munkyben.wordpress.com
The Magic Shed – munky on oracle
https://munkyben.wordpress.com/2013/03/14/the-magic-shed
March 14, 2013. March 14, 2013. In keeping with my last post, this is another ‘back to basic’s kind of thing. It’s basically a small metaphor of why we should use constraints, datatypes and other normal database design fundamentals when storing data and is aimed either at the complete newbie to database design or as a handy explanation to your Excel loving business users for more experienced developers…. The first weekend she carefully placed her pots on one shelf, her compost bags in one corner, her too...
cc13.com
2 eBooks zu verschenken - Oracle APEX 4.0 Cookbook - CC13.comCC13.com
http://www.cc13.com/wordpress_21/2011/02/15/2-ebooks-zu-verschenken-oracle-apex-4-0-cookbook
Oracle Apex, C#, .NET. Oracle APEX 4.0 Cookbook. Die 2 eBooks gehen an… →. 2 eBooks zu verschenken – Oracle APEX 4.0 Cookbook. Vor ein paar Tagen erst habe ich einen kleinen Beitrag zum „ Oracle APEX 4.0 Cookbook. Nun hat mir Packt Pub. 2 eBooks zur Verfügung gestellt, die ich unter meinen treuen Lesern verschenken darf. Wie kommt ihr an ein Buch heran? Ganz einfach, schreibt ein Kommentar unter diesen Beitrag, und teilt. Weshalb ihr APEX einsetzt. Oder weshalb es sich von anderen Technologien hervorhebt.
cntrint.blogspot.com
Counterintuition: Button Confirmation Message
http://cntrint.blogspot.com/2012/07/button-confirmation-message.html
A place for Application Express tips and tricks. Sunday, July 8, 2012. This is a quick way to add a javascript confirmation message to a button. Firstly make sure that your button template uses #BUTTON ATTRIBUTES# substitution string (note #BUTTON ID# doesn't seem to work as expected here). Add a button id to the Attributes field, or otherwise ensure you can identify it with a jQuery selector. Then in Post Element Text place some jQuery to extend the click event. Sam Hall (aka Capt. Egg).
cntrint.blogspot.com
Counterintuition: April 2010
http://cntrint.blogspot.com/2010_04_01_archive.html
A place for Application Express tips and tricks. Tuesday, April 13, 2010. XSS = X(cross) Site Scripting. This is where user entered data contains some javascript that will be later inadvertently rendered and executed by another users browser. The javascript then sends session information back to the attackers external server. This information could contain cookies that can be used to steal the user's session. It's a great read). HTTPOnly is sufficiently supported by 99% of mainstream browsers (and most i...
cntrint.blogspot.com
Counterintuition: XSS and Apex
http://cntrint.blogspot.com/2010/04/xss-and-apex.html
A place for Application Express tips and tricks. Tuesday, April 13, 2010. XSS = X(cross) Site Scripting. This is where user entered data contains some javascript that will be later inadvertently rendered and executed by another users browser. The javascript then sends session information back to the attackers external server. This information could contain cookies that can be used to steal the user's session. It's a great read). HTTPOnly is sufficiently supported by 99% of mainstream browsers (and most i...
cntrint.blogspot.com
Counterintuition: Interactive Report Column Custom Formatting
http://cntrint.blogspot.com/2012/05/interactive-report-column-custom.html
A place for Application Express tips and tricks. Tuesday, May 8, 2012. Interactive Report Column Custom Formatting. The question was posed, how to achieve custom formatting of a column if the available Format Models. In standard SQL reports, it's not such a problem as you can simply use the "HTML Expression" field. After teething problems with the first use case. The advantage here is you don't have to modify the query and you can put all sorts of additional formatting in the one place without interferin...
munkyben.wordpress.com
Handling aggregated strings in SQL reports – munky on oracle
https://munkyben.wordpress.com/2010/11/16/handling-aggregated-strings-in-sql-reports
November 16, 2010. November 16, 2010. Handling aggregated strings in SQL reports. Well, it’s been a long time without a new post from me so I thought I’d get the ball rolling again! Having been surfing about and happened upon Adrian Billington’s. Site again, I spotted something pretty nifty. With a bit of rewriting, I started to see a possible benefit to the APEX community – mostly for the handling of multiselect list values in reports. Consider this example of the that approach…. 2 thoughts on “ H...
munkyben.wordpress.com
About – munky on oracle
https://munkyben.wordpress.com/about
My name’s Ben Burrell and I’m an Oracle developer currently based in the Isle of Man. The aim of this blog is to share tips and tricks in SQL tuning, PL/SQL programming and APEX development in Oracle. I will be posting as I come across things in my day-today work and also documenting some things that I’ve already been doing for a while. Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. Follow me on Twitter. Boneist's Oracle Blog. Join 255 other followers.