Showing posts with label Scoring Forms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scoring Forms. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Minima IV Online Baseball Scorecard - Colour Menu on Top

Minima_IV-Colour_Menu_on_Top.html
Originally published at Blogger Baseball Scorecard - http://internetbaseballscorecard.blogspot.com/2011/12/minima-iv-colour-menu-on-top.html.

Cross posted at Michael Holloway's Baseball Blogs - http://baseball---blog.blogspot.com/2011/12/minima-iv-online-baseball-scorecard.html.

This is a new "Minima IV" at-bat box design which renders four Colour Notations Scoring Menus along the right side of the At-Bat box --- instead of in four pop-up menu, as in my last post on this latest version in the Internet Baseball Scorecard.
( http://internetbaseballscorecard.blogspot.com/2011/12/minima-iv.html )

'Minima IV' AB box Image - rendered in Google Chrome


The colour notation 'Selection Menus' open by clicking on the appropriate 'base' icon. When you click on the First Base icon ( the furthest right black triangle on the peach coloured, infield icon ), the First Base menu opens, indicated by the 1 in the bottom white box. In this coding the colour notation menu remains live until you choose another menu by clicking on a different Base icon. Click on any of the colours in the menu and an appropriately coloured triangle will appear on the chosen side of the infield.

In My scorekeeping universe: red means Out, pink means Error, yellow means Fielder's Choice, lime green means Base Hit, forest green means the runner advanced via ball put into play by another batter, blue means Stolen Base, navy blue indicates the route by which a Run was scored and RBI awarded. The bottom two boxes are field green and white - for fixing mistakes.

The Miima IV At-Bat (AB) box is less than half the size of the "Minima III" baseball scorecard AB box - but it has many hidden functions that provide for lots of customization for the individual user. Each quadrant of the AB box has text areas for recording scorekeeper notations - five lines high that allow for "Project Scoresheet" scoring notation protocols - but instead of room for 13 characters as in the Minima III scorecard, there are 7 in this sleek version. All text areas have hidden scroll bars which allow for any amount of text - but to keep the look of the card clean, I suggest limiting your notations to 5 lines. By clicking the button a "notepad" is available for any extra notations you wish, or for notes. The notepad closes by clicking on the "notepad" button again.

All the elements discussed above are Live in this example:



notes:
Valid HTML 4.01 Strict

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Minima III Baseball Scorecard - Build 4 (3 X 3 TEST)

This was originally published at one of my other blogs, the extra wide Blogger Baseball Scorecard. The image below shows the new scorecard's lay out in build 4, to experience the interactivity of the new coding you should go to the site.

Had to take a break from coding for a while - the last time I published on the Minima III Baseball Scorecard project was on July 7th 2011.

Publishing code inside of the Blogger Interface poses tricky problems - everything can be working perfectly when one checks one's work in one's browser - taking the code into Blogger creates some default issues that need to be solved.

Back on July 7th I presented a 2 row, by 2 column example of the Minima III Scorecard that inexplicably stretched the table at certain points. That has been fixed. As well, only Microsoft IE 9 and newer support the Base Icon buttons (if you're in an earlier MS browser you see "&" instead of diamonds).

I have been unable so far, to fix the way MS renders the green Field Icon over-top of the 2nd Base and 3rd Base text areas - despite 'z-index' attributes. As a stop-gap, I created space between each row of AB boxes to remind Internet Explorer users that they have to click above the 2nd Base and 3rd Base text areas to get a prompt cursor in them.

Image of the Minima III Baseball Scorecard example coding - rendered with the HTML5 compliant browser, Firefox 5. Via Blogger Baseball Scorecard


This coding is working great! All the sides of the diamond can be coloured 9 different ways via pop-up menu that open with a click on any of the 4 Bases.

Every space on the scorecard is live, ready for text. In all of the text areas, scroll bars open automatically when you create more lines than there is space for in each area - so you can write as much as you like. As many game-notes as you need - positioned where they belong, at the precise point in the time-line schematic where the action is happening!



mh

Properties of the Minima III Baseball Scorecard



This article was originally published at my other blog, the Blogger Baseball Scorecard blog, on Thursday, July 7, 2011.

