TinyMCE javascript errors - javascript

i Have downloaded TinyMCE and running examples. When i run any example and click on html button of TinyMCE GUI i am getting js errors
Permission denied for <file://> to get property Window.tinymce from <file://>.
and
this.params is undefined
Check these errors in Firefox while opening firebug.

Browsers can be overly strict when loading files directly from the file system. Try putting the examples on a web server and you'll probably find they work correctly.
Regards,
Adrian Sutton
http://tinymce.ephox.com

Related

warings:: DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://gighmmpiobklfepjocnamgkkbiglidom/browser-polyfill.js.map [duplicate]

I'm trying to display an image selected from the local machine and I need the location of that image for a JavaScript function. But I'm unable to get the location.
To get the image location, I tried using console.log, but nothing returns.
console.log(document.getElementById("uploadPreview"));
Here's the HTML code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
<div align="center" style="padding-top: 50px">
<img align="center" id="uploadPreview" style="width: 100px; height: 100px;" />
</div>
<div align="center" style="padding-left: 30px">
<input id="uploadImage" type="file" name="myPhoto" onchange="PreviewImage();" />
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function PreviewImage() {
var oFReader = new FileReader();
oFReader.readAsDataURL(document.getElementById("uploadImage").files[0]);
oFReader.onload = function (oFREvent) {
document.getElementById("uploadPreview").src = oFREvent.target.result;
console.log(document.getElementById("uploadPreview").src);
};
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Console Output:
Here's the warning:
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for
chrome-extension://alplpnakfeabeiebipdmaenpmbgknjce/include.preload.js.map:
HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
That's because Chrome added support for source maps.
Go to the developer tools (F12 in the browser), then select the three dots in the upper right corner, and go to Settings.
Then, look for Sources, and disable the options:
"Enable JavaScript source maps"
"Enable CSS source maps"
If you do that, that would get rid of the warnings. It has nothing to do with your code. Check the developer tools in other pages and you will see the same warning.
Go to Developer tools → Settings → Console → tick "Selected context only". The warnings will be hidden. You can see them again by unticking the same box.
The "Selected context only" means only the top, iframe, worker and extension contexts. Which is all that you'll need, the vast majority of the time.
Fixing "SourceMap" error messages in the Development Tools Console caused by Chrome extensions:
Examples caused by McAfee extensions:
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://klekeajafkkpokaofllcadenjdckhinm/sourceMap/content.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://fheoggkfdfchfphceeifdbepaooicaho/sourceMap/chrome/content.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://fheoggkfdfchfphceeifdbepaooicaho/sourceMap/chrome/iframe_handler.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
If you are developing, then you need "Enable JavaScript source maps" and "Enable CSS source maps" checked to be able see your source code in Chrome Developer Tools. Unchecking those takes away your ability to debug your source code. It is like turning off the fire alarm instead of putting out the fire. You do not want to do that.
Instead you want to find the extensions that are causing the messages and turn them off. Here is how you do that:
Go to the three dots in the upper right hand corner of Chrome.
Go to "More Tools" and click on "Extensions".
Do this for one extension at a time until no more "SourceMap" errors are in the console:
Turn off the extension by sliding the switch to the left.
Reload the page that you were using the Development Tools on.
Check if any of the "SourceMap" error messages disappeared.
If any did, then that extension was causing those messages.
Otherwise, that extension can be turned back on.
After determining which extensions caused the issue either:
If you need it, then contact the maker to have them fix the issue.
Otherwise, remove the extension.
I stumbled upon this Stack Overflow question after discovering loads of source map errors in the console for the Edge browser. (I think I had disabled the warnings in the Chrome browser long ago.)
For me it meant first realising what a source map is; please refer to Macro Mazzon's answer to understand this. Since it's a good idea, it was just a case of finding out how to turn them on.
It's as simple as adding this line in your webpack.config.js file -
module.exports = {
devtool: "source-map",
}
Now that Edge could detect a source map, the errors disappeared.
Apologies if this answer insults anybody's intelligence, but maybe somebody reading this will be as clueless about source maps as I was.
The include.prepload.js file will have a line like below, probably as the last line:
//# sourceMappingURL=include.prepload.js.map
Delete it and the error will go away.
For me, the problem was caused not by the application in development itself, but by the Chrome extension React Developer Tool. I solved it partially by right-clicking the extension icon in the toolbar, clicking "Manage extension" and then enabling "Allow access to files URLs." But this measure fixed just some of the alerts.
I found issues in the React repository that suggests the cause is a bug in their extension and is planned to be corrected soon - see issues 20091 and 20075.
You can confirm is extension-related by accessing your application in an anonymous tab without any extension enabled.
Chrome has changed the UI in 2022, so this is a new version of the most upvoted reply.
Open the dev tools (hit F12 or Option + Command + J)
Select the gear at the top. There are two gears in that area, so be sure to select the one at the top, top.
Locate the Sources section
Deselect "Enable JavaScript source maps"
Check to see if it worked!
Right: it has nothing to do with your code. I've found two valid solutions to this warning (not just disabling it). To better understand what a source map is, I suggest you check out this answer, where it explains how it's something that helps you debug:
The .map files are for JavaScript and CSS (and now TypeScript too) files that have been minified. They are called SourceMaps. When you minify a file, like the angular.js file, it takes thousands of lines of pretty code and turns it into only a few lines of ugly code. Hopefully, when you are shipping your code to production, you are using the minified code instead of the full, unminified version. When your app is in production, and has an error, the sourcemap will help take your ugly file, and will allow you to see the original version of the code. If you didn't have the sourcemap, then any error would seem cryptic at best.
