What I'm trying to do is load a website on a frame and then mark points on it depending on screen coordinates obtained via a function.
Do I need PHP GD?
Loading the website on the frame is not an issue. It's how to mark points on the screen that's causing my hair to fall
Nah, what you need are absolute positioned HTML elements.
You can grab the page with PHP with curl or file_get_contents() and inject some HTML/CSS into it that creates absolutely positioned <p>s or <span>s or whatever.
Checkout this post here. It uses Mootools(a JavaScript framework), PHP, and MySQL. I think it's very similar to what you are trying to do except you want to mark points on the iframe instead of doing it on an image. The plugin can be attached to an element:
David Walsh's Mootools Heatmap
Related
How could I use imagegrabscreen to get a thumbnail image and a full size image of a specific website.
I was thinking that I could have an array that I feed the wanted uri's into but I am a bit stuck on how I would set the wxh of the image I need to grab. I also think that I would need a thumbnail class and a fullimage class and call them when required.
Any better Ideas?
Keep in mind that imagaegrabscreen is Windows-only. If you have multiple displays set up, this function will only grab the primary display. Also, for this to work, your Apache service must be set to Allow service to interact with desktop otherwise you will just get a blank image.
This discussion covers the use of imagegrabscreen pretty well: Getting imagegrabscreen to work
There are a lot of other discussions about saving webpages as images, too - here are a few:
Website screenshots
Web Page Screenshots with PHP?
How can I generate a screenshot of a webpage using a server-side script?
PHP: How to capture browser window screen with php?
What is the best way to create a web page thumbnail?
Screenshot of current page using PHP
shell tool which renders web site including javascript
In any languages, Can I capture a webpage and save it image file? (no install, no activeX)
I am using this script which is one of the examples provided by the graph itself. When I put this on a web-page by itself, it's drawing the graph. But when I embed the code in an already existing web-page (with some content), it doesn't draw a graph.
I did the experiment using img src and its working fine.
But I just wanted to submit some parameter along with that graph in same web page.
How do I do that one without using "img src"?
Thanks in advance
but i just want to copy the total graph code in my exist php script
Better don't. It's best to just use an <img> element to embed the graph. Use GET parameters to pass values:
<img src="script.php?param1=123456¶m2=124050">
Creating inline images is theoretically possible using data: URIs, but it's not fully supported by Internet Explorer yet.
You can do this by generating new CSS or by using javascript.
I want to make a button generator with javascript in my site, something like this http://css-tricks.com/examples/ButtonMaker/ .
But I want to add a save button too, so that the user will be able to save the button image he creates. I want to save the image in my server with PHP if possible.
Does anyone have an idea, of what should I really read or search for?
Thanks in advance
The button in the example generator is rendered by your browser. It is just a button element which is styled. I don't think you can easily save it using php.
What you could do is create a button generator that accepts parameters and then renders the image serverside (using php) and sends it to the browser for displaying. This rendered image can then easily be saved.
The link you've provided just defines the CSS for the element - you just eed to send this back to the server - via a form or ajax.
One approach would be to send the css settings to your server and execute an html renderer which somehow allows you to save a screenshot of the button.
Googling for "html renderer" yields several results, but I can't tell whether any of them offers an API that allows you to easily save images of desired elements.
(Of course, Firefox and Chrome all count as html renderers too).
In the worst scenario, using my approach, you'd have to render the button server side, take an screenshot and use some algorithm to find and cut the button from the screenshot.
I'd say this is a complicated approach overall. I'd go with what Iljaas' says.
I tried to google it, but without much success.
Here is my problem:
I have something like a drag-and-drop game in jQuery, where the user drags some items (div with img) to the droppable drawing area.
I need a screenshot of the users design so I can put all designs into a gallery page.
My problem is how to get the HTML code into a jpeg/png/gif/canvas/whatever.
Btw. I'm on a shared PHP hosting on the server side.
You're doing it wrong. Store each piece's location at all times in javascript, and then just submit that data and re-build the images/locations based on the passed javascript data.
The functionality you are describing is extremely complex to write with PHP - but there are services such as www.thumbshots.com or www.browsershots.com that do the same thing. This question has been asked similarly many times before here:
https://stackoverflow.com/search?q=screenshots+with+php
You want to build your game in canvas, which can then export itself out as a PNG file that you could then have submitted back to the server.
This question is a bit open at the moment as I'm not sure the idea is even possible.
So far I've loaded an image from a url, and then used jQuery UI draggable feature to allow the user to drag html text (which has been replaced using cufon font replacement) over the top of the image.
The major step (which is what my question relates to) is being able to take the image and text layered over the top of the image, and save the result, either to the server, or potentially offer the option to save the altered image to the user's HD, or what would also be useful is to upload to facebook using the facebook API, but this is something I know is possible.
It all hangs on whether it's even possible to achieve the first step, which is to save the image and layered text as a combined image?
I wonder if there is a PHP/jQuery solution that would allow me to do this?
My suggestion would be to have an internal URL that outputs the final image using jQuery and PHP, then take a screenshot using webkit2png of that page. You should know the dimensions etc., so you'll be able to crop down the resulting screenshot to just the region you're looking for.