I have used Greasemonkey many times and am stepping up to Firefox extension development. Is there a consolidated reference for the variables, functions, and anything else that is available to overlays on browser.xul? Besides gBrowser, I note from the source that there are at least gNavToolbox, ...
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Coworker gives me ftp/sftp/shell login details for the company website as images. I tell him the passwords aren't working. He tells me to copy & paste them. I tell him I can't copy and paste from an image and his response is "Write it in notepad, copy and paste it."
Today, my visual editor wasn't working well. It started with being unable to add a link using link button. Then I found I couldn't switch to the text editor to add the link manually.
I re-installed the latest wp update using the button on the updates page. No change.
I started in Firefox; exper...
Alright, before I punch myself in the face for another day, here's my problem: Working on IE9 support. Current status: Placeholders (which we use everywhere) don't happen in IE9. I've got a pretty nifty plugin that does it for me, but doesn't work on dynamically added content (it needs to be called every time we add something with a placeholder). Some work from last night with @OctavianDamiean proved that listening for DOM mutation events was even stupider than it sounds. CSS animation hacks aren't supported in IE9. Where should I look next?
I'm trying to implement a SignIn with Google+ on my app, but I keep having this error:
SecurityError: Blocked a frame with origin "https://myapp.appspot.com" from accessing a frame with origin "https://accounts.google.com". Protocols, domains, and ports must match.
as you can see I'm already using https on my app, but still having this problem. and this isn't letting my server method be called onSignedIn
have anyone faced this same origin policy problem?
Every time you add a placeholder element, it'll also add an image element that'll try to load an image, now load an image (really tiny 1x1px transparent), the idea is that you listen to the load event on the image.
@SomeKittens btw I'd do a simple cbeck on the string placeholder. Doesn't matter if the plugin is launched for nothing if there is some text with placeholder once in a while. Except if you have this string in every html fragment because some element is duplicated dverywhere ofc...
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A total of 1,800 commits were made by 437 authors in the Blink, Chromium, v8 and Skia repositories last week. Animations in Blink are getting a large overhaul as the implementation of Web Animations is progressing, bringing along new features and a ton of bug-fixes. WebKit, by the way, announced their intentions to start working […]
when I try to perform a JSON.stringify on a JSON I get a:
"Blocked a frame with origin "https://myapp.appspot.com" from accessing a frame with origin "https://accounts.google.com". Protocols, domains, and ports must match."
@rogcg yes, it can. Because the element points to window, and all the stuff it contains, and by recursively calling everything that looks like a property, it can do about anything... and if your page has frames, that's totally logic.
I need a function building a JSON valid string from any argument but :
avoiding recursivity problem by not adding objects twice
avoiding call stack size problem by truncating past a given depth
Generally it should be able to process big objects, at the cost of truncating them.
As reference, ...
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@RyanKinal How would you have answered this comment ?
Is it possible attach a reference "local" scope? So for example in this case : window.a = 12, I'm scoping a to window, and can be accessed later by calling window.a. Is it possible to do something like local.a = 13 such that by just calling a, I get 13? — chibro25 mins ago
This is one of those guys who don't know JS and absolutely want to use it in a different way of how it works. There seems to be more and more of them...
To expand on the question, I want this statement to be possible:
declare("Hello") = bindVal("World")
where both declare and bindVal are functions that does something like this:
function declare(p){ return window[p] }
function bindVal(x){ return x }
The point here is that declare runs some o...
I'm growing tired of trying to make sense from his comments...
so in other words, there's no way to lift local variable of an inner function to the local scope of the outer function in such a setup: function f1(){ function f2(){ var x = "lift me" }; console.log(x) } — chibro23 mins ago