First solution: apparently, Mr Heelis was the closest one: you should add the .map file and there are some tools that help you with this problem (Grunt, Gulp and Google closure for example, quoting the answer). Otherwise you can download the .map file from official sites like Bootstrap, jQuery, font-awesome, preload and so on... (maybe installing things like popper or swiper by the npm command in a random folder and copying just the .map file in your JavaScript/CSS destination folder)
Second solution (the one I used): add the source files using a CDN (content delivery network). (Here are all the advantages of using a CDN). Using content delivery network (CDN) you can simply add the CDN link, instead of the path to your folder. You can find CNDs on official websites (Bootstrap, jquery, popper, etc.) or you can easily search on some websites like Cloudflare, cdnjs, etc.
Extensions without enough permissions on Chrome can cause these warnings, for example for React developer tools. Check if the following procedure solves your problem:
Right click on the extension icon.
Or
Go to extensions.
Click the three-dot in the row of React developer tool.
Then choose "This can read and write site data".
You should see three options in the list. Pick one that is strict enough based on how much you trust the extension and also satisfies the extension's needs.
I appreciate this is part of your extensions, but I see this message in all sorts of places these days, and I hate it: how I fixed it (this fix seems to massively speed up the browser too) was by adding a dead file
physically create the file it wants it/where it wants it, as a blank file (for example, "popper.min.js.map")
put this in the blank file
{
"version": 1,
"mappings": "",
"sources": [],
"names": [],
"file": "popper.min.js"
}
make sure that "file": "*******" in the content of the blank file matches the name of your file ******.map (minus the word ".map")
(I suspect you could physically add this dead file method to the addon yourself.)
I do not think the warnings you have received are related. I had the same warnings which turned out to be the Chrome extension React Dev Tools. I removed the extension and the errors were gone.
You have just missing files.
Go to the website https://www.cdnpkg.com/.
Download what you need and copy it to the right folder.
For me, the warnings were caused by the Selenium IDE Chrome extension. These warnings appeared in the Console on every page load:
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/atoms.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/polyfills.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/escape.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/playback.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/record.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
Since Selenium IDE was already set to be able to read site data on all sites, I uninstalled it. (I read in another comment here that you might try enabling more permissions for an extension instead of removing it.) In my case, removing Selenium IDE (Chrome extension) got rid of the warnings.
It is also possible to add the file that is missing, aside with other .js libraries in the same folder (no need to reference the .map in the .html file, <script> tag).
I had the same error, when trying to code in Backbone.js.
The problematic file was backbone-min.js, and the line that created the error was sourceMappingURL=backbone-min.map.
After downloading the missing file (the link comes from here), the error disappeared.
I had the same problem. I tried to disable the extensions one by one to check it, and finally realized I had Adblock enabled, which was causing this issue. To remove that error I followed the step below,
Three dots (top right corner).
Click More tools --> extensions.
Disable the Adblock.
Reload the page.
And it should work now.
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://cfhdojbkjhnklbpkdaibdccddilifddb/browser-polyfill.js.map: System error: net::ERR_FILE_NOT_FOUND
Disable the Chrome extension "Adblock Plus - free ad blocker". https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/adblock-plus-free-ad-bloc/cfhdojbkjhnklbpkdaibdccddilifddb
Lately this error is caused by the extension.
Problems with Debugging and Sourcemaps in Web Browsers
Hope this clarifies the technicals behind the problem...knowing how things works helps some :)
This browser error means it has some compiled version of your JavaScript in a sourcemap intermediate file it or some 3rd party created that is now needed when debugging that same script in "devtools" in your web browser.
This can happen if your script fails (or in your case trying to get an image source hidden in the sourcemap code that created the script) but whose script error is tied to some JavaScript that got created from an original sourcemap file that now cannot be found to debug that same error. So it's an error about an error, a missing debugging file creating a new error. (crazy, huh?)
This error is likely coming from an extension in the web browser and is reporting it has generated a script error it has recorded in the console.log window of devtools (press F12 in the browser). The error is likely from the extension (not your code) saying it has some code that contains an address to a sourcemap file it cannot access, has a bad URI/URL address, is blocked, or that is missing.
The browser only needs this sourcemap file if a developer using devtools will need to debug the original script again.
A sourcemap, by the way, is a file that translates or transpiles code from one language to another language. Often this is a file that the browser uses to translate this source code into a child script like JavaScript/ECMAScript, or when it needs to do the opposite and recreate the source file from the child script. In most cases this file is not needed at all as a 3rd party software program has already compiled or transpiled the source code into the child script for the browser. For example, developers who like TypeScript use it to create JavaScript. This source code gets transpiled into JavaScript so the browser script engine can run it. The URI/URL to this sourcemap file is usually at the top of the javaScript or application compiled code file in a format like //#....
When this intermediary transpile file is missing or blocked for security reasons in a web browser, the application will usually not care unless it needs the source file for debugging the child script using this source file. In that case it will complain when it feels it needs this file and cannot find it, as it uses it to recreate the source file for the code running in the browser when debugging the script in order to allow a developer to debug the original source code. When it cannot find it, it means that any developer trying to debug it will not be able to do so, and is stuck with the compiled code only. So it is safe to turn off these errors in the various ways mentioned in this post. It should not affect your own scripts if it is connected to an extension. Even if it is related to your own scripts, it is still unlikely you need it unless you plan to run debugging from devtools.
In my case, it was JSON Viewer extension that was blocking the source map files from being loaded
In my case i made silly mistake by adding bootstrap.min.js instead of bootstrap.bundel.js :)
You need to open Chrome in developer mode: select More tools, then Extensions and select Developer mode

