Code goes in last &dd=(X) Like /count.exe?df=newnan.dat&dd=A
Newnan's counter code looks like this:
<img src="http://counter.firstserver.cc/count.exe?df=newnan.dat&dd=E">
That adds the style picked
Style A ![]()
Old Calculator look
Style B ![]()
57 Chevy Style C ![]()
A standard
Style D ![]()
Clean and Green
Style E Like Used on the top of Newnan.cc
My Personal Fav.... Style
F
![]()
A Personal Fav....
Style
G
![]()
A Personal Fav....
Style
H
![]()
Puppy paws One
Style
I
![]()
Got me?
Style
J
![]()
Base-a-ball
Style
K
![]()
Mirror
Style
L
![]()
Blue Blot
Style
M
![]()
For the Blind
Style
N
![]()
Style
O
![]()
Style
P
![]()
Puppy paws Two
Style
Q
![]()
A Personal Fav....
Style
R
![]()
Punched Thick
Style
S
![]()
A Personal Fav....
Style
T
![]()
Glowing
Style
U
![]()
Looks better on page
Style
V
![]()
Golf
Good for PTC
Style
W
![]()
Morse Code hehehe
Style
X
![]()
Digit Blue
Style
Y
![]()
Lightning
Style
Z
![]()
Clean! Small!
Style
AA
![]()
Tunes
Style
BB
![]()
Splat
Style
CC
![]()
Task bar
Style
DD
![]()
Punch
Style cd ![]()
Style cdr ![]()
Style cdd ![]()
Style bang ![]()
(Sucks) For a huge collection of GIF digits, check out the Digit Mania page. If you design some cool digits and like to share with others try sending them to Digit Mania instead of me.
Some other sites:
- http://www.webdigits.com/
This program will work with any digits from the Digit Mania page. To use those digits, create subdirectories say, F, G, H, foo etc. inside the digits directory and rename the images to zero.gif, one.gif..nine.gif. I suggest you create an image strip out of these digits and use it instead of using individual images.
How to call the program? (all platforms)
If your web server is running on On Unix, you can refer to the program from web page like this:Counter options (all platforms)If the web server is running on Unix:
<img src="/cgi-bin/Count.cgi?df=sample.dat" align="absmiddle">If the web server is running on NT:<img src="/cgi-bin/Count.exe?df=sample.dat" align="absmiddle">Note: in Unix, the .exe extension is not used to determine a executable. You can call your program anything you like. So, if your server is not on Unix, the name of the counter program will be Count.exe instead of Count.cgi.The string after the ? mark is called the QUERY_STRING. Make sure there are no newlines in the <img src= line and no space in the QUERY_STRING. In df=sample.dat, df means datafile and sample.dat is the counter datafile. The counter stores the hits in this file. This datafile is supplied. If you configured the counter to allow automatic datafile creation (look at count.cfg file), you can specify a datafile with df like df=count.dat. The file count.dat will be created for you if the permission to the data directory is correct.
If you configured not to allow automatic datafile creation (good thing), you have to create this file in the data directory. Change directory (cd) to the data directory and type:
echo "1" > count.datIn NT, go to Command Prompt from Start->Programs and do the same.The counter program has lots of options, you can make it work and look the way you desire. In the query string, you can use the options described in the table below. The options can be separated by a | or a &. You can use either one or combination of both but I prefer to use & as some browser may not like |. Here is an example:
<img src="/cgi-bin/Count.cgi?ft=4&frgb=gold&df=sample.dat" align=absmiddle>The options can be in any order and not case sensitive.
Anyway, look at this Example Page you will get the picture.
