codemirror.setOption('mode',val) isnt working - javascript

I am trying to make a text editor with firepad and codemirror, everything works perfectly on page loading, but when I try to change the mode on button click, the function gets called but
codemirror.setOption('mode',val);//should change mode
CodeMirror.autoLoadMode(editor, mode);//should reload codemirror
doesn't seem to work.
I am calling the following code on the onload event of the body (works perfectly):
var firepadRef = getExampleRef();
codeMirror = CodeMirror(document.getElementById('firepad-container'), {
lineNumbers: true,
mode: 'javascript'
});
var firepad = Firepad.fromCodeMirror(firepadRef, codeMirror, {
defaultText: '// Welcome'
});
function getExampleRef() {
var ref = database.ref('Firepad');
var hash = window.location.hash.replace(/#/g, '');
if (hash) {
ref = ref.child(hash);
} else {
ref = ref.push(); // generate unique location.
window.location = window.location + '#' + ref.key;
}
if (typeof console !== 'undefined') {
console.log('Firebase data: ', ref.toString());
}
return ref;
}
on button click event I am calling the following code (problem here!):
console.log('Button Clicked');
CodeMirror.modeURL = "https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/codemirror/5.40.0/mode/%N/%N.js";
var editor = CodeMirror(document.getElementById('firepad-container'), {
lineNumbers: true
});
console.log("started changing");
var val ="xml",mode,spec;
mode=spec=val;
editor.setOption("mode", spec);//isn't changing mode!!
CodeMirror.autoLoadMode(editor, mode);//isn't reloading editor!!
This is just a miniaturized sample of the code (the relevant one).
I am using as a resources for the mode reloading and for firebase with codemirror the following:
https://firepad.io/docs/
https://codemirror.net/demo/loadmode.html#
Scripts and stylesheets being called are the following (the relevant ones only):
<link rel="stylesheet" href="codemirror-dark.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdn.firebase.com/libs/firepad/1.4.0/firepad.css">
<script src="https://www.gstatic.com/firebasejs/5.0.4/firebase-app.js"></script>
<script src="https://www.gstatic.com/firebasejs/5.2.0/firebase-database.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/codemirror/5.40.0/codemirror.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/codemirror/5.40.0/addon/mode/loadmode.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.firebase.com/libs/firepad/1.4.0/firepad.min.js"></script>
I am using Firefox and there is no errors on the developper console(it is just neither changing nor reloading).
So what am I missing ??
Thanks in advance.

codemirror doesn't accept "xml" as a mode type. What you're looking for is "application/xml" or "text/xml".
according to the documentation on CodeMirrors site, you need to call codemirror.findModeByExtension on your filename string's extension to get an info object. You call CM_OBJ.setOption("mode",info.mime) first, then CodeMirror.autoLoadMode(editor,info.mode) if you want to use simpler and less specific typing strings.
this works for me on firefox and chrome from the inspect page.
source: https://codemirror.net/demo/loadmode.html

