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    How to load a <script> src = " " </script> into my mirror?

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    • nbrenn
      nbrenn @morozgrafix last edited by nbrenn

      @morozgrafix Yep, when the mirror was running, and running the wget http://localhost:8080 command, I connected successfully.

      So then when I open up a command terminal while the mirror is running, and run:

      wget http://localhost:8080/home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/datafeed/JANUARY22TEST.csv
      

      it says connected to 8080, but returns 404 Not Found.

      morozgrafix 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • morozgrafix
        morozgrafix Moderator @nbrenn last edited by

        @nbrenn that path is incorrect. Try

        wget http://localhost:8080/modules/datafeed/JANUARY22TEST.csv
        
        nbrenn 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • nbrenn
          nbrenn @morozgrafix last edited by

          @morozgrafix You got it! The path was the issue. Do you know why I can’t use the path the way I specified?

          Now, I’ll go back and try your solution and see if I have any other problems!

          Thanks again for your help. It’s much appreciated.

          morozgrafix 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • morozgrafix
            morozgrafix Moderator @nbrenn last edited by morozgrafix

            @nbrenn glad you are getting closer to solving this.

            Root directory that is served by webserver that is running on localhost:8080/ is mapped to MagicMirror directory. In most cases and in your case the full path of that is /home/pi/MagicMirror.
            By default it is configured to serve you index.html.

            So mapping looks kind of like this:

            http://localhost:8080					---->	/home/pi/MagicMirror/
            http://localhost:8080/index.html			---->	/home/pi/MagicMirror/index.html
            http://localhost:8080/modules/module_name		---->	/home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/module_name/
            http://localhost:8080/modules/module_name/foo.html	---->	/home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/module_name/foo.html
            

            as you can see from above when you asking for

            http://localhost:8080/home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/datafeed/JANUARY22TEST.csv
            

            webserver will attempt to serve you something from

            /home/pi/MagicMirror/home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/datafeed/JANUARY22TEST.csv
            

            which doesn’t really exist and that’s the reason why you can’t use absolute file path in the URL. Which also brings up another point: because root directory that is served by webserver is mapped to /home/pi/MagicMirror, webserver can’t serve anything above the /home/pi/MagicMirror directory. (for example you won’t be able to access /home/pi/foo.html).

            This is just a small portion of how it works and there are other rules that play role, but hopefully this info shines some light and gives you enough explanation on why your path didn’t work.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • morozgrafix
              morozgrafix Moderator last edited by

              I’ve moved this thread into Development category, since conversation is now mostly related to your module development.

              Thanks.

              nbrenn 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • nbrenn
                nbrenn @morozgrafix last edited by

                @morozgrafix I am referring back to your jsfiddle example: jsfiddle example, and you created an object called csvData which you refer to in var data = ...

                I was wondering how I would create a similar object, except with the file that I have in my directory. I couldn’t seem to find an HTML DOM function that would allow me to load the .csv file. I looked at the examples for the Compliments module, and they were in json. So, I saw that I might be able to use Papa Parse to convert the .csv to json and then follow the similar route as the Compliments.

                My d3 approach loads the data from my csv onto my mirror, but the .css doesn’t seem to help it. It doesn’t appear in a table, and is very large (displaying in the upper left part of the mirror) even when I specified it to load in the middle.

                For some context, my .csv data table contains two columns of time-series data for which I want to sum together. And then I just want to output a sentence like, “Your sum is XXX.”

                Thanks again for the clarifications. I’m slowly wrapping my head around the interaction of the HTML and Javascript, and I think I get confused when I see code split into HTML and Javascript, when the modules are written with it all together in the HTML DOM format.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • morozgrafix
                  morozgrafix Moderator last edited by

                  It would be very difficult for me to guide you through building entire module without seeing the code and understanding what it is doing. That’s the reason why I’m only able to give you bits and pieces of information. One of the things that can help is for you to create a repo on GitHub with code that you got so far and then I can take a look and possibly offer some suggestions.

                  In your original post you mentioned that you wanted to display CSV data from the file in HTML table format which seems a bit different from your most recent requirement:

                  For some context, my .csv data table contains two columns of time-series data for which I want to sum together. And then I just want to output a sentence like, “Your sum is XXX.”

                  To achieve the above following very rough logic would need to be implemented:

                  1. CSV file is created/updated in /home/pi/MagicMirror/modules/datafeed/file.csv
                  2. When module is loaded JS creates a variable and reads contents of the CSV file into it (similar to what compliments module does)
                  3. CSV data in that variable is parsed, sum of the values in one of the columns calculated and assigned to another variable (sum).
                  4. DOM element is created and innerHTML of that element is updated with "Your sum is " + sum
                  5. At given config interval steps 1-4 are repeated to get fresh set of data.

                  Is this close to something that you are trying to do?

                  (Above steps aren’t accounting for any error handling etc.)
                  BTW I don’t think you need to convert your CSV to JSON, especially if this is a simple 2 column file. Commenting out or removing xobj.overrideMimeType("application/json"); from complimentFile example should be sufficient for CSV file reading.

                  Thanks.

                  morozgrafix 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • morozgrafix
                    morozgrafix Moderator @morozgrafix last edited by

                    I also updated JSfiddle example with sum calculation logic: https://jsfiddle.net/morozgrafix/8oz1t9g4/2/

                    nbrenn 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • nbrenn
                      nbrenn @morozgrafix last edited by

                      @morozgrafix Thanks for your outline. It is very, very helpful and appreciated. So I tried to take what you suggested to turn it into my code, and put it onto GitHub.

                      I created a GitHub repository that contains my .css, .csv, and datafeed.js. My areas of confusion (which you’ll probably see in the code) are around how I called in the remoteFile in my getDom. I am not sure if I did that correctly. https://github.com/brennn1/Magic-Mirror-Datafeed-Module

                      My .csv is coming in the format which you’ll see on the Github - so each data point is separated by a new line. So I changed where you had the line.split(",") to line.split("\n").

                      Do you see anything obvious that will cause me problems? I will go ahead and see what errors I get when I load it onto my mirror.

                      morozgrafix 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • morozgrafix
                        morozgrafix Moderator @nbrenn last edited by

                        @nbrenn perfect!!! i can now see your full code and have better idea what you are trying to achieve.

                        Your data file is not really a CSV (Comma Separated Values) file, just a text file with values on each line, so you were correct to remove that line.split(",") part. I already spotted a few things where your code will not work correctly. I will take a closer look at it later tonight and hopefully together we can get this resolved.

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