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To connect 1C to a proxy server you need to perform the following actions:
Open the 1C program. Go to the "Reports" section. Under the item "1C Reporting" select the category "Regulated reports". Go to the "Settings" section. Click "Other exchange settings". Select "Proxy server settings". Enter your proxy server information. Confirm and save your settings.
To connect to the Internet through a proxy server, you must authenticate with your username and password. This can be done by logging in automatically, by using a Windows agent, and by using a Web agent. With automatic login, as well as when using the Web-agent, you need to manually configure the address of the proxy server in your browser. The Windows agent does not require any special settings, because it sets up everything you need for work by itself.
If you are parsing a site using JSoup in a Java application and you want to introduce a delay between requests to avoid being blocked or rate-limited by the website, you can use Thread.sleep to pause the execution for a specified duration. Here's a basic example
First, make sure you have the JSoup library included in your project. If you're using Maven, you can add the following dependency to your pom.xml:
org.jsoup
jsoup
1.14.3
Now, here's an example Java program using JSoup with a delay between requests:
import org.jsoup.Jsoup;
import org.jsoup.nodes.Document;
import java.io.IOException;
public class WebScraperWithDelay {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Replace with the URL you want to scrape
String url = "https://example.com";
// Number of milliseconds to wait between requests
long delayMillis = 2000; // 2 seconds
try {
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
// Make the HTTP request using JSoup
Document document = Jsoup.connect(url).get();
// Process the document as needed
System.out.println("Title: " + document.title());
// Introduce a delay between requests
Thread.sleep(delayMillis);
}
} catch (IOException | InterruptedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
In this example:
Jsoup.connect(url).get()
is used to make an HTTP request and retrieve the HTML document from the specified URL.Thread.sleep(delayMillis)
introduces a delay of 2 seconds between requests. You can adjust the value of delayMillis
based on your needs.To simulate a mouse click in Selenium IDE, follow these steps:
1. Open Selenium IDE and navigate to the web page where you want to simulate the mouse click.
2. Click on the "Record" button to start recording your actions.
3. Move your mouse to the area of the web page where you want to simulate the click.
4. Right-click on the desired element (this will open a context menu).
5. From the context menu, select "Store As" and give the variable a name (e.g., "element").
6. Click on the "Actions" button in the Selenium IDE toolbar.
7. From the Actions menu, select "Move To Element" and select the variable you stored in step 5 (e.g., "element").
8. Move your mouse away from the element and then click on the "Actions" button again.
9. This time, select "Click" and choose the variable you stored in step 5 (e.g., "element").
10. Click the "Stop" button to stop recording your actions.
11. Selenium IDE will generate the corresponding Selenium WebDriver commands in the Commands panel.
Your Selenium IDE should now have the following commands:
storeElement: Stores the element you want to click on in a variable.
moveToElement: Moves the mouse to the stored element.
click: Clicks on the stored element.
You can now run the test to simulate the mouse click on the specified element.
Technically, a proxy is an ordinary computer or server connected to a network (local or Internet). It accepts traffic from the user, redirects it to the address that was specified in the request. And then receives the response from the server and transmits it to the user's equipment. That is, it is actually an intermediary.
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