Related

Client Side Taxonomy Picker For SharePoint

On Premise SharePoint 2013, Implementing a Client Side Taxonomy Picker For SharePoint using below blogs:
https://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/93cb27/client-side-taxonomy-picker-for-sharepoint-app/
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/richard_dizeregas_blog/2014/03/13/taxonomy-picker-in-sharepoint-provider-hosted-app/
Added the code using a Script Editor, and the control shows only on Edit Mode - when I save the page, the control disappears and throws the following error "b.get_path is not a function"
Tried many combinations however it looks like a bug as the same code works fine in SharePoint Online.
<link href="https://server/sites/TeamSite/SiteAssets/CodeLibrary/styles/taxonomypickercontrol.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<script type="text/ecmascript" src="https://server/sites/TeamSite/SiteAssets/CodeLibrary/jquery-1.9.1.js"></script>
<script type="text/ecmascript" src="https://server/sites/TeamSite/SiteAssets/CodeLibrary/taxonomypickercontrol.js"></script>
<script type = "text/javascript" src = "https://server/sites/TeamSite/SiteAssets/CodeLibrary/taxonomypickercontrol_resources.en.js"></script>
<script type = "text/javascript" src = "https://server/sites/TeamSite/_layouts/15/sp.core.js" ></script>
<script type = "text/javascript" src = "https://server/sites/TeamSite/_layouts/15/sp.runtime.js" ></script>
<script type = "text/javascript" src = "https://server/sites/TeamSite/_layouts/15/sp.taxonomy.js" ></script>
<script type = "text/javascript">
if (myStronglyTypedObj === undefined) {
var myStronglyTypedObj = {};
}
myStronglyTypedObj = {
// Object Globals
"g": {},
// Pre-initialization functions ensure scripts SharePoint dependencies are loaded
"preinit": function() {
// Load necessary libraries
SP.SOD.executeFunc('sp.js', 'SP.ClientContext', function() {
// Register what you need from SharePoint (in this case the sp.runtime)
SP.SOD.registerSod('sp.runtime.js', SP.Utilities.Utility.getLayoutsPageUrl('sp.runtime.js'));
// Register what you need from SharePoint (in this case the term store)
SP.SOD.registerSod('sp.taxonomy.js', SP.Utilities.Utility.getLayoutsPageUrl('sp.taxonomy.js'));
// Load the registered items
SP.SOD.executeFunc('sp.taxonomy.js', 'SP.Taxonomy.TaxonomySession', myStronglyTypedObj.init());
});
},
// The main Initialization function
"init": function() {
/* Check if SP.Taxonomy actually exists yet
* PLEASE NOTE that it's common that these objects aren't available, even if you've properly loaded them in the "preinit" function.
* This bit of code checks if the object is available, and if it's not, waits for 200ms and then tries again until this object is loaded
*/
if (SP.Taxonomy) {
console.log("SP.Taxonomy ready... continuing scripts...");
myStronglyTypedObj.therest();
} else {
console.log("SP.Taxonomy not ready... set timeout and try again after 200ms");
setTimeout(myStronglyTypedObj.init, 200);
}
},
"therest": function() {
// Continue with your code here...
try {
var context = new SP.ClientContext()
$('#taxPickerKeywords').taxpicker({ isMulti: true, allowFillIn: true, termSetId: "63858201-dd9b-46b1-b1bb-b6a054fa7cb7" }, context);
}
catch(err) {
alert(err.message);
}
}
}
$(document).ready(function(){
myStronglyTypedObj.preinit();
});
</script>
<div>
<input type="hidden" id="taxPickerKeywords" />
</div>
As stated it works in SharePoint Online, though I checked the version of our Farm and it seems that our dev box was not up to date.
After patching, it worked fine.
Thanks for your valuable help.

How to disable browser back action [duplicate]

