I've tried to search for this both on Google and StackOverFlow, but simply can't find what I'm looking for, it might be that it's simply not possible, but thought I would ask anyway.
I'm looking for a way to make a file redirect the user to another page, the user would download the file by clicking on a button.
It's for a Prestashop downloadable product, I'm trying to redirect the user to another part of our site (which isn't directly visible) to be able to view magazines, etc. in a viewer.
Now Prestashop is natively set up to download the file, which is what we don't want, hence the use of the viewer, but there is no way to simply provide a link to send the user to instead of a physical file, like a PDF or something. I can't really modify the button as its generated by Prestashop, and if I add a PDF file with the link in there it defeats te purpose as I dont want people having the link in a document (I know they can find it from their history and so on). Hence I thought it would be easier to do it with a document that redirects if possible.
So in short, is it possible to make a file that would send people to a certain web page once they open/download this file on/to their computer?
And if yes, how would one go about it?
Can you make the user download an HTML file? If so, you can use "meta refresh" to redirect the user to your private page.
This does mean the unprotected link will be visible in downloaded HTML file - perhaps you can obfuscate this with JavaScript to make it a little more difficult for users to find your protected URL.
http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20-TECHS/H76
Related
I'm working on an api which returns a PDF link. I can put that link into a button, and when users click on that link, it'll download a PDF to their computer. I wonder if there is a way, so that when users click on the link the first time, it'll download the file. But if they click on the link the second time, it just opens a modal with the PDF content inside of it? That way they don't have to download the file again and again.
It's confidential so I can't tell how the link look like, but it's a PDF link stored in s3 aws.
You can do it but you need to store the information that if the user clicked the button before or not. The options for storing that information is:
Local Storage
Cookie
Your backend
I would suggest not to involve your backend on this, you can just write to localStorage when user clicks that link for the first time and set something like pdfDownloadedPreviously. If you have multiple pdfs like this, you would need to define a unique key for each of them so they don't override each other.
And in your program logic, you can read this from the localStorage, if that key exists in the localStorage then you open your modal, otherwise download.
I am trying to create buttons on a web page that allow users to share links to PDF documents on LinkedIn. LinkedIn loads a window without any errors but offers no link or preview of the PDF or any indication of what is being shared.
Here are the two methods I have tried. First the plugin method.
<script type="in/share" data-url="http://example.net/DocumentDownload.aspx?Command=Core_Download&entryID=114"></script>
And, secondly with a custom url.
TEST
Encoding the url makes no difference.
The above links are direct document links from a DNN web site using Document Exchange. If I change the urls to any html page it works fine and LinkedIn seems to be able to extract the useful information right from the page and use that for the share details.
Can LinkedIn handle this kind of thing? There is nothing to guide me on the type of links that can be shared. I can't find any information about it. There are no errors in the web console.
Not sure, but you should try to provide LinkedIn with the link that has .pdf at the end, like http://example.com/documents/file1.pdf. I guess LinkedIn just checks the URL if it has .pdf file at the end to decide if it is a PDF document or not.
I have no problem sharing pdf's on LinkedIn. Check it out...
https://www.linkedin.com/sharing/share-offsite/?url=https://www.revoltlib.com/anarchism/the-conquest-of-bread/view.pdf
Works perfectly fine. And view.pdf is a script, not a file, either, so, it's not looking for a PDF file to analyze, so much as headers that indicate you have a PDF file available to analyze, so, in PHP, at DocumentDownload.aspx, we would do...
header('Content-type: application/pdf; charset=utf-8');
This header let's the sharing app know that it can analyze the document as a PDF file and extract useful information from it, as you can see from the screen shot.
In ClearCase, is there anyway to make a straight hyperlink to file? Like of the form
http://mysite/myfile
where all a user has to do is click on the link to view a page or download a file?
We have several non-technical people at our organization who want to look at some of the documentation that developers are storing on ClearCase.
On Windows, you can try and version (add to source control) an xxx.lnk file: a shortcut file, which is set to open an http url.
Once loaded in a snapshot view (or even accessed in a dynamic view), a simple click should open a browser.
An even simpler solution would be to store an xxx.html static page, which would:
open the same browser when double-clicked
list all the actual documentation urls you want.
One file, multiple links!
i am currently working on a issue where i need to get location of the file downloaded.First let me explain the scenario.
I placed a link in my page and when user clicks the link it shows file download dialog with open/save/cancel options in IE.Now when the user clicks on the save button and choose a location to save the file i need to get that file saved location using whatever options possible.
Thanks!
I do not think you can... at least not easy. This runs on the client, and for security reasons you can not acces the client's filesystem with javascript.
Maybe it is however possible using a flash or silverlight plugin, as the user can allow access from within these applications to the local filesystem. It might be very difficult tho...
The browser will not allow you to access information about the clients filesystem.
I am looking for some initial direction on this one because I cannot seem to find my way with it. Let me explain...
I am developing a website wherein a logged in site member (Joomla 1.6) can fill out a simple form and attach a pdf to be uploaded upon submission. The user then clicks the submit button and the page will refresh to a new and unique web page.
User Submits data on http://www.examplesite.com and then after submission a new web page is generated that is called http://www.examplesite.com/userSubmittedValue
This newly generated web page would come from a template that is specified by the administrator and, most important, it will display all of the information that the user submitted. Also, there would be a link to download the pdf they uploaded. The user could then view a list of all the pages they have created in this manner via their profile.
I have seen this all over, but I am at a loss for how to generate this. Any help is much appreciated.
This is not something you will be able to easily do or get a detailed answer for here. If you just wanted to do the submission form with a thank you page that shows the data submitted you could use any number of form wizard type extensions - http://extensions.joomla.org/extensions/contacts-and-feedback/forms
If you just needed a way for users to upload PDfs and have access to them you could use one of the file management extensions that offer front end upload features - http://extensions.joomla.org/extensions/directory-a-documentation/downloads
If the additional data that is being submitted is simply data related to the file - title, description, etc then one of the file download components should work fine for you. The choices are limited in 1.6 at this time though so you might have to go with 1.5 to get the extension that works best for your needs.
So this probably isn't the best way to do it if your using Joomla but it just might help.
I would use PHP and inside of you're directory have a file like "template.html". Then I would create some php to handle the task of....
Opening "template.html"
Finding and replacing the values that the user passed you
Save the "template.html" under a new name (userSubmittedValue.html)
Again, I never really use Joomla. If you were to try this I'd suggest checking out php's file system functions (http://us2.php.net/manual/en/ref.filesystem.php).
Hope this helps a bit.