Keywords
| align | - align counter image on a base image. |
| cache | - It's deprecated. use expires instead. |
| chcolor | - change one color of the counter image. |
| cdt | - countdown target date. |
| cdf | - countdown from date. |
| comma | - show comma after 3rd digits from right. |
| dd | - digit directory. |
| degrees or angle | - rotation angle of the image. |
| df | - counter data file. |
| dformat | - date format. |
| display | - counter, clock, date, countdown or image. |
| expires | - used to change the image caching behavior of the browsers. |
| frgb | - Frame color. |
| ft | - Frame thickness |
| fy | - Full year (all digits). |
| image | - Display a GIF image. |
| incr | - Increment the counter or not. |
| istrip | - Use strip.gif or not. |
| lit | - Show literal string. |
| md | - Maximum number of digits to display. |
| negate | - Show the negative image of counter. |
| offset | - Offset from the counter image from the edge of the base image while compositing. |
| pad | - Left pad with zeros or not. |
| reload | - Count page reload or not. |
| rotate | - Rotate the counter image. |
| sdhms | - Show the day, hr, min, sec in countdown or not. |
| sfd | - Show "from" date while showing countdown. |
| sh | - Show the counter or keep it hidden. |
| srgb, prgb | - Change source color to pen color. |
| st | - Start count number. |
| timezone | - Show time of that time zone. |
| tformat | - Time format, 12 or 24 hr. |
| tr | - Transparency On or Off. |
| trgb | - Transparency color. |
| xy | - Composite the counter at x,y location of a base image. |
| Parameter | Name | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|---|
| expires=X | This parameter can be used to change the image caching behavior of certain web browsers. |
The integer value of expires specifies the cache
expiration duration time in seconds. If you do not want the
browser to cache the image, specify 0. If you want the browser
to cache image for 5 minues, specify the value as 300.
The valid integer range of the expires parameter is between 0
and 604800 (7 days).
Note, these parameters will work with browsers that support the HTTP Expires header as specified in HTTP specification. By default, most web browsers cache the image received from the counter. That means, if someone visits your page and comes back after a while, the counter or clock does not get refreshed. |
None |
| reload=B |
Count page reload if the site admin configured the counter to
support it. (Added on: Dec-05-1998) |
If the site admin configured the counter to count reload, users can choose to count reload (default) or ignore reload. The site admin allows count reloading by yes, 1 or true in the [options] section of the configuration file with the keyword count_reload. Note, if the admin decided to ignore reload count (count_reload=No), user preference is ignored. The valid values for the Boolean parameter reload are Y, N, T, F, 1 or 0. |
reload=T Count reload if site admin configured to so. |
| cdt=year;month;day;hr;min;sec (Added on: Dec-13-1998) | Show the countdown time to this target date. | The parameter cdt specifies the countdown target date. The valid values for this parameter is 6 integers separated by semicolon. The first integer specifies the year, for example: 2000. The month starts at 1 (January). The first day is 1. Note: in Unix systems, the year can not be less than 1970 as Unix epoch starts starts at 00:00:00 on January 1, 1970, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The range of hr is 0 to 23. The range of min is 0 to 59 and the range of sec is 0 to 59. To count down to Year 2000, the parameter will be: cdt=2000;1;1;0;0;0. If you do not specify any Timezone with the parameter timezone, the countdown will be calculated from the web server time. For example if you like to show the countdown from GMT, specify timezone as: timezone=GMT+0000. | None |
| cdf=year;month;day;hr;min;sec (Added on: Jul-17-2003) | Show the countdown time from this date. | The parameter cdf specifies the countdown from date. The default is to calculate from the current local time or local time of a specific timezone if the parameter timezone is specified. The valid values for this parameter is 6 integers separated by semicolon. The first integer specifies the year, for example: 1999. The month starts at 1 (January). The first day is 1. Note: in Unix systems, the year can not be less than 1970 as Unix epoch starts starts at 00:00:00 on January 1, 1970, Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The range of hr is 0 to 23. The range of min is 0 to 59 and the range of sec is 0 to 59. | The local web server time. |