Updated: July 25th 2011

The Minima III Baseball Scorecard works in all Browsers. At my last post on this development ("Javascript Functions enable push-button colour notation Baseball Scorekeeping": http://internetbaseballscorecard.blogspot.com/2011/06/javascript-functions-enable-push-button.html), I had some troubles with Microsoft compatibility - those issues have been resolved. But now there is a new one, and with some sense of relief, I'm happy to report it's not particularly about Microsoft compatibility this time!.

A Screen-shot of the Minima example coding, rendered by an HTML5 compliant browser (Firefox5)



The Minima III Baseball Scorecard requires HTML5 compliant Browsers. The reason for this is that the little squares which indicate the Bases around the Infield icon diamond, are only available in HTML5. (Who'da-thunk - a simple box on it's ear - hither-to not in the HTML symbol list?) If your using an older Browser, the square renders instead as an "&" - the first character of the code that produces the symbol in HTML5 (⋄). The other characters are hidden by the container box I put around it. No worries, the "&" character functions as the button key, it just looks like crap.

Browsers that are HTML5 compliant are IE9, FireFox 5, Google Chrome 5. At this publishing I haven't found out whether Safari has an HTML5 Browser out yet, the Safari Browser that I downloaded last month, renders the Bases like IE8 does. I haven't checked out the Opera Browser yet.

Update: July 25th 2011
Apple released their Safari 5 Browser today, it supports the html5 90 degree corners diamond symbol.


For all you folks who haven't got the latest browser (especially you Microsoft patrons who need to BUY a new Operating System to run IE9), I've included a screen shot to the right of what the example scorecard looks like in an HTML5 compliant Browser (in this case, a free download, Firefox 5 Browser running on a MS-XP 2003 OS)

These Base icons - squares with 90 degree corners, rotated 45 degrees - are much more than just perfectly suited Base icons - they are the Buttons that make appear, pop-up Colour Scoring Menus. Each at-bat box has four Scoring Menus that open when a user clicks on the First Base, Second Base, Third Base or Home Plate icon. They are at the heart of this scorecard's 'Colour Scoring' functionality.

In the example lower right, in order to show the functionality of all the elements of the new scorecard, I've laied out 2 player's at-bat (AB) box rows, 2 innings long, their game stat tables, and a Team Pitching Table.

(mh - this blogis too narrow to accomadate even the 2 player by 2 inning example to see what I'm talking about head over to the extra-wide Blogger Baseball Scorecard Blog -, this article was originally published there.)

The reason for the abridged scorecard is that the complete Minima III Scorecard - for 2 Teams, 11 Innings wide, Box Score Table, Pitching Tables - is over 2.5 MB big. That's too large for Blogger, which has a 1 MB/post limit. So you won't see this scorecard used to score games here - The Minima III will require my own web site. (Or is there a free web site application that can handle it? I've noticed a few around - but I haven't done the research yet.)


Check out the functionality yourself!

When clicked, all the buttons make appear a pop-up menu. In the menu, click on any of the coloured words like "Out", for example - and the first base side of the infield icon turns red - indicating the batter is out at first. Change the colour by clicking on another word; close the menu with the "X" in the box, bottom right. Click on the teaxtarea box associated with the 1B side of the AB box and type in some baseball scoring notations - like FO7, for example (meaning the batter flied out to left field).

The empty, long, thin box - top left - is where one types in the Team name, right under that, the large rectangle is for the batter's position in the batting order, the player's name and fielding position.

The totals tables at the end of each row of AB boxes are fully functional textareas - there are 4 rows so you can total up possible substitutions AB's as well as the starting fielder's stats.

The Lower table has a space to type in the Team name, and a place for 6 Pitcher's names and stats. All the data boxes are live textareas.



mh

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

How the new "2011 Blogger Baseball Scorecard" works

(This piece was simultaneously published at "Michael Holloway's Baseball Blogs".)

Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser won't show certain properties of border tags which make up the diamond shape of the 'At Bat' boxes that are at the centre of the new 2011 Blogger Baseball Scorecard's design.

The two images below (side by side) show Microsoft's Internet Explorer's rendering of my code:

Internet Explorer Rendering

Below are images as above, from the same web page, this one rendered by Firefox 3.6.15 browser:

Firefox Browser Rendering
Valid HTML 4.01 TransitionalThe code has been validated at W3C as HTML 4.01 Transitional - Passed. I'm working on finding out why Internet Explorer won't render the border tags properly, and fixing it. In the meantime if you want to read this years scorecards, you'll have to do it with a different browser.

