Libraries tagged by responsive tables

gangsterforms/sqledit

0 Favers
4 Downloads

Generate web app to view, add and edit data in any MySQL table or Query in just 4 lines of code, with pagination auto generated as well, as are the media queries, to build a truly responsive app that is mobile friendly and works accross all platforms and screen sizes

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tabler/tabler

39225 Favers
20771 Downloads

Premium and Open Source dashboard template with responsive and high quality UI. For Free!

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ahand/mobileesp

174 Favers
433906 Downloads

Since 2008, MobileESP provides web site developers an easy-to-use and lightweight API for detecting whether visitors are using a mobile device, and if so, what kind. The APIs provide simple boolean results ('true' or 'false') for identifying individual device categories (such as iPhone, BlackBerry, Android, and Windows Mobile), device capabilities (e.g., J2ME), and broad classes of devices, such as 'iPhone Tier' (iPhone/Android/Tizen) or 'Tablet Tier.' APIs are available in PHP, JavaScript, Java, C#, Ruby Python, and more.

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logiksuite/tabler

0 Favers
13 Downloads

Premium and Open Source dashboard template with responsive and high quality UI. For Free!

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tildbj/sz-ebook

3 Favers
18 Downloads

Shows eBooks in your browser, using turn.js and pdf.js, based on Extbase and Fluid. Works with Tablets and Smartphones.

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mhinspeya/mhinspeya-employee-hyva

0 Favers
1 Downloads

The 'Modehaus Employee' module for Magento enables retail organizations to spotlight their employees, fostering a sense of community and trust among customers. This module provides a dedicated space within the Magento store where businesses can feature profiles of their team members, including their roles, expertise, and personal backgrounds. Key Features: 1. Employee Profiles: Create comprehensive profiles for each team member, including their name, position, bio, and a photo. 2. Role-Based Filtering: Allow customers to filter employees based on their roles or departments within the organization. 3. Customizable Templates: Customize the layout and design of employee profiles to match the branding and aesthetics of your store. 4. Social Integration: Optionally include links to employees' social media profiles to encourage engagement and connection. 5. SEO-Friendly: Ensure that employee profiles are optimized for search engines, helping to improve visibility and attract organic traffic. 6. Easy Management: Easily add, edit, or remove employee profiles through a user-friendly interface within the Magento admin panel. 7. Responsive Design: Ensure a seamless browsing experience for customers on all devices, including desktops, tablets, and smartphones. With the 'Modehaus Employee' module, retailers can humanize their brand and build stronger relationships with customers by highlighting the talented individuals who contribute to their success.

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mhinspeya/mhinspeya-employee-core

0 Favers
1 Downloads

The 'Modehaus Employee' module for Magento enables retail organizations to spotlight their employees, fostering a sense of community and trust among customers. This module provides a dedicated space within the Magento store where businesses can feature profiles of their team members, including their roles, expertise, and personal backgrounds. Key Features: 1. Employee Profiles: Create comprehensive profiles for each team member, including their name, position, bio, and a photo. 2. Role-Based Filtering: Allow customers to filter employees based on their roles or departments within the organization. 3. Customizable Templates: Customize the layout and design of employee profiles to match the branding and aesthetics of your store. 4. Social Integration: Optionally include links to employees' social media profiles to encourage engagement and connection. 5. SEO-Friendly: Ensure that employee profiles are optimized for search engines, helping to improve visibility and attract organic traffic. 6. Easy Management: Easily add, edit, or remove employee profiles through a user-friendly interface within the Magento admin panel. 7. Responsive Design: Ensure a seamless browsing experience for customers on all devices, including desktops, tablets, and smartphones. With the 'Modehaus Employee' module, retailers can humanize their brand and build stronger relationships with customers by highlighting the talented individuals who contribute to their success.

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mhinspeya/mhinspeya-employee

0 Favers
5 Downloads

The 'Modehaus Employee' module for Magento enables retail organizations to spotlight their employees, fostering a sense of community and trust among customers. This module provides a dedicated space within the Magento store where businesses can feature profiles of their team members, including their roles, expertise, and personal backgrounds. Key Features: 1. Employee Profiles: Create comprehensive profiles for each team member, including their name, position, bio, and a photo. 2. Role-Based Filtering: Allow customers to filter employees based on their roles or departments within the organization. 3. Customizable Templates: Customize the layout and design of employee profiles to match the branding and aesthetics of your store. 4. Social Integration: Optionally include links to employees' social media profiles to encourage engagement and connection. 5. SEO-Friendly: Ensure that employee profiles are optimized for search engines, helping to improve visibility and attract organic traffic. 6. Easy Management: Easily add, edit, or remove employee profiles through a user-friendly interface within the Magento admin panel. 7. Responsive Design: Ensure a seamless browsing experience for customers on all devices, including desktops, tablets, and smartphones. With the 'Modehaus Employee' module, retailers can humanize their brand and build stronger relationships with customers by highlighting the talented individuals who contribute to their success.

