What is ccID? - Page 2 - Post ID 299838

User 122279 Photo


Senior Advisor
14,560 posts

What kind of charset declaration do you have? (You can see it if you look at the source code of one of your pages after export.)

I often write in German myself, and I have no problem writing ä, ö, ü (I don't have them on my keyboard, so I have to type first the ¨and then the letter). I don't have the 'sz' either, so there I need the ß

At the top of the German sites I make I have this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="de">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">

Ha en riktig god dag!
Inger, Norway

My work in progress:
Components for Site Designer and the HTML Editor: https://mock-up.coffeecup.com


User 187934 Photo


Senior Advisor
20,244 posts

Inger wrote:
What kind of charset declaration do you have? (You can see it if you look at the source code of one of your pages after export.)

I often write in German myself, and I have no problem writing ä, ö, ü (I don't have them on my keyboard, so I have to type first the ¨and then the letter). I don't have the 'sz' either, so there I need the &szlig;

At the top of the German sites I make I have this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="de">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">


They are looking at the source code of the internal preview. That appears to me to be the only problem.
I can't hear what I'm looking at.
It's easy to overlook something you're not looking for.

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http://esmansgreenhouse.com
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User 122279 Photo


Senior Advisor
14,560 posts

Eric Rohloff wrote:

They are looking at the source code of the internal preview. That appears to me to be the only problem.


Yeah, I guess you're right.
Ha en riktig god dag!
Inger, Norway

My work in progress:
Components for Site Designer and the HTML Editor: https://mock-up.coffeecup.com


User 63158 Photo


Registered User
5 posts

Dear Inger, my HTML head looks exactly as you suggested.
And it worked well, also using the ¨+ letter keys.
But now my new Win10 is a German installation while before I had a
Taiwan/English Win7. Already I downloaded the English language pack and
changed the Win display language but to no avail.
Martin (oakhouse.de)
User 122279 Photo


Senior Advisor
14,560 posts

Have you tried the 'Search for undocumented characters', which can be found under Tools, then about half-way down the list of options?
You may write your German letters as normal, and then, when you are done, run that search and choose Replace, or Replace all. then your ö's and ä's etc. will be replaced by HTML entities.
Ha en riktig god dag!
Inger, Norway

My work in progress:
Components for Site Designer and the HTML Editor: https://mock-up.coffeecup.com


User 63158 Photo


Registered User
5 posts

Dear all, I focused my search on this character coding and found the straight forward solution.
Because my wife’s Taiwan installations made some adjustments in the ‘Administrative language Settings’ and the ‘Language for non Unicode programs’ had been set to Chinese (Taiwan) with UTF-8 set ON. I changed that back to English and UTF-8 to OFF and good old CoffeeCup feels like home finally!
Thanks for the encouraging discussion, Martin
By the way, will there be a Unicode version of CoffeeCup? I guess, back in 2016 Liehcheng had the same problem.
User 1236630 Photo


Registered User
1 post

"The ccId's should only appear in the temp files used for previewing, and
not in saved files."

Not for me: ccID IS added to the saved/published html, and remains in the code after deselecting "Clicking tags in code selects elements in Preview" and "Clicking element in Preview selects its code". Deselecting those options only prevents new ccIDs from appearing.

It's a very irritating feature, as I don't want to publish anything that unneccessarily inflates every element on the page by 11 bytes. As each ccID is unique, once they are generated the only way to remove them before saving is one-at-a-time for every single element on the page.

For me, the cost of this feature far outweighs the benefits. Or am I missing something?
User 379556 Photo


Registered User
1,567 posts

Tony Lloyd wrote:
... Deselecting those options only prevents new ccIDs from appearing.
... once they are generated the only way to remove them before saving is one-at-a-time for every single element on the page...

Removing the old ccID references could almost certainly be done in bulk by using a program like Text Crawler with Regular Expressions.

Frank
User 3185057 Photo


Guest
1 post

Hello, it appears that this query is still unresolved. I just installed the Editor on my brand-new Windows 10 laptop today.
While it worked great for me for many years on Windows 7 and 8, I can now see these ccID in the internal preview by using the F11 and F12 keys. It's okay to see the same old HTML page with an external browser. What actions are possible? Many thanks, Martin
User 3182125 Photo


Guest
4 posts

Eric Rohloff wrote:
Your seeing those in the source code after preview in the editor correct. Thats for the html editor to render your page in the preview.

Hi Randy,

It's great to hear that you're working on displaying values from your weather station on a webpage! The "ccID" you're seeing in the HTML tags likely stands for "custom control ID." These IDs are often used in web development to uniquely identify specific elements or controls on a page.

In your case, it seems like the ccID is being used to differentiate between different weather data elements, such as temperature and temperature units. This can be useful for styling or scripting purposes, allowing you to target specific elements with CSS or JavaScript if needed.

While the exact purpose may vary depending on how the webpage is coded, understanding that ccID serves as a unique identifier for these elements should help you work with them more effectively.

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