I am doing an online quiz application in PHP. I want to restrict the user from going back in an exam.
I have tried the following script, but it stops my timer.
What should I do?
The timer is stored in file cdtimer.js.
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack()
{
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
<body onLoad="noBack();" onpageshow="if (event.persisted) noBack();" onUnload="">
I have the exam timer which takes a duration for the exam from a MySQL value. The timer starts accordingly, but it stops when I put the code in for disabling the back button. What is my problem?
There are numerous reasons why disabling the back button will not really work. Your best bet is to warn the user:
window.onbeforeunload = function() { return "Your work will be lost."; };
This page does list a number of ways you could try to disable the back button, but none are guaranteed:
http://www.irt.org/script/311.htm
It is generally a bad idea overriding the default behavior of the web browser. A client-side script does not have the sufficient privilege to do this for security reasons.
There are a few similar questions asked as well,
How can I prevent the backspace key from navigating back?
How can I prevent the browser's default history back action for the backspace button with JavaScript?
You can-not actually disable the browser back button. However, you can do magic using your logic to prevent the user from navigating back which will create an impression like it is disabled. Here is how - check out the following snippet.
(function (global) {
if(typeof (global) === "undefined") {
throw new Error("window is undefined");
}
var _hash = "!";
var noBackPlease = function () {
global.location.href += "#";
// Making sure we have the fruit available for juice (^__^)
global.setTimeout(function () {
global.location.href += "!";
}, 50);
};
global.onhashchange = function () {
if (global.location.hash !== _hash) {
global.location.hash = _hash;
}
};
global.onload = function () {
noBackPlease();
// Disables backspace on page except on input fields and textarea..
document.body.onkeydown = function (e) {
var elm = e.target.nodeName.toLowerCase();
if (e.which === 8 && (elm !== 'input' && elm !== 'textarea')) {
e.preventDefault();
}
// Stopping the event bubbling up the DOM tree...
e.stopPropagation();
};
}
})(window);
This is in pure JavaScript, so it would work in most of the browsers. It would also disable the backspace key, but that key will work normally inside input fields and textarea.
Recommended Setup:
Place this snippet in a separate script and include it on a page where you want this behavior. In the current setup it will execute the onload event of the DOM which is the ideal entry point for this code.
Working DEMO!
It was tested and verified in the following browsers,
Chrome.
Firefox.
Internet Explorer (8-11) and Edge.
Safari.
I came across this, needing a solution which worked correctly and "nicely" on a variety of browsers, including Mobile Safari (iOS 9 at time of posting). None of the solutions were quite right. I offer the following (tested on Internet Explorer 11, Firefox, Chrome, and Safari):
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function (event)
{
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
});
Note the following:
history.forward() (my old solution) does not work on Mobile Safari --- it seems to do nothing (i.e., the user can still go back). history.pushState() does work on all of them.
the third argument to history.pushState() is a url. Solutions which pass a string like 'no-back-button' or 'pagename' seem to work OK, until you then try a Refresh/Reload on the page, at which point a "Page not found" error is generated when the browser tries to locate a page with that as its URL. (The browser is also likely to include that string in the address bar when on the page, which is ugly.) location.href should be used for the URL.
the second argument to history.pushState() is a title. Looking around the web most places say it is "not used", and all the solutions here pass null for that. However, in Mobile Safari at least, that puts the page's URL into the history dropdown the user can access. But when it adds an entry for a page visit normally, it puts in its title, which is preferable. So passing document.title for that results in the same behaviour.
<script>
window.location.hash = "no-back-button";
// Again because Google Chrome doesn't insert
// the first hash into the history
window.location.hash = "Again-No-back-button";
window.onhashchange = function(){
window.location.hash = "no-back-button";
}
</script>
For restricting the browser back event:
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
window.onpopstate = function () {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
};
This code will disable the back button for modern browsers which support the HTML5 History API. Under normal circumstances, pushing the back button goes back one step, to the previous page. If you use history.pushState(), you start adding extra sub-steps to the current page. The way it works is, if you were to use history.pushState() three times, then start pushing the back button, the first three times it would navigate back in these sub-steps, and then the fourth time it would go back to the previous page.
If you combine this behaviour with an event listener on the popstate event, you can essentially set up an infinite loop of sub-states. So, you load the page, push a sub-state, then hit the back button, which pops a sub-state and also pushes another one, so if you push the back button again it will never run out of sub-states to push. If you feel that it's necessary to disable the back button, this will get you there.
history.pushState(null, null, 'no-back-button');
window.addEventListener('popstate', function(event) {
history.pushState(null, null, 'no-back-button');
});
How to block coming backwards functionality:
history.pushState(null, null, location.href);
window.onpopstate = function () {
history.go(1);
};
None of the most-upvoted answers worked for me in Chrome 79. It looks like Chrome changed its behavior with respect to the Back button after version 75. See here:
https://support.google.com/chrome/thread/8721521?hl=en
However, in that Google thread, the answer provided by Azrulmukmin Azmi at the very end did work. This is his solution.
<script>
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
history.back();
history.forward();
window.onpopstate = function () {
history.go(1);
};
</script>
The problem with Chrome is that it doesn't trigger onpopstate event
unless you make browser action ( i.e. call history.back). That's why
I've added those to script.