Chrome browser console warning [https://s3.amazonaws.com/onelogin-sourcemaps/extensions/chrome/production~] [duplicate]

I'm trying to display an image selected from the local machine and I need the location of that image for a JavaScript function. But I'm unable to get the location.
To get the image location, I tried using console.log, but nothing returns.
console.log(document.getElementById("uploadPreview"));
Here's the HTML code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title></title>
</head>
<body>
<div align="center" style="padding-top: 50px">
<img align="center" id="uploadPreview" style="width: 100px; height: 100px;" />
</div>
<div align="center" style="padding-left: 30px">
<input id="uploadImage" type="file" name="myPhoto" onchange="PreviewImage();" />
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function PreviewImage() {
var oFReader = new FileReader();
oFReader.readAsDataURL(document.getElementById("uploadImage").files[0]);
oFReader.onload = function (oFREvent) {
document.getElementById("uploadPreview").src = oFREvent.target.result;
console.log(document.getElementById("uploadPreview").src);
};
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
Console Output:
Here's the warning:
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for
chrome-extension://alplpnakfeabeiebipdmaenpmbgknjce/include.preload.js.map:
HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
That's because Chrome added support for source maps.
Go to the developer tools (F12 in the browser), then select the three dots in the upper right corner, and go to Settings.
Then, look for Sources, and disable the options:
"Enable JavaScript source maps"
"Enable CSS source maps"
If you do that, that would get rid of the warnings. It has nothing to do with your code. Check the developer tools in other pages and you will see the same warning.
Go to Developer tools → Settings → Console → tick "Selected context only". The warnings will be hidden. You can see them again by unticking the same box.
The "Selected context only" means only the top, iframe, worker and extension contexts. Which is all that you'll need, the vast majority of the time.
Fixing "SourceMap" error messages in the Development Tools Console caused by Chrome extensions:
Examples caused by McAfee extensions:
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://klekeajafkkpokaofllcadenjdckhinm/sourceMap/content.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://fheoggkfdfchfphceeifdbepaooicaho/sourceMap/chrome/content.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load SourceMap: Could not load content for chrome-extension://fheoggkfdfchfphceeifdbepaooicaho/sourceMap/chrome/iframe_handler.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
If you are developing, then you need "Enable JavaScript source maps" and "Enable CSS source maps" checked to be able see your source code in Chrome Developer Tools. Unchecking those takes away your ability to debug your source code. It is like turning off the fire alarm instead of putting out the fire. You do not want to do that.
Instead you want to find the extensions that are causing the messages and turn them off. Here is how you do that:
Go to the three dots in the upper right hand corner of Chrome.
Go to "More Tools" and click on "Extensions".
Do this for one extension at a time until no more "SourceMap" errors are in the console:
Turn off the extension by sliding the switch to the left.
Reload the page that you were using the Development Tools on.
Check if any of the "SourceMap" error messages disappeared.
If any did, then that extension was causing those messages.
Otherwise, that extension can be turned back on.
After determining which extensions caused the issue either:
If you need it, then contact the maker to have them fix the issue.
Otherwise, remove the extension.
I stumbled upon this Stack Overflow question after discovering loads of source map errors in the console for the Edge browser. (I think I had disabled the warnings in the Chrome browser long ago.)
For me it meant first realising what a source map is; please refer to Macro Mazzon's answer to understand this. Since it's a good idea, it was just a case of finding out how to turn them on.
It's as simple as adding this line in your webpack.config.js file -
module.exports = {
devtool: "source-map",
}
Now that Edge could detect a source map, the errors disappeared.
Apologies if this answer insults anybody's intelligence, but maybe somebody reading this will be as clueless about source maps as I was.
The include.prepload.js file will have a line like below, probably as the last line:
//# sourceMappingURL=include.prepload.js.map
Delete it and the error will go away.
For me, the problem was caused not by the application in development itself, but by the Chrome extension React Developer Tool. I solved it partially by right-clicking the extension icon in the toolbar, clicking "Manage extension" and then enabling "Allow access to files URLs." But this measure fixed just some of the alerts.
