viewed from history. Report writing capabilities show how much work has been done BY a user, and FOR a customer. Keep track of whether remote users are logged in or not.
This article explains an alternative to the boring string parse/loop method of building a search query for your website.
Break down large recordsets into simple pages without all of the math work! This simple class acts as a wrapper to hide the grunt-work of the ADO Recordset paging feature. PageSize and AbsolutePage are handled on the backend, and exposed in their place is an easy to use 2-D array that contains ONLY the values you need. The navigation controls are automatically handled, and a function is even included to display the page of results in tabular form for you! An example page is included to show how easy it is to start separating your recordset results into pages. This is also a good example of VBScript classes.
Support Solution is a complete customer service/tech support issue entry and completion system, which greatly facilitates the use of remote service employees. A call comes in, gets logged by a local user, gets taken by a remote user, resolved or passed on, then can be viewed from history. Report writing capabilities show how much work has been done BY a user, and FOR a customer. Keep track of whether remote users are logged in or not.
This article explains an alternative to the boring string parse/loop method of building a search query for your website.
Break down large recordsets into simple pages without all of the math work! This simple class acts as a wrapper to hide the grunt-work of the ADO Recordset paging feature. PageSize and AbsolutePage are handled on the backend, and exposed in their place is an easy to use 2-D array that contains ONLY the values you need. The navigation controls are automatically handled, and a function is even included to display the page of results in tabular form for you! An example page is included to show how easy it is to start separating your recordset results into pages. This is also a good example of VBScript classes.
This is meant to be a quick, intuitive menu building javascript code that allows you to add powerful Windows-like menus to your Intranet web application. It runs on IE 5 and later only. It's main feature is native support for cross-frame scripting. Add the menu object code to only your header, and then every document that loads in your main frame can show the menu bars by referencing just the style sheet! You only have to code one page. This saves a lot of time. Menu options are coded as functions, so the options are unlimited. A blank table with no rows must be created for the menu bar, then the menu object created on page load that accepts a numeric input that is roughly the width you want the menu options to be. Then you create each menu and menu item programmatically. This assumes the browser is IE 5 or greater, and that you have a basic knowledge of javascript object oriented programming. It assumes that any page you wish the menus to appear on reference a style sheet.
Support Solution is a complete customer service/tech support issue entry and completion system, which greatly facilitates the use of remote service employees. A call comes in, gets logged by a local user, gets taken by a remote user, resolved or passed on, then can be viewed from history. Report writing capabilities show how much work has been done BY a user, and FOR a customer. Keep track of whether remote users are logged in or not.
This article explains an alternative to the boring string parse/loop method of building a search query for your website.
Break down large recordsets into simple pages without all of the math work! This simple class acts as a wrapper to hide the grunt-work of the ADO Recordset paging feature. PageSize and AbsolutePage are handled on the backend, and exposed in their place is an easy to use 2-D array that contains ONLY the values you need. The navigation controls are automatically handled, and a function is even included to display the page of results in tabular form for you! An example page is included to show how easy it is to start separating your recordset results into pages. This is also a good example of VBScript classes.
This is meant to be a quick, intuitive menu building javascript code that allows you to add powerful Windows-like menus to your Intranet web application. It runs on IE 5 and later only. It's main feature is native support for cross-frame scripting. Add the menu object code to only your header, and then every document that loads in your main frame can show the menu bars by referencing just the style sheet! You only have to code one page. This saves a lot of time. Menu options are coded as functions, so the options are unlimited. A blank table with no rows must be created for the menu bar, then the menu object created on page load that accepts a numeric input that is roughly the width you want the menu options to be. Then you create each menu and menu item programmatically. This assumes the browser is IE 5 or greater, and that you have a basic knowledge of javascript object oriented programming. It assumes that any page you wish the menus to appear on reference a style sheet.
Support Solution is a complete customer service/tech support issue entry and completion system, which greatly facilitates the use of remote service employees. A call comes in, gets logged by a local user, gets taken by a remote user, resolved or passed on, then can be viewed from history. Report writing capabilities show how much work has been done BY a user, and FOR a customer. Keep track of whether remote users are logged in or not.
This article explains an alternative to the boring string parse/loop method of building a search query for your website.
Break down large recordsets into simple pages without all of the math work! This simple class acts as a wrapper to hide the grunt-work of the ADO Recordset paging feature. PageSize and AbsolutePage are handled on the backend, and exposed in their place is an easy to use 2-D array that contains ONLY the values you need. The navigation controls are automatically handled, and a function is even included to display the page of results in tabular form for you! An example page is included to show how easy it is to start separating your recordset results into pages. This is also a good example of VBScript classes.
This is meant to be a quick, intuitive menu building javascript code that allows you to add powerful Windows-like menus to your Intranet web application. It runs on IE 5 and later only. It's main feature is native support for cross-frame scripting. Add the menu object code to only your header, and then every document that loads in your main frame can show the menu bars by referencing just the style sheet! You only have to code one page. This saves a lot of time. Menu options are coded as functions, so the options are unlimited. A blank table with no rows must be created for the menu bar, then the menu object created on page load that accepts a numeric input that is roughly the width you want the menu options to be. Then you create each menu and menu item programmatically. This assumes the browser is IE 5 or greater, and that you have a basic knowledge of javascript object oriented programming. It assumes that any page you wish the menus to appear on reference a style sheet.
Support Solution is a complete customer service/tech support issue entry and completion system, which greatly facilitates the use of remote service employees. A call comes in, gets logged by a local user, gets taken by a remote user, resolved or passed on, then can be viewed from history. Report writing capabilities show how much work has been done BY a user, and FOR a customer. Keep track of whether remote users are logged in or not.
This article explains an alternative to the boring string parse/loop method of building a search query for your website.
Break down large recordsets into simple pages without all of the math work! This simple class acts as a wrapper to hide the grunt-work of the ADO Recordset paging feature. PageSize and AbsolutePage are handled on the backend, and exposed in their place is an easy to use 2-D array that contains ONLY the values you need. The navigation controls are automatically handled, and a function is even included to display the page of results in tabular form for you! An example page is included to show how easy it is to start separating your recordset results into pages. This is also a good example of VBScript classes.
This is meant to be a quick, intuitive menu building javascript code that allows you to add powerful Windows-like menus to your Intranet web application. It runs on IE 5 and later only. It's main feature is native support for cross-frame scripting. Add the menu object code to only your header, and then every document that loads in your main frame can show the menu bars by referencing just the style sheet! You only have to code one page. This saves a lot of time. Menu options are coded as functions, so the options are unlimited. A blank table with no rows must be created for the menu bar, then the menu object created on page load that accepts a numeric input that is roughly the width you want the menu options to be. Then you create each menu and menu item programmatically. This assumes the browser is IE 5 or greater, and that you have a basic knowledge of javascript object oriented programming. It assumes that any page you wish the menus to appear on reference a style sheet.