Showing posts with label Google Sites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Sites. Show all posts

March 11, 2010

How to Embed Multiple Calendars in Google Sites



You are probably here because you cannot embed multiple Google calendars in Google Sites. I will show you how I did it or how I found it.

An example of two Google calendars embedded into one can be viewed at Arnel Dy’s Math Webpage.

The iframe tag and origsrc="domainname.org_############### methods
There is a link in Google Calendar, (Settings > Calendars > yourCalendar > Customize the color, size, and other options) that directs you to Google Embeddable Calendar Helper. Copying and pasting the HTML provided in the Calendar Helper—after configuring the calendar
s settings—on your webpage’s HTML window (click the edit HTML button) will not work even though the preview displays your multiple calendars into one.

Also, copying a part of the HTML code provided at Google Embeddable Calendar Helper and then pasting them after origsrc=" somewhere in the page’s HTML will not work. This method returns an error when I tried this.

What works?
Steegle.com provides the best way to embed multiple calendars in Google Sites. A word of advice: Use Your Keyboard to Copy and Paste the HTML Code.

The title of the article at Steegle.com is: Google Sites - Embed Multiple Calendars (and other things)!


September 13, 2009

The Pythagorean Triple Generator



I was practicing how to write programs one day learning how to create a line in Liberty BASIC when it came to me that I could create a triangle. One thing led to another that I thought I create a Pythagorean Triple Generator and at the same time draw the triangle in scale. The result is a program written in Just BASIC language.

The program is available at this website, CST Geometry. You may download the program free.


July 22, 2009

Animated GIFs in Google Sites



I have a website at Google Sites for my geometry class in high school. Last week, I wrote a piece about the difference of the terms congruence and equality. What a nice way I thought to create an animated GIF to support my article. But don’t look now; Google Sites does not support animated GIFs (nor Javascript), well not directly. I was surprised that Google Sites converted automatically my animated GIF files to PNG. With a couple of Google searches later I found out that Google Sites blocks animated images.

However, there is a workaround for this predicament. Every search I made in the Internet suggests uploading the file into Google Docs or creating a gadget. For me, I did what I always do in my blogs; upload the animated GIF files to Photobucket. It works!

Here’s my website with the animated GIFs, Geometry.