I don't entirely understand what he wrote, but apparently an additional history.back() / history.forward() is now required for blocking Back in Chrome 75+.
React
For modal component in React project, the open or close of the modal, controlling browser back is a necessary action.
The stopBrowserBack: the stop of the browser back button functionality, also get a callback function. This callback function is what you want to do:
const stopBrowserBack = callback => {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
window.onpopstate = () => {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
callback();
};
};
The startBrowserBack: the revival of the browser back button functionality:
const startBrowserBack = () => {
window.onpopstate = undefined;
window.history.back();
};
The usage in your project:
handleOpenModal = () =>
this.setState(
{ modalOpen: true },
() => stopBrowserBack(this.handleCloseModal)
);
handleCloseModal = () =>
this.setState(
{ modalOpen: false },
startBrowserBack
);
This is the way I could it accomplish it.
Weirdly, changing window.location didn't work out fine in Google Chrome and Safari.
It happens that location.hash doesn't create an entry in the history for Chrome and Safari. So you will have to use the pushstate.
This is working for me in all browsers.
history.pushState({ page: 1 }, "title 1", "#nbb");
window.onhashchange = function (event) {
window.location.hash = "nbb";
};
history.pushState(null, null, document.URL);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, document.URL);
});
This JavaScript code does not allow any user to go back (works in Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Edge).
This article on jordanhollinger.com is the best option I feel. Similar to Razor's answer but a bit clearer. Code below; full credits to Jordan Hollinger:
Page before:
<a href="/page-of-no-return.htm#no-back>You can't go back from the next page</a>
Page of no return's JavaScript:
// It works without the History API, but will clutter up the history
var history_api = typeof history.pushState !== 'undefined'
// The previous page asks that it not be returned to
if ( location.hash == '#no-back' ) {
// Push "#no-back" onto the history, making it the most recent "page"
if ( history_api ) history.pushState(null, '', '#stay')
else location.hash = '#stay'
// When the back button is pressed, it will harmlessly change the url
// hash from "#stay" to "#no-back", which triggers this function
window.onhashchange = function() {
// User tried to go back; warn user, rinse and repeat
if ( location.hash == '#no-back' ) {
alert("You shall not pass!")
if ( history_api ) history.pushState(null, '', '#stay')
else location.hash = '#stay'
}
}
}
<html>
<head>
<title>Disable Back Button in Browser - Online Demo</title>
<style type="text/css">
body, input {
font-family: Calibri, Arial;
}
</style>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="noBack();" onpageshow="if (event.persisted) noBack();" onunload="">
<H2>Demo</H2>
<p>This page contains the code to avoid Back button.</p>
<p>Click here to Goto NoBack Page</p>
</body>
</html>
This code was tested with the latest Chrome and Firefox browsers.
<script type="text/javascript">
history.pushState(null, null, location.href);
history.back();
history.forward();
window.onpopstate = function () { history.go(1); };
</script>
Try it with ease:
history.pushState(null, null, document.title);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, document.title);
});
You can just put a small script and then check. It won't allow you to visit previous page.
This is done in JavaScript.
<script type="text/javascript">
function preventbackbutton() { window.history.forward(); }
setTimeout("preventbackbutton()", 0);
window.onunload = function () { null };
</script>
The window.onunload function fires when you try to visit back or previous page through browser.
Very simple and clean function to break the back arrow without interfering with the page afterward.
Benefits:
Loads instantaneously and restores original hash, so the user isn't distracted by URL visibly changing.
The user can still exit by pressing back 10 times (that's a good thing), but not accidentally
No user interference like other solutions using onbeforeunload
It only runs once and doesn't interfere with further hash manipulations in case you use that to track state
Restores original hash, so almost invisible.
Uses setInterval, so it doesn't break slow browsers and always works.
Pure JavaScript, does not require HTML5 history, works everywhere.
Unobtrusive, simple, and plays well with other code.
Does not use unbeforeunload which interrupts user with modal dialog.
It just works without fuss.
Note: some of the other solutions use onbeforeunload. Please do not use onbeforeunload for this purpose, which pops up a dialog whenever users try to close the window, hit backarrow, etc. Modals like onbeforeunload are usually only appropriate in rare circumstances, such as when they've actually made changes on screen and haven't saved them, not for this purpose.
How It Works
Executes on page load
Saves your original hash (if one is in the URL).
Sequentially appends #/noop/{1..10} to the hash
Restores the original hash
That's it. No further messing around, no background event monitoring, nothing else.
Use It In One Second
To deploy, just add this anywhere on your page or in your JavaScript code:
<script>
/* Break back button */
window.onload = function(){
var i = 0;
var previous_hash = window.location.hash;
var x = setInterval(function(){
i++;
window.location.hash = "/noop/" + i;
if (i==10){
clearInterval(x);
window.location.hash = previous_hash;
}
}, 10);
}
</script>
In a modern browser this seems to work:
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API
let popHandler = () => {
if (confirm('Go back?')) {
window.history.back()
} else {
window.history.forward()
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('popstate', popHandler, {once: true})
}, 50) // delay needed since the above is an async operation for some reason
}
}
window.addEventListener('popstate', popHandler, {once: true})
window.history.pushState(null,null,null)
I had this problem with React (class component).
And I solved it easily:
componentDidMount() {
window.addEventListener("popstate", e => {
this.props.history.goForward();
}
}
I've used HashRouter from react-router-dom.
You simply cannot and should not do this. However, this might be helpful:
<script type = "text/javascript" >
history.pushState(null, null, 'pagename');
window.addEventListener('popstate', function(event) {
history.pushState(null, null, 'pagename');
});
</script>
This works in my Google Chrome and Firefox.
This seems to have worked for us in disabling the back button on the browser, as well as the backspace button taking you back.
