Showing posts with label test. Show all posts
Showing posts with label test. Show all posts

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Test "Quote from a blog" bookmarklet

abc

function mozInnerHTML(node) { var str = ''; for (var i = 0; i < str =" '';" i =" 0;" attr =" node.attributes.item(i);">'; } else { str += '>'; str += mozInnerHTML(node); str += ''; } break; case Node.TEXT_NODE: str += node.nodeValue; break; default: break; } return str; } var sel = window.getSelection(); var node = sel.getRangeAt(0).commonAncestorContainer; var html = mozOuterHTML(node); var uri=document.location; var title = document.title; var win=window.open('','','width=500,height=400'); win.document.write('

' + html + ' [' + title + ']' + '

' );
[]

def

4. Quote from a blog, which lifts text from a page and formats it for posting to a blog, along with attribution and a link. Because this version uses an advanced Mozilla-only technique described here, though, you might rather use the version that Phil Windley discussed here.

[Jon Udell: Bookmarklets 101]

ghi

Friday, May 02, 2008

Test post

This is a test post via blog.gears.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Fwd: "jojoba" - Word of the Day from the OED

This is a text to see how the fancy typography survives the trip to a blog and how it does in the Atom feed.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <oedwotd@oup.com>
Date: Mon, Mar 3, 2008 at 9:30 PM
Subject: "jojoba" - Word of the Day from the OED
To: OEDWOTD-AMER-L@webber.uk.oup.com


OED Online Word of the Day

An unsurpassed guide to the meaning and history of millions of words, both present and past, the Oxford English Dictionary Online is the most powerful online lexical resource on the Internet! Subscribe today for only $29.95 a month, and you can have access to the "greatest work in dictionary making ever undertaken." – The New York Times


jojoba, n.

ADDITIONS SERIES 1997
Bot.

(h{schwa}{sm}h{schwa}{shtu}b{schwa}) Formerly also jajoba, jojobe, jojove. [a. Sp. jojoba, ad. native Indian hohohwi.]

a. A desert shrub, Simmondsia chinensis (family Simmondsiaceae), native to northern Mexico and the south-western U.S., that is used for the oil it yields. Also, = *jojoba oil below.

1900 E. J. WICKSON California Fruits (ed. 3) 43 The 'jajoba' (Simmondsia californica) is a low shrub, the fresh fruits of which..are eaten like almonds. 1933 Bot. Gaz. LXXXXIV. 826 Simmondsia californica, commonly known in the southwest as 'jojobe' or 'jojove', is an evergreen shrub. 1958 Econ. Bot. XII. 261 Jojoba, the gray box bush, is a drought-resistant, long-lived, evergreen, desert shrub bearing fruit like an acorn set in sepals. 1983 Houston (Texas) Chron. 21 Aug. I. 19/5 The August harvest of jojoba looks good so far, raising the spirits of manufacturers of just about everything from food to floor wax. 1989 Times 31 Aug. 25/6 Jojoba is hardly absorbed in the gut{em}an attractive feature if you are trying to make low-calorie foods. 1989 Sunday Tel. 10 Dec. 43/4 Brown paper wrapped grapefruit and jojoba soap, £2.25.

b. jojoba oil, oil extracted from the fruit of the jojoba, used in cosmetics and as a substitute for sperm oil.

1975 Nature 22 May 272/3 Chemical analysis of jojoba oil has confirmed that it is strikingly similar in composition to sperm oil. 1986 Look Now Oct. 68/2 The Renewer Lotion contains collagen, jojoba oil and a special firming ingredient to smooth and soften the skin.

To cancel this service, send a message to wotd@oed.com consisting of the text signoff oedwotd-amer-l. Alternatively, use this unsubscribe mail link.

Written requests to unsubscribe may be sent to:

Online Products
Oxford University Press
Great Clarendon Street
Oxford OX2 6DP
UK

Visit the OED's home page at www.oed.com

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2005

Monday, April 23, 2007

COinS Test

class="Z3988"
title="ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Focoins.info%3Agenerator&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Onward+%26+Upward+with+the+Arts+-+Farewell%2C+My+Lovely&rft.title=New+Yorker&rft.issn=0028-792X&rft.date=1936-05-16&rft.spage=20&rft.epage=22&rft.aulast=White&rft.aufirst=&rft.auinit=E.+B.&rft.au=E.+B.+White">
(Insert Default Text Here)


Look at the page source and search for ctx to find the OpenURL context object.