| sdhms=B | Show the day, hr, min, sec in countdown or not. | This parameter affects how the countdown is displayed. The valid values for the Boolean parameter sdhms are Y, N, T, F, 1 or 0. By defualt, the value for this parameter is True, that means the countdown is shows as Day, Hour, Min and Sec. If you just want to show the countdown days, specify F as the value. | sdhms=T |
| sfd=B | Show from date (sfd) below the countdown. | The parameter sfd shows the from date below the countdown. The from date is the time when the program is executed. The time in date is always in 24 hr format. If you use the parameter timezone, the timezone offset will be shown at the end of time. It may be necessary to see this date to make sure that the Counter program actually ran and the browser is not loading the image from cache. Use cache=F&expires=0 to make sure that browser does not cache the image. The valid values for the Boolean parameter sfd are Y, N, T, F, 1 or 0. | sfd=F |
| display=X | Specifies what to display. | The valid values for X is: counter, clock, date, countdown, image or version. If the value is countdown and if the countdown time is not specified with parameter cdt, the countdown to year 2000 is assumed. See also: cdt. Note: If you specify display=image and if you specify a datafile with df parameter and if incr is true, then counter will be incremented in the datafile. This will help some people who do not like to show the counter, instead they can show an image. You can use incr=F from another page to monitor the counter. | display=counter |
| timezone=X | Display time/date of the specified timezone. |
The parameter timezone= is only significant with
display=clock,
display=date or
display=countdown
Use this parameter
if you want to display time or date of another timezone or calculate
countdown in reference to a timezone to a target date.
The timezone must be specified with a negative or positive
four digit offset from GMT, for example: timezone=GMT-0500 or
timezone=GMT+0000 or timezone=GMT+0530.
The routine to display time of various timezones are written in a
generic way. Therefore, the unix machines will not be aware of
daylight saving time because of the way the routine is written. For
example, if daylight saving time is on, to display time of NY, the
timezone will be timezone=GMT-0500 instead of
timezone=GMT-0400. If the clock displays your local time wrong, specify your timezone with that parameter in order to display the correct time. |
None. |
|
tformat=X
|
Time format in 12 or 24 hour. | This parameter can be used to display time in 12 or 24 hour format. The valid values for the parameter X is 12 or 24. | tformat=12 |
| dformat=X | Specifies date format. | This parameter is only significant with display=date. The valid value for the string parameter X is any combination of MMDDYY (Month-Day-Year). For example, dformat=ddmmyy, dformat=YYMMDD. To show the full year in the display instead of two digit year specify YYYY instead of YY, for example dformat=MMDDYYYY. To show full year you can also use the parameter fy. | dformat=MMDDYY |
| fy=B | Show the full year (fy) in the date instead of only two digit year. | This boolean parameter indicates whether to show all the year digits instead of default two digits in the date. By the way the program will display all the year digits by default from Year 2000. The valid values for the boolean parameter fy are Y,N,T,F,1 or 0. See also: dformat. | fy=F |
| istrip=B | Use of image strip On/Off | The boolean value of istrip specifies whether to use image strip or not. If you specify istrip=F, the program will look for the individual digit image files in the digits/style directory. The valid values for the Boolean parameter istrip are Y, N, T, F, 1 or 0. | istrip=T |
| ft=X | Frame Thickness | You can wrap the counter in an ornamental frame of X pixels thick. Use 0 for no frame. Values over 5 make a nice 3-D effect. | ft=4 |
|
frgb=R;G;B or frgb=RRGGBB (in hex) |
Frame Color |
Specifies the color of the frame in RGB (red/green/blue)
format. Each color component, R, G, and B is specified as a
value between 0 and 255. If you use ft= without a frgb=
param, the default color is used.