Firefox browser is available here. I have found that I can have more than one browser on my Windows XP Operating System. In my experience even running both at the same time doesn't compromise performance on my machine.

On Sunday March 6th, I used the new scorecard to score-keep the Toronto Blue Jays at Pittsburgh Pirates spring training game in Bradenton Florida, which was on Rogers SNET-1 in this market. You can see it here - if you must, it's an awful mess of scoring. As I say at the Internet Baseball Scorecard Blog, "This is the new, never before used in-game, 2011 Internet Baseball Scorecard - bear with me." I scored all the runs, but missed a lot of outs, and substitutions and even the staring line-ups were incomplete - etc., etc., etc.. But you can see that it functions as it's supposed to. So far, I'm really happy with it.


How it Works


(Border: 30px height: 90px width: 260px)

Above is an example of a border tag used to make a simple two tone border - note the angles at the corners. In the scorecard, each quadrant of the diamond is actually the corner of a border (see Figure 1.) - it's the only way to make an angle with HTML!

At the top of this post - in the Firefox Browser Rendering, 2 image set - the left image has all four of the vertical border lines set to "solid black" - and the horizontal border lines set to match the background colour, thus they are invisible. In the image right next to that, the four horizontal border colours are set to a slightly darker colour than the background - so the appearance is of a frame around a diamond.

A scorekeeper can change the horizontal border's colour attributes on the fly, using the Blogger Compose mode "Text background color" widget. By selecting one of the four horizontal borders in each AB box, and changing it's colour with the "Text background color" button, one can indicate the progress of a runner around the bases:



The first box on the left, is how all the boxes in the entire scorecard appear before the game starts. The next box shows a runner on First Base, next one on Second Base, and so on. A solitary black diamond indicates a Run Scored - just like in pencil and paper scoring! :)


How to score with it

To change the attributes of the borders that make up the black diamond while scoring a baseball game is easy. Below I've taken a screen shot of me about to change the colour of the south-east quadrant - in order to indicate a runner is on First Base The colour indicated in the palette is the slightly darker peach. I'm about to change the colour of the horizontal border to the colour right above the one indicated - to the same colour as the background of the quadrant box:


First you highlight the border attribute by left clicking beside the diamond in the quadrant you wish to change. Next, left click on the "Text background color" button and choose the colour you want.

And Viola, a runner is on First Base:



Specifications

I think there's more than enough space in the 2011 Blogger Baseball Scorecard to score the game with any iconography you wish to invent.

Below (or above) each angle of the diamond there are four lines for text, room for 10 uppercase letters or 12 lower case letters on each line.

In the Pitches column there is again, more than enough room for the number of pitches in the best plate appearance (a great plate appearance is around 12 pitches).

Modern Project Scoresheet defensive notations and ball trajectory notations can be noted in the Pitches column as well.

Also note that if you have to, you can keep on writing outside of any of the boxes - the letters render where you put them - by hitting return you can create a block of script that extends into the next inning's AB box (which usually remains empty - unless the team bats around).

In a few days I will finish the new 2011 Blogger Baseball Scorecard.  It still needs Per-Inning totals boxes; Pitchers Totals boxes and a Per-Inning Box Score table for across the top. When all that is done I will post the code for the 2011 Blogger Baseball Scorecard to a Google Document and you can run it in a special extra-wide Blogger blog.

The Extra-wide Blogger code is available below:

Blogger Code to make your Blog Wider

(to view the code, right click over the frame, highlight "This Frame")



To read an overview of how to install this code into a Blogger Blog go to, "2011 Scorecard: Bigger! Better!"

(Note the "2011 Scorecard Bigger! Better!" is an article about a simpler version I used in the 2010 MLB Postseason - it doesn't have the diamond feature - but the width of the blog you'll need for this, new version is the same.)


mh

Saturday, June 12, 2010

ScorePAD evalulation



Scoring scoresheets for iphone have been around for a while, but nothing open source until May 2010 when 6-4-3 Baseball Scorecard for Android came out. This has probably lead the standard in pad scoring ScorePad to release this evaluation version (ScorePAD V8) of their proprietary software. I've set it up with lineups for today's Toronto Blue Jays at Colorado Rockies - Game 2 (Scored Live tonight at the ISCB, 8:10PM EDT 6:10 PM MDT). I loaded in yesterdays lineup with today's probable pitchers - it may change.