I found issues in the React repository that suggests the cause is a bug in their extension and is planned to be corrected soon - see issues 20091 and 20075.
You can confirm is extension-related by accessing your application in an anonymous tab without any extension enabled.
Chrome has changed the UI in 2022, so this is a new version of the most upvoted reply.
Open the dev tools (hit F12 or Option + Command + J)
Select the gear at the top. There are two gears in that area, so be sure to select the one at the top, top.
Locate the Sources section
Deselect "Enable JavaScript source maps"
Check to see if it worked!
Right: it has nothing to do with your code. I've found two valid solutions to this warning (not just disabling it). To better understand what a source map is, I suggest you check out this answer, where it explains how it's something that helps you debug:
The .map files are for JavaScript and CSS (and now TypeScript too) files that have been minified. They are called SourceMaps. When you minify a file, like the angular.js file, it takes thousands of lines of pretty code and turns it into only a few lines of ugly code. Hopefully, when you are shipping your code to production, you are using the minified code instead of the full, unminified version. When your app is in production, and has an error, the sourcemap will help take your ugly file, and will allow you to see the original version of the code. If you didn't have the sourcemap, then any error would seem cryptic at best.
First solution: apparently, Mr Heelis was the closest one: you should add the .map file and there are some tools that help you with this problem (Grunt, Gulp and Google closure for example, quoting the answer). Otherwise you can download the .map file from official sites like Bootstrap, jQuery, font-awesome, preload and so on... (maybe installing things like popper or swiper by the npm command in a random folder and copying just the .map file in your JavaScript/CSS destination folder)
Second solution (the one I used): add the source files using a CDN (content delivery network). (Here are all the advantages of using a CDN). Using content delivery network (CDN) you can simply add the CDN link, instead of the path to your folder. You can find CNDs on official websites (Bootstrap, jquery, popper, etc.) or you can easily search on some websites like Cloudflare, cdnjs, etc.
Extensions without enough permissions on Chrome can cause these warnings, for example for React developer tools. Check if the following procedure solves your problem:
Right click on the extension icon.
Or
Go to extensions.
Click the three-dot in the row of React developer tool.
Then choose "This can read and write site data".
You should see three options in the list. Pick one that is strict enough based on how much you trust the extension and also satisfies the extension's needs.
I appreciate this is part of your extensions, but I see this message in all sorts of places these days, and I hate it: how I fixed it (this fix seems to massively speed up the browser too) was by adding a dead file
physically create the file it wants it/where it wants it, as a blank file (for example, "popper.min.js.map")
put this in the blank file
{
"version": 1,
"mappings": "",
"sources": [],
"names": [],
"file": "popper.min.js"
}
make sure that "file": "*******" in the content of the blank file matches the name of your file ******.map (minus the word ".map")
(I suspect you could physically add this dead file method to the addon yourself.)
I do not think the warnings you have received are related. I had the same warnings which turned out to be the Chrome extension React Dev Tools. I removed the extension and the errors were gone.
You have just missing files.
Go to the website https://www.cdnpkg.com/.
Download what you need and copy it to the right folder.
For me, the warnings were caused by the Selenium IDE Chrome extension. These warnings appeared in the Console on every page load:
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/atoms.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/polyfills.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/escape.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/playback.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://mooikfkahbdckldjjndioackbalphokd/assets/record.js.map: HTTP error: status code 404, net::ERR_UNKNOWN_URL_SCHEME
Since Selenium IDE was already set to be able to read site data on all sites, I uninstalled it. (I read in another comment here that you might try enabling more permissions for an extension instead of removing it.) In my case, removing Selenium IDE (Chrome extension) got rid of the warnings.
It is also possible to add the file that is missing, aside with other .js libraries in the same folder (no need to reference the .map in the .html file, <script> tag).
I had the same error, when trying to code in Backbone.js.