If you specify a frgb= without a ft=, then the frame thickness defaults to 5. All the examples show ft=5. The color can be specified as hex string or a name. Do not use a # before the hex string as Netscape. For example, if you want to specify white in hex, use frgb=ffffff. You also can use a color name (e.g. frgb=blue) if the counter is configured to do so (look at the cfg file). Look at the color name mapping database for some hints about color name database. |
frgb=100;139;216
or frgb=648bd8 |
| tr=B | Transparency On/Off | You can specify if your counter image will have a transparent color with the Boolean B. So tr=Y means there will be a transparent color. It does not matter if the GIF files used for the digits are "transparent"; you must specify explicitly which color to make transparent. If you specify a trgb=, then you do not need to specify tr=Y. If you specify tr=Y and do not specify trgb=, then the default color black will be transparent. The valid values for B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0. |
tr=F
No Transparency |
|
trgb=R;G;B or trgb=RRGGBB (in hex) |
Transparency Color | Specifies the color to be made transparent in RGB (red/green/blue) format. Each color component, R, G, and B is specified as a value between 0 and 255. If you use tr= without a trgb= param, the default color is used. The color can be specified as hex string or a name. Do not use a # before the hex string as Netscape. For example, if you want to specify white in hex, use trgb=ffffff. You also can use a color name (e.g. trgb=blue) if the counter is configured to do so (look at the cfg file). Look at the color name mapping database for some hints about color name database. If you use trgb= then tr=Y is not needed. |
trgb=0;0;0
or trgb=000000 |
| md=X | Max Digits | Defines maximum number of digits to display. Any value between 5 and 80 inclusive are permitted. Padding with leading zeros is automatically done for you; longer counts are truncated to the given X. |
md=6
Without padding |
| pad=B | Left padding with 0s | Turn padding on/off in conjunction with md= setting. It also affects padding hour in clock. Valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0. |
pad=N
Without specification of a md=value
pad=Y |
| dd=A | Digit Directory | Denotes directory of a specific styles of digits. Four styles of digits are supplied. They are kept at the directories A,B,C and D respectively. Visit the digit mania page for other styles of digits. |
dd=A
My green LED digits |
| image=gif_file | Display this GIF file | You can display any GIF image specified with this parameter. The location of this file is determined by the dd= parameter. Note that no path in the GIF file is allowed. All attributes of the counter apply to the image. This parameter is used for compositing counter image with the GIF image. The default alignment is top-center and the default offset is 2 pixels from the top of the GIF image. If you want to composite clock, date or contdown, specify so with the display paramter. | None |
| comma=B | Display comma after every 3rd digit from right. | The boolean value of parameter comma specifies whether to display comma after every 3rd digit from right. If you use this parameter as true, the left padding with zeros will be turned off. | comma=F |
|
srgb=R;G;B or srgb=RRGGBB (in hex) prgb=R;G;B or prgb=RRGGBB (in hex) |
Change a color of the image to a target color on the fly. | Any one color of the image can be changed to a different color on the fly. srgb stands for source color, that is the color to change. prgb stands for pen color, that is the target color. The values for srgb and prgb can be colon separated color components (e.g, srgb=255;0;0), a hex value (e.g. srgb=ff0000) or a color name (e.g. srgb=red). The color name can be used if you configured the counter to do so (look at the cfg file). |
srgb=00ff00 (0;255;0 green)
prgb=00ffff With chcolor=T |
| chcolor=B | Change a color of the image. | This parameter is usually used to change the default green color to cyan. That is if you specify chcolor=T, and you want to change green to cyan, then you do not need to specify srgb and prgb parameters. 1x1 GIF is displayed. The valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0 | chcolor=F |
| st=X | Start Count | This parameter is used to set the initial value of the counter to some number X. This is only valid if you decided to allow automatic datafile creation. It is a bad practice to allow automatic datafile creation, however it makes site maintaining easier. The automatic datafile creation option is specified in configuration file and can be changed at run time. Note that this parameter has no effect if the datafile already exists. If you want to change the counter value in a existing datafile, hand edit the file. The minimum value for st is 1. |
st=1 Count starts at 1 |
| sh=B | Show digits |
Used to turn display of digits on or off according to the
Boolean B. When sh=T, counter will be displayed and incremented,
this is the default behavior.