The ScorePad has all the buttons I imagined when I began building my DIY Score Card.

You high-light the batter who's at the plate and then, if they hit the ball for a single, you go to the batter row to the right of the lineup section that has a selection scroll beneath it, click '1B', a green angled area appears in the AB box along where the first base line would be - indicating Fred Lewis is on first base.


There's no way for me to share this live with you in internet land, except by taking a 'print screen' shot of it with my Windows OS - like I've done here.



mh

Project Scoresheet/Baseball Workshop - Google embed







mh

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Standard Baseball Score Card - W3C XHTML 1.0 Strict! - I'm a code writer!



I've been working on a baseball scoring form since early in May. I started with a hack of an ESPN table that I liked the look of (it had 10 columns across). ;)

Through trial and error I learned how to build a table with html. To make it look good though, I needed a way to stabilize the table so that when I added data through the course of a baseball game, it wouldn't distort sideways and up and down.

For that, I taught myself how to write some Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) code.



If you've been following my posts on this project you know I've been tweaking the html/css tables by live scoring baseball games in my new, extra-wide blog, the "Internet Baseball Score Card Blog". It is an exercise to learn how best to accommodate all the info one would like to put in a score card, and moreover, using a computer keyboard rather than pencil and paper.

I had to be sure the scoring form was flexible enough that one could accommodate all the changes that can possibly occur; like the game goes into extra innings, a pinch runner replaces a base runner, or a double switch happens, and so on. I scored ten games including three in a National League park. Each score card created a subsequent change in the form until now - it works in every situation I can imagine.



A friend of mine who has been helping with poignant suggestions - he must find obvious - has helped me navigate the geography of writing and publishing code; making sure it's up to standard and as simple as it can be. After I'd gotten the code as simple as I could (he says it can be smaller), he directed me to the W3C site - where you can test your coding for errors.

W3C is the internet standards body, it holds regular summits of code writers from around the world to come up with and updates world wide web coding standards. An example are the protocols that make html the standard language of the internet. Right now they are debating the new html5 protocols, the foundation of Google Wave.

They have a page in W3C Vadidator where you can upload your code and a program checks it. I had two errors - directions missing from the top because I wrote the code in blogger - which doesn't allow those directions.

I added the missing protocols and Bingo! - I'm a code writer! :)



You can save a copy of this template (opens in a new tab):


The Plan


So... that's stage one.

Next is to turn this template into an application where baseball scorers can login and score games, save them to their own private suite, or share with a community of baseball scores though an in-house wiki and a micro-blog. Users will invent new ways of scoring and create new icons to score with. I envision a way to upload your own icons so a user can score a game any way they see fit.

After 140 years of scoring there are still problems getting it all on paper. When crazy stuff happens in a baseball game a scorer is tested to get all that happened onto their scoring form - so the more games that are scored using the different and inventive ways to score the game the better baseball scoring will become. I envision a template that will allow as much flexibility for the users as possible. This will enable the continuing evolution of the craft of baseball scoring.

A wiki and micro blog will be an important part of an Internet Baseball Score Card website, the group will edit out mistakes in the scoring and an echelon of dedicated scores will emerge. Then, once the wiki is humming, the data, stored in specific places in the cards code can be easily transferred into a program that will amass the Official Statistical Record of the game.

I think this interactive iconographic structure will use Project Scoresheet scoring innovations, but will replace the front end, the point where humans input data.


I'd especially like to thank Kathryn Barrett, O'Reilly Media Webcast Producer for 'Prizing' me the "Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML" book. Thank you very much.
(I answered a Webcast questionnaire - and won the book that was really important reference source to get me started.)

These are some of the great resources I used at the W3C website:


Free Webmaster Tutorials - Quackit.com

Scoring a Baseball Game the Project Scoresheet Way by David Cortesi (pdf)

O'Reilly's Safari Books "Baseball Hacks" By Joseph Adler Chapter 1. Basics of Baseball: Keep Score, Project Scoresheet–Style

Baseball Hacks by Joseph Adler at Google Books.



mh

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Internet Baseball Score Card Blog



Update # 4 on my html/css Internet Scoring Form.

I've started a new blog called the "Internet Baseball Score Card". It's a place for me to score baseball games. To get the twenty columns across that I needed to score nine innings and show batting statistics to the right of the game score I had to create a blog with a wider format. It makes for a nice compact score card; it's a lot easier to use and to 'pencil' in all the totals at the end of the game.