history.pushState(null, null, $(location).attr('href'));
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, $(location).attr('href'));
});
Just run code snippet right away and try going back
history.pushState(null, null, window.location.href);
history.back();
window.onpopstate = () => history.forward();
<script src="~/main.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
Try this to prevent the backspace button in Internet Explorer which by default acts as "Back":
<script language="JavaScript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$(document).unbind('keydown').bind('keydown', function (event) {
var doPrevent = false;
if (event.keyCode === 8 ) {
var d = event.srcElement || event.target;
if ((d.tagName.toUpperCase() === 'INPUT' &&
(
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'TEXT' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'PASSWORD' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'FILE' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'EMAIL' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'SEARCH' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'DATE' )
) ||
d.tagName.toUpperCase() === 'TEXTAREA') {
doPrevent = d.readOnly || d.disabled;
}
else {
doPrevent = true;
}
}
if (doPrevent) {
event.preventDefault();
}
try {
document.addEventListener('keydown', function (e) {
if ((e.keyCode === 13)) {
//alert('Enter keydown');
e.stopPropagation();
e.preventDefault();
}
}, true);
}
catch (err) {
}
});
});
</script>
It's basically assigning the window's "onbeforeunload" event along with the ongoing document 'mouseenter' / 'mouseleave' events so the alert only triggers when clicks are outside the document scope (which then could be either the back or forward button of the browser)
$(document).on('mouseenter', function(e) {
window.onbeforeunload = null;
}
);
$(document).on('mouseleave', function(e) {
window.onbeforeunload = function() { return "You work will be lost."; };
}
);
Just set location.hash="Something". On pressing the back button, the hash will get removed from the URL, but the page won't go back.
This method is good for preventing going back accidentally, but for security purposes you should design your backend for preventing reanswering.
Some of the solutions here will not prevent a back event from occurring - they let a back event happen (and data held about the page in the browsers memory is lost) and then they play a forward event to try and hide the fact that a back event just happened. Which is unsuccessful if the page held transient state.
I wrote this solution for React (when react router is not being used), which is based on vrfvr's answer.
It will truly stop the back button from doing anything unless the user confirms a popup:
const onHashChange = useCallback(() => {
const confirm = window.confirm(
'Warning - going back will cause you to loose unsaved data. Really go back?',
);
window.removeEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
if (confirm) {
setTimeout(() => {
window.history.go(-1);
}, 1);
} else {
window.location.hash = 'no-back';
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
}, 1);
}
}, []);
useEffect(() => {
window.location.hash = 'no-back';
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
}, 1);
return () => {
window.removeEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
};
}, []);
I create one HTML page (index.html). I also create a one (mechanism.js) inside a script folder / directory. Then, I lay all my content inside of (index.html) using form, table, span, and div tags as needed. Now, here's the trick that will make back / forward do nothing!
First, the fact that you have only one page! Second, the use of JavaScript with span / div tags to hide and display content on the same page when needed via regular links!
Inside 'index.html':
<td width="89px" align="right" valign="top" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<small>
<b>
IN
</b>
</small>
[ <span id="inCountSPN">0</span> ]
</td>
Inside 'mechanism.js':
function DisplayInTrafficTable()
{
var itmsCNT = 0;
var dsplyIn = "";
for (i=0; i<inTraffic.length; i++)
{
dsplyIn += "<tr><td width='11'></td><td align='right'>" + (++itmsCNT) + "</td><td width='11'></td><td><b>" + inTraffic[i] + "</b></td><td width='11'></td><td>" + entryTimeArray[i] + "</td><td width='11'></td><td>" + entryDateArray[i] + "</td><td width='11'></td></tr>";
}
document.getElementById('inOutSPN').innerHTML =
"" +
"<table border='0' style='background:#fff;'><tr><th colspan='21' style='background:#feb;padding:11px;'><h3 style='margin-bottom:-1px;'>INCOMING TRAFFIC REPORT</h3>" +
DateStamp() +
" - <small><a href='#' style='letter-spacing:1px;' onclick='OpenPrintableIn();'>PRINT</a></small></th></tr><tr style='background:#eee;'><td></td><td><b>###</b></td><td></td><td><b>ID #</b></td><td></td><td width='79'><b>TYPE</b></td><td></td><td><b>FIRST</b></td><td></td><td><b>LAST</b></td><td></td><td><b>PLATE #</b></td><td></td><td><b>COMPANY</b></td><td></td><td><b>TIME</b></td><td></td><td><b>DATE</b></td><td></td><td><b>IN / OUT</b></td><td></td></tr>" +
dsplyIn.toUpperCase() +
"</table>" +
"";
return document.getElementById('inOutSPN').innerHTML;
}
It looks hairy, but note the function names and calls, embedded HTML, and the span tag id calls. This was to show how you can inject different HTML into same span tag on same page! How can Back/Forward affect this design? It cannot, because you are hiding objects and replacing others all on the same page!
How can we hide and display? Here goes:
Inside functions in ' mechanism.js ' as needed, use:
document.getElementById('textOverPic').style.display = "none"; //hide
document.getElementById('textOverPic').style.display = ""; //display
Inside ' index.html ' call functions through links:
<img src="images/someimage.jpg" alt="" />
<span class="textOverPic" id="textOverPic"></span>
and
Introduction
In my case this was a shopping order. So I disabled the button. When the user clicked back, the button was disabled still. When they clicked back one more time, and then clicked a page button to go forward. I knew their order was submitted and skipped to another page.
In the case when the page actually refreshed which would make the button (theoretically), available; I was then able to react in the page load that the order was already submitted and redirected then too.
This code is full javascript.
Put this on your home page or whatever you need when someon goes back it brings them to the page they were previously on.
<script type="text/javascript">
function preventBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
setTimeout("preventBack()", 0);
window.onunload = function () { null };
</script>

