When creating website applications within Visual Studio 2005, I use the File System method because it meets the needs of our environment. In choosing the location of the directory where the files will reside, I can choose a share on a network file server or a local directory on my workstation. I use the network file server share because there are others who need access to the files as well, plus the files also get backed up.
The problem I have is when I go to access the “Security� page on the Web Site Administration Tool (WAT), I get the following error message:
An error occurred during the execution of the SQL file 'InstallCommon.sql'. The SQL error number is 5110 and the SqlException message is: The file "R:HELLOWORLDHELLOWORLDAPPAPP_DATAASPNETDB_TMP. MDF" is on a network path that is not supported for database files.
If I use the File System method and choose a local directory, I don’t get the error message. But, the files need to reside on the network share so working locally is not really an option. Code:
I was reading up on ASP for a report and it talked about scripting languages. It also talked about using VBScript or Javascript as a scripting language? What exaclty is a scripting language and why do you have to use it?
We have a few English websites running on a single server and are in the process of adding a Spanish website to the same server. I am trying to determine how one would set the language for a particular website. For example, instead of ASP generating a date like "Monday, July 19, 2004" .
Can any one tell me how many programming languages are there in the world? I tried to google it but could not really get an exact or complete list of them all.cheers.
My ASP/Access app'n uses UTF-8 data in mixed languages/scripts successfully. That is, it takes input, stores and retrieves stuff OK browser-wise. The app also writes an RTF file and downloads that to the client (for display by Word) fine, but ONLY English; Cyrillic and the CJK group gets the trash display - and it's not a font pblm, cuz the browser display is good.
I've tried a number of charset directives in the RTF-writer, including CP-1251, UTF-8, Unicode, etc. None works. I don't know whether I need an explicit code-set translator or not, and am working with ChilKat's Charset product without any improvement so far.
I am now creating a website which have 3 languages (English, Simplified Chinese and Traditional Chinese). The server has installed English version Window 2000 (Server Version, Default Codepage is Traditional Chinese) and MSSQL 2000 (English). I have created a database which use the codepage "chinese_PRC".
However, when I created an testing asp pages ( 1 textbox and it will insert the content into the table), it cannot store the chars in correct coding. I would like to know whether asp or MSSQL has something wrong in my setting?
Just started learning ASP, seems like lots of people use VBScript to program with. Though, I have spent the last year learning Java. Just wondering if I can use this to program with? along with its API's ?
Also, is it worth while to learn VBScript ? Is it industry standard or needed? Im guessing it is from the way its the language used in most ASP books. Any insight would be great.
This is a first for me...so all help much appreciated.
I am trying to create a survey form which retrieves all its questions form an ACCESS database.. (I know ACCESS isn't the best option, it just not my call).
This database is to be multi lingual and my current survey is to be in THAI...
So in creating the survey, I copy the thai text into the ACCESS table from a WORD document and all looks good. ACCESS seems to understand the THAI.
When I retrieve these Questions from the Database, loading them into a recordset however, I get '????'s' in the output instead of the thai text .
I have set the charset of the HTML document as charset=TIS-620..
Can anyone tell me what i am missing? What needs to be done to display thai text in my ASP App?
I have an ASP page that I want to support multiple languages. If I set the <%@ Language=VBScript CodePage=65001%>
and adds a <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
meta tag it seems to work OK. Now instead of setting the codepage in every page I tried adding a global.asa (Session_onStart) file and add session.codepage=65001 and also tried to add response.charset="utf-8" (I was not allowed to set <%@ Language=VBScript CodePage=65001%> inside global.asa). This does not seems to work though. Is it possible to set a codepage in some event in a global.asa to make it global for the entire application? Is it possible to add a directive in global.asa that works like setting a <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">. If this is possible I don't have to recomplie my business logic that creates the html.
how ASP (not ASP.Net) to do the following things: 1) Get real-time information from other web site such as tracking via Fed-Ex; 2) Real-time credit card charging via a payment gateway such as WorldPay; 3) How to support multiple languages.
Ive done quite a few sites now that involve different languages using different strategies and I would like to hear some different opinions on which is the most efficient.
The previous sites with languages that I have done have not been majorly big or would involve vast amounts of traffic so using included language file have been ok. I am about to do a site in 4 - 6 different languages that will have quite a lot of traffic. I have also used application variables in some cases but not sure if that is the best way.
So if anyone has any ideas on a better way and also one that is easy on server resources I'd love to hear them (and maybe a link to some code would be koool)..
I want to create some pages using .net, and have others using regular asp with vb. Just wondering? I know you can have Java within the same pages, but didn't know if using asp, and then wanted to do some .net things if the site would have problems.