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phputil/datatables

0 Favers
458 Downloads

PHP representation of Datatables' request and response.

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v8-ict/laravel-smart-cache

0 Favers
14 Downloads

Allows to capture the entire response with a middleware, and while caching it observer the checksum of the database tables used to create the response, if any related table has a modified checksum, it refreshes the response. This makes it serve live data, but then cached as long as it is not modified. Huge reduction of resource consumption and keep data live.

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mohammadfahadrao/mfr-tokens

1 Favers
10 Downloads

Package to generate tables based upon response from API or by supplying key value pair manually.

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elcweb/requestlogger-bundle

0 Favers
159 Downloads

Record Request/Response/User in a table

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nogrod/tyre24-seller-php-sdk

0 Favers
5 Downloads

## API Versioning We're constantly updating and improving the API, and while we try to ensure backwards compatibility, there's always a chance that we'll introduce a change that affects the way your app works. To get around any problems that this might cause, we recommend that you include the Accept header with every API request that you make. This header enables you to target your request to a particular version of the API. It looks like this in HTTP: ```text Accept: application/vnd.saitowag.api+json;version={version_number} ``` Normally, you set the value of the placeholder to the current version of the API. But if you're troubleshooting your app, and you know that an older version of the API works perfectly, say version 1.0, you'd substitute 1.0 for the placeholder value. The API then handles the request as if it were for version 1.0, and your app goes back to working properly. ### Example of an error with invalid `ACCEPT` header. The `HTTP status code` in case of an invalid `ACCEPT` header will be `400 Bad Request` and the following response will be returned. ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_ACCEPT_HEADER_NOT_VALID", "error_message": "Accept header is not valid or not set." } ] } ``` ### Unexpected Error If an unexpected error occours, a so called Error General will be returned. The `HTTP status code` in case of an invalid `ACCEPT` header will be `500` and the following response will be returned. ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_GENERAL", "error_message": "An unexpected error has occurred. If this problem persists, please contact our support." } ] } ``` ### Invalid Endpoint Error Any call to a non-existing API endpoint (i.e. wrong route) will return a response with `HTTP status code` `404` and the following response body: ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_GENERAL_INVALID_ENDPOINT", "error_message": "The requested endpoint does not exist." } ] } ``` Please, note that this error is returned also when a request parameter, part of a valid route, is not well formed. For example, a call to a route that contains a wrong order id (i.e. it does not meet the accepted order id pattern - e.g. 123456789PAC instead of PAC123456789) will return the error just mentioned, as the route is considered as badly formed. In conclusion, please pay special attention to all those routes that have request parameters with specific pattern requirements. ### Shipping Method IDs These ids may not be available in all the countries. | ID | Name | | --- | --- | | 1 | Standard `Standard` | | 2 | Self-collection `Selbstabholung` | | 3 | Express morning (truck) `Express-Morgen (LKW)` | | 4 | Express Today (Truck) `Express-Heute (LKW)` | | 5 | Express morning (package forwarding) `Express-Morgen (Packet Spedition)` | | 7 | Express-now | ### Payment Method IDs These ids may not be available in all the countries. | ID | Name | | --- | --- | | 1 | SEPA Direct Debit `SEPA-Lastschrift` | | 2 | Prepayment `Vorkasse` | | 3 | Cash on delivery `Nachnahme` | | 4 | PayPal/Credit Card `PayPal/Kreditkarte` | | 5 | open payment method `offene Zahlungsart` | | 7 | Invoice(8 days payment term) `Rechnung(8 Tage Zahlungsziel)` | | 8 | open payment method (SEPA) `offene Zahlungsart (SEPA)` | ## Query String Filters Query String Filters | Operator | Full Name | Description | Example | | ------ | ------ | ------ | ------ | | eq | Equal | Used to narrow down the result of a query to some specific value, for specified field. It adds the "**=**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=eq;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} = 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=eq;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=eq;3.7`string: `{url}?filter[free_text]=eq;apple`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=eq;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=eq;2020-06-03 14:32:32`boolean: `{url}?filter[is_active]=eq;1` | | neq | Not equal | Used to exclude the value from a query result. It adds the "****" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=neq;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=neq;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=neq;3.7`string: `{url}?filter[free_text]=neq;apple`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=neq;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=neq;2020-06-03 14:32:32`boolean: `{url}?filter[is_active]=neq;1` | | gt | Greater than | Used to reduce fetched values to those greater than the one provided in a query string. It adds the "**>**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=gt;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} > 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=gt;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=gt;3.7`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=gt;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=gt;2020-06-03 14:32:32` | | gte | Greater than or equal | Used to reduce fetched values to those greater than or equal to the one provided in a query string. It adds the "**>=**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=gte;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} >= 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=gte;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=gte;3.7`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=gte;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=gte;2020-06-03 14:32:32` | | lt | Less than | Used to reduce fetched values to those less than provided in a query string. It adds the "**