How can I inject JS and collect alert message from website?

I am trying to collect alert from website by using overwrite method. I searched on google and found wappalyzer, a Chrome/Firefox extension to detect software on website. It injects a script inject.js when page load and collect information. My method is similar. I make a local website and test it. When I inject overwrite_alert.js manually then it works.
But I want to do it dynamically and apply to other website. So I use headless browser like PhantomJS. The following code which I tried in PhantomJS but it does not work.
I am trying to inject a JavaScript on phantom JS. Like this code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Test alert</title>
<!-- !!! Inject here !!! <script src="overwrite_alert.js"></script> -->
<script type="text/javascript" src="other_script.js"> </script>
<script type="text/javascript">
alert("Alert content");
</script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>website content</h1>
</body>
</html>
overwrite_alert.js file from this question:
(function() {
var _alert = window.alert; // <-- Reference
window.alert = function(str) {
// do something additional
if(console) console.log(str);
//return _alert.apply(this, arguments); // <-- The universal method
_alert(str); // Suits for this case
};
})();
I tried with onLoadStarted event and My PhantomJS code:
var webPage = require('webpage');
var page = webPage.create();
var url = "https://localhost:5000/alert.html";
page.onConsoleMessage = function(msg, lineNum, sourceId) {
console.log('CONSOLE> ' + msg);
};
page.onLoadStarted = function() {
if (page.injectJs('do.js')) {
var title = page.evaluate(function() {
// returnTitle is a function loaded from our do.js file - see below
console.log("evaluate completed");
});
console.log(title);
}
}
page.open(url, function(status) {
if (status === "success") {
if (page.injectJs('do.js')) {
var title = page.evaluate(function() {
// returnTitle is a function loaded from our do.js file - see below
console.log("evaluate completed");
});
console.log(title);
phantom.exit();
}
page.render("onOpen.png");
}
});
Result:
$ phantomjs test_inject.js
CONSOLE> from onLoadStarted completed
null
CONSOLE> from page.open
null
Since the page.open callback is called after a page is loaded, it would be simply to late to change the implementation of window.alert. You would need to use earlier events such as page.onInitialized, page.onLoadStarted, etc.
Since you're interested in alerts, you don't need to do that at all, because PhantomJS provides an event for that: page.onAlert