Below is the top half of the latest game scored, Toronto Blue Jays at Seattle Mariners, May 19, 2010.





mh

Friday, May 14, 2010

Internet Friendly Baseball Score Card update # 3

Html/CSS Game Ready Template - rationalized box sizes and columned legend - 05/13/10


On May 7th I introduced a skeleton html score card that became bent out of shape as one added data to the columns. On May 10th I introduced a fix using CSS boxes that added horizontal and vertical stability.

Now I've rationalized the space used; I've made some data entry boxes smaller and some bigger, depending on how the score card worked while actually scoring a baseball game.

Next I intend to float text data in each box for a cleaner look. Also I want to add a set of columns beside each batters set at-bat boxes for AB, R, H, RB, BB, SO, PO, A, LOB. A score card should have a space to record every pitch that is thrown during a game; this too will come.

You can download this score card


To take a copy for yourself simply high light the entire table by holding the left click button on your mouse down while dragging the cursor from the bottom to top of the table, copy, and in your blog (with the "New Post" page tabbed to the "Rich Test"), paste - and save.

To score a game, copy the saved template and paste it to a new post, click to Rich text and start typing in-side any box.

Each batters at-bat box has room for three characters across and three lines down for a total of nine characters. This is tight for all the info scorer's find themselves entering during and after each at bat. To fit all this data I have revised some of the standard notations. The legend below shows the notations that I have used so far in scoring 4 MLB games. Some are the old standards, some are new.

One of the most difficult things to show on a score card is what's happening with the base runners - and when.

"Scoring a Baseball Game the Project Scoresheet way" is a new way of scoring a baseball game published November 2001 by David Cortesi. It invents new protocols and notations towards entering penciled score card data into a computer via scanning.

I borrow one of David's ideas; the box on the left shows an at-bat box from Project Scoresheet, with three lines. My html/css scoresheet below-right also has three lines. The top line describes what happens before the play (a runner on base steals), the middle line shows the play (a hit, walk or out) and the bottom line shows what happens after the play (advances a base, scores...).

Below is a good example; Jeter walked to lead off the 3rd. During Gardner's at-bat Jeter steals second (#1s). Then Gardner strikes out looking. In the next at-bat Jeter scored when Teixeira's hit the ball to right for a base hit (BH9). Teixeira got an rbi (r) and was left on base, at first (-).
Enjoy scoring games! Any feed back is appreciated.
(michaelholloway111(at)gmail(dot)com

Legend:
- on 1st
= on 2nd
--- on 3rd
r = rbi
<> run plated
p pitch count
/// end of inning
E4t E4 throwing
#2s - base runner (batting second) stole a base
-
-
-
B bunt
B bunt
PO pop-up caught
BH base hit
K batter strikes out
Ks batter strikes out swinging
UA un-assisted
#1s first batter in the line up stole one base
#1ss first batter in the line up stole another base in the same at-bat


Away Team123456789
player name
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player name
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123456789Totals
Runs
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Hits
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Errors
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LOB
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PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
Pitchers name
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Pitchers name
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Home Team123456789
player name
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player name
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123456789Totals
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Hits
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Errors
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LOB
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PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
Pitchers name
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Pitchers name
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Legend:
- on 1st
= on 2nd
--- on 3rd
r = rbi
<> run plated
p pitch count
/// end of inning
E4t E4 throwing
#2s - base runner (batting second) stole a base
-
-
-
B bunt
B bunt
PO pop-up caught
BH base hit
K batter strikes out
Ks batter strikes out swinging
UA un-assisted
#1s first batter in the line up stole one base
#1ss first batter in the line up stole another base in the same at-bat



Away Team101112131415161718
player name
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123456789Totals
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Hits
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PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
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Home Team101112131415161718
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123456789Totals
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LOB
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PitchingIPHRERBBKHRp/sERA
Pitchers name
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Legend:
- on 1st
= on 2nd
--- on 3rd
r = rbi
<> run plated
p pitch count
/// end of inning
E4t E4 throwing
#2s - base runner (batting second) stole a base
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B bunt
B bunt
PO pop-up caught
BH base hit
K batter strikes out
Ks batter strikes out swinging
UA un-assisted
#1s first batter in the line up stole one base
#1ss first batter in the line up stole another base in the same at-bat



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