If sh=F no digits will show, but the counter will still increment; instead of digits a transparent 1x1 GIF is displayed. The valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0 |
sh=Y |
| df=data_file | Datafile to store count |
Specifies the name of the file for storing the count in. The
file must be allocated to you as was mentioned in the
"Authorizations" section above. You can use df=random
to display a random number.
One special use of the parameter is df=RANDOM. This returns a random number using the fractional portion of the host's time of day clock as a seed for the generator. Unlike all other WWWcounter parameters, the file name provided is case-sensitive, except for the value random. Or Random, or rANDOM, etc. |
df=random
if no datafile is specified |
| incr=B | Increment Count |
Makes it possible to display the current count without
incrementing the count. This can be used to examine the count
for reporting or other purposes without adding to the count.
Valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0.
|
incr=T
Increment the counter |
| lit=X | Display literal | Makes it possible to display a given, predetermined string. The valid values for the string X are digits, a,p,: and - | None |
| negate=B | Negate the color | Makes it possible to negate the color of the counter digits. Note that the Frame is exempted from negating. Valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0. |
negate=F
Do not negate |
|
degrees=X or angle=X |
Rotate X degrees | Makes it possible to rotate the counter image X degrees. The possible values of X are 90, 180, 270 and 360. Note 360 is meaningless as the counter will come back to the original 0 degrees. Note: Microsoft MS Explorer interprets °rees as the degree character (it's gotta be a bug in IE), so use angle to be safe. |
degrees=270
With rotate=Y and without degrees=X rotate 270 degrees clockwise |
| rotate=B | Rotate On/Off | The Boolean value B turns on or off rotating. If you use degrees= setting, rotate is not needed. Valid values for the Boolean parameter B are Y, N, T, F, 1, or 0. |
rotate=F
Do not rotate |
| xy=x;y | composite the counter image to a base image at the location x,y | When a base image is specified with image parameter, the parameter xy can be used to composite the counter image on the base image at location x,y. x is positive towards right and y is positive downward. The co-ordinate of the upper left corner of the base image is 0,0). See also: align. | xy=1;1 |
| align=X | composite the counter/clock/countdown image with a base image and align the counter image. | This option can be used to composite the counter on a base image (specified with image with known width and height. This way, you will be able specify the width and height of the counter image in the <img src= tag while calling the counter. The implication is, if the counter is the first thing in a large table, the browser will not have to wait to calculate the width and height of the counter image before loading the rest. The valid value for the parameter align is topleft, topcenter, topright, midleft, midright, midcenter, bottomleft, bottomcenter and bottomright. The parameter offset can be used to specify the offset in pixels from the edge of the base image. Note: xy parameter has higher precedence than align. Therefore, if both xy and align is specified xy will take the precedence. See also: xy. | align=bottomcenter |
| offset=N | Offset of the counter image in pixels from the edge of the base image while compositing the counter with an image. | The parameter offset is used with parameter align to specify the offset of the counter image in pixels from the edge of the base image while compositing the counter/clock image with an base image. If align=topleft, the the offset is counted from the top and left edge of the base image. If align=topcenter, the offset is counted from the top edge of the base image. If align=topright, the offset is counted from the top and right edge of the base image. If align=midleft, offset is counted from the left edge of the base image. If align=midcenter, offset is ignored. If align=midright, offset is counted from the right edge of the base image. If align=bottomleft, offset is counted from the left and bottom edge of the base image. If align=bottomcenter, offset is counted from bottom edge of the base image. If align=bottomright, offset is counted from the right and bottom edge of the base image. The valid value for the paramter N is a positive integer. See also: xy. | offset=2 |
Configuration file (all platforms)