window.location.replace wtih Phonegap

I try setup a JS function to auto load a index page in a different language, regardig the setting device o my reader.
I try with this...but don't work :
<script src="cordova-2.2.0.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8">
function checkLanguage() {
if (navigator.globalization.getPreferredLanguage()='en_EN')
{
window.location.replace("index_en.html");
}
else if (navigator.globalization.getPreferredLanguage()='fr_FR')
{
window.location.replace("index_fr.html");
}
else
{
window.location.replace("index_other.html");
}
}
</script>
Is this method can be use, or do I have to consider other option to deal with my multilanguage app ?
Thanks in advance for any help.
You need to use the callback of getPreferredLanguage:
var handleDeviceReady = function (event)
{
navigator.globalization.getPreferredLanguage(
function (language)
{
console.log("language: " + language.value + '\n');
redirectToLocaleSpecificLogin(language.value);
},
function ()
{
console.log("Error getting language\n");
redirectToLocaleSpecificLogin("en");
}
);
};
document.addEventListener("deviceready", handleDeviceReady, false);
Then inside of your callback (redirectToLocaleSpecificLogin in this case), you can do your redirects.
most of the browsers use language property, IE uses userLanguage
var lang = window.navigator.userLanguage || window.navigator.language;
this should work in IE, SAFARI, CHROME and FF
Edit:
JavaScript for detecting browser language preference this link has more detailed discussion on this topic

CKeditor select the upload tab in image dialog by default

Is there a way to modify the image dialog of CKEditor to display the upload tab by default instead of the Image info tab?
I've tried doing this by adding a line of code to the onload of the dialog:
onLoad: function() {
this.getDialog().selectPage('Upload');
}
this seems to work fine, I'm able to upload the image to the server, but as soon as I hit the ok button I get a permission denied error.
I've also tried it the way CKSource describes but this gives me an exception since it overrides the onShow method.
Fixed this by adding this.selectPage('Upload'); to the end of the onShow function of the image plugin
As you noticed, the example in the docs is broken because the Image plugin already has an onShow() method.
The trick is to chain the methods like this:
CKEDITOR.on('dialogDefinition', function(e) {
if (e.data.name == 'image') {
var dialog = e.data.definition;
oldOnShow = dialog.onShow;
dialog.onShow = function() {
oldOnShow.apply(this, arguments);
this.selectPage('Upload');
};
}
});
This doc explains how to set a dialog tab by default in your ckeditor config:
http://docs.cksource.com/CKEditor_3.x/Howto/Default_Dialog_Tab
Can user following script.
<script type="text/javascript">
CKEDITOR.on('dialogDefinition', function(ev) {
var dialogName = ev.data.name;
var dialogDefinition = ev.data.definition;
if (dialogName == 'image') {
dialogDefinition.onShow = function () {
// This code will open the Upload tab.
this.selectPage('Upload');
};
}
});
</script>

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