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nogrod/tyre24-common-php-sdk

0 Favers
3 Downloads

## API Versioning We're constantly updating and improving the API, and while we try to ensure backwards compatibility, there's always a chance that we'll introduce a change that affects the way your app works. To get around any problems that this might cause, we recommend that you include the Accept header with every API request that you make. This header enables you to target your request to a particular version of the API. It looks like this in HTTP: ```text Accept: application/vnd.saitowag.api+json;version={version_number} ``` Normally, you set the value of the placeholder to the current version of the API. But if you're troubleshooting your app, and you know that an older version of the API works perfectly, say version 1.0, you'd substitute 1.0 for the placeholder value. The API then handles the request as if it were for version 1.0, and your app goes back to working properly. ### Example of an error with invalid `ACCEPT` header. The `HTTP status code` in case of an invalid `ACCEPT` header will be `400 Bad Request` and the following response will be returned. ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_ACCEPT_HEADER_NOT_VALID", "error_message": "Accept header is not valid or not set." } ] } ``` ### Unexpected Error If an unexpected error occours, a so called Error General will be returned. The `HTTP status code` in case of an invalid `ACCEPT` header will be `500` and the following response will be returned. ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_GENERAL", "error_message": "An unexpected error has occurred. If this problem persists, please contact our support." } ] } ``` ### Invalid Endpoint Error Any call to a non-existing API endpoint (i.e. wrong route) will return a response with `HTTP status code` `404` and the following response body: ```json { "data": [ { "error_code": "ERR_GENERAL_INVALID_ENDPOINT", "error_message": "The requested endpoint does not exist." } ] } ``` Please, note that this error is returned also when a request parameter, part of a valid route, is not well formed. For example, a call to a route that contains a wrong order id (i.e. it does not meet the accepted order id pattern - e.g. 123456789PAC instead of PAC123456789) will return the error just mentioned, as the route is considered as badly formed. In conclusion, please pay special attention to all those routes that have request parameters with specific pattern requirements. ### Shipping Method IDs These ids may not be available in all the countries. | ID | Name | | --- | --- | | 1 | Standard `Standard` | | 2 | Self-collection `Selbstabholung` | | 3 | Express morning (truck) `Express-Morgen (LKW)` | | 4 | Express Today (Truck) `Express-Heute (LKW)` | | 5 | Express morning (package forwarding) `Express-Morgen (Packet Spedition)` | | 7 | Express-now | ### Payment Method IDs These ids may not be available in all the countries. | ID | Name | | --- | --- | | 1 | SEPA Direct Debit `SEPA-Lastschrift` | | 2 | Prepayment `Vorkasse` | | 3 | Cash on delivery `Nachnahme` | | 4 | PayPal/Credit Card `PayPal/Kreditkarte` | | 5 | open payment method `offene Zahlungsart` | | 7 | Invoice(8 days payment term) `Rechnung(8 Tage Zahlungsziel)` | | 8 | open payment method (SEPA) `offene Zahlungsart (SEPA)` | ## Query String Filters Query String Filters | Operator | Full Name | Description | Example | | ------ | ------ | ------ | ------ | | eq | Equal | Used to narrow down the result of a query to some specific value, for specified field. It adds the "**=**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=eq;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} = 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=eq;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=eq;3.7`string: `{url}?filter[free_text]=eq;apple`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=eq;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=eq;2020-06-03 14:32:32`boolean: `{url}?filter[is_active]=eq;1` | | neq | Not equal | Used to exclude the value from a query result. It adds the "****" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=neq;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=neq;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=neq;3.7`string: `{url}?filter[free_text]=neq;apple`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=neq;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=neq;2020-06-03 14:32:32`boolean: `{url}?filter[is_active]=neq;1` | | gt | Greater than | Used to reduce fetched values to those greater than the one provided in a query string. It adds the "**>**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=gt;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} > 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=gt;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=gt;3.7`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=gt;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=gt;2020-06-03 14:32:32` | | gte | Greater than or equal | Used to reduce fetched values to those greater than or equal to the one provided in a query string. It adds the "**>=**" symbol to the SQL query. Eg. `{url}?filter[{alias_name}]=gte;11` will result in the following sql: `SELECT {field_name} AS {alias_name} FROM {table_name} WHERE {alias_name} >= 11` | integer: `{url}?filter[id]=gte;21`float: `{url}?filter[average]=gte;3.7`Date: `{url}?filter[birthday]=gte;2020-06-03`DateTime: `{url}?filter[created_at]=gte;2020-06-03 14:32:32` | | lt | Less than | Used to reduce fetched values to those less than provided in a query string. It adds the "**

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larapps/bigcommerce-app

0 Favers
27 Downloads

Responsible for installing the app in the store and store the access token in the table.

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