The count.cfg file contains the runtime configuration information for the Count program. The file consists of sections and parameters. A section begins with the name of the section in square brackets and continues until the next section begins. The sections contain parameters of the form keyword=value or just keyword one in each line. The file is line-based, that is, each newline-terminated line represents either a comment, a section name or a parameter. The section and the parameter names are not case sensitive. A sample configuration file is shown below:###----------------------------------------------------------------------- ### configuration file for Count 2.5 ### Automatically generated from user input by the script Gen-conf ### created on: Sun Jan 3 18:15:01 EST 2003 ### Note: Configuration file format for Count 2.5 is different than ### older versions. -- mm ### The format of the file is described below: ### - Any line starts with # or ; is considered comment and ignored. ### - A section in the file is inside left and right bracket. ### - Each section has parameters below the section. ### ### Please read the Configuration section in the counter webpage for details. ### The official counter homepage is at URL: ### http://www.fccc.edu/users/muquit/Count.html ###---------------------------------------------------------------------- [version] 2.5 ##-- options section ; If auto_file_creation=Yes, then the users can create data files. It IS ; dangerous to set this option to Yes. # ; strict_mode=Yes or No. Run the program in strict mode or not. It's a good ; idea to set this option to Yes. # ; allow_rgb_database=Yes or No. Convenient to use because colorname e.g., red, ; gold etc can be used instead of rgb components of the color, however it is ; very inefficient to lookup. If your site is busy, set this option to No. # ; count_reload=Yes or No. It is a good idea to set this option to No. But ; you've to set this option to Yes if you are running a proxy server. ; Normally set this to Yes. # ; log_error_messages=Yes or No. If your site is extremely busy and if the ; counter generates lots of logs, set this option to No. Normally set this ; option to Yes. # ; show_error_messages_to_browsers=Yes or No. Set this option to No if you're ; concerned with privacy and you're sure that the counter works perfectly. ; If you set this option to No, you will not see error messages. [options] auto_file_creation=No strict_mode=Yes allow_rgb_database=Yes count_reload=No log_error_messages=Yes show_error_messages_to_browsers=Yes ; You can specify IP address of the hosts you want to ignore from counting. ; netmasks can be used to ignore a entire network or a specificrange of ; hosts in the network. Read the counter documentation to know about ; netmasks. Wild card can be used as well. one item per line. ; [ignore IPs] ; ; All possible names and IP addresses by which your host can be referred. ; These hosts can access the counter remotely or locally. Host running ; the http server must exist here. Wild card can be used. one item per line. ; [authorized] *.bar.com abcd.foo.com abcd 131.249.1.100 www.foo.com www test.counter.comThe config file is parsed each time the counter program gets accessed. Therefore, smaller the file, the better the performance. If you have thousands of entries in [ignore IPs] or [authorized] section, you'll notice performance degradation. Try using wild cards if possible.As of version Count version 2.4, referrer host names will be looked up in DNS if the program is compiled with the USE_DNS macro defined in src/Makefile. This allows you to list wild-card IP address ranges in [authorized] section of the config file. This feature can reduce a 200 line [authorized] section down to a single line. Without USE_DNS, the host name as sent by the browser's HTTP_REFERER header must be listed EXACTLY.
Examples (all platforms) (link)
![]()
The HTML tag used to create the above image is as follows:
<img src="/cgi-bin/Count.cgi?df=sample.dat&dd=A&image=mine.gif&ft=0&offset=5&align=topcenter">Note: while compositing the keyword tr and trgb for transparency makes the color of the counter image transparent not that of the base image. Also, when you're compositing, do NOT specify display=image.
Count will try to return an image in any event. That is, even if it fails for some reason, it will write the error messages in GIF format. The text error messages also will be written to the counter log file defined with LOG_FILE in the directory defined with LOG_DIR in the config.h file. The program Count-config asked about these if you remember.If you see any of these images, please check the Counter log file you defined with LOG_DIR and LOG_FILE. If the program could not create the log file, it will write the error messages to stderr. In that case if you configured your httpd server to write the log to a file, the error messages will be written to this file.