The problematic file was backbone-min.js, and the line that created the error was sourceMappingURL=backbone-min.map.
After downloading the missing file (the link comes from here), the error disappeared.
I had the same problem. I tried to disable the extensions one by one to check it, and finally realized I had Adblock enabled, which was causing this issue. To remove that error I followed the step below,
Three dots (top right corner).
Click More tools --> extensions.
Disable the Adblock.
Reload the page.
And it should work now.
DevTools failed to load source map: Could not load content for chrome-extension://cfhdojbkjhnklbpkdaibdccddilifddb/browser-polyfill.js.map: System error: net::ERR_FILE_NOT_FOUND
Disable the Chrome extension "Adblock Plus - free ad blocker". https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/adblock-plus-free-ad-bloc/cfhdojbkjhnklbpkdaibdccddilifddb
Lately this error is caused by the extension.
Problems with Debugging and Sourcemaps in Web Browsers
Hope this clarifies the technicals behind the problem...knowing how things works helps some :)
This browser error means it has some compiled version of your JavaScript in a sourcemap intermediate file it or some 3rd party created that is now needed when debugging that same script in "devtools" in your web browser.
This can happen if your script fails (or in your case trying to get an image source hidden in the sourcemap code that created the script) but whose script error is tied to some JavaScript that got created from an original sourcemap file that now cannot be found to debug that same error. So it's an error about an error, a missing debugging file creating a new error. (crazy, huh?)
This error is likely coming from an extension in the web browser and is reporting it has generated a script error it has recorded in the console.log window of devtools (press F12 in the browser). The error is likely from the extension (not your code) saying it has some code that contains an address to a sourcemap file it cannot access, has a bad URI/URL address, is blocked, or that is missing.
The browser only needs this sourcemap file if a developer using devtools will need to debug the original script again.
A sourcemap, by the way, is a file that translates or transpiles code from one language to another language. Often this is a file that the browser uses to translate this source code into a child script like JavaScript/ECMAScript, or when it needs to do the opposite and recreate the source file from the child script. In most cases this file is not needed at all as a 3rd party software program has already compiled or transpiled the source code into the child script for the browser. For example, developers who like TypeScript use it to create JavaScript. This source code gets transpiled into JavaScript so the browser script engine can run it. The URI/URL to this sourcemap file is usually at the top of the javaScript or application compiled code file in a format like //#....
When this intermediary transpile file is missing or blocked for security reasons in a web browser, the application will usually not care unless it needs the source file for debugging the child script using this source file. In that case it will complain when it feels it needs this file and cannot find it, as it uses it to recreate the source file for the code running in the browser when debugging the script in order to allow a developer to debug the original source code. When it cannot find it, it means that any developer trying to debug it will not be able to do so, and is stuck with the compiled code only. So it is safe to turn off these errors in the various ways mentioned in this post. It should not affect your own scripts if it is connected to an extension. Even if it is related to your own scripts, it is still unlikely you need it unless you plan to run debugging from devtools.
In my case, it was JSON Viewer extension that was blocking the source map files from being loaded
In my case i made silly mistake by adding bootstrap.min.js instead of bootstrap.bundel.js :)
You need to open Chrome in developer mode: select More tools, then Extensions and select Developer mode

PDF.js not working when deploying to different Server in IE

I have a local IIS site where i developed some code with PDF.js. There it worked fine to load a specific PDF and read the text contents from it.
Then I copied everything to the a library in a SharePoint Server (thats the only difference, IIS vs SharePoint) and changed all references. The code does not throw any Errors, with debugging level info it just prints
Info: Cannot use postMessage Transfers
to the console. Adding a console.log line into the PDF.js catch block of the promise did not result in any new information. It doesn't even get to the first logging inside the then:
var pdfobj = PDFJS.getDocument(docPath);
pdfobj.then(function (pdf) {
console.log(pdf);
any ideas?
EDITS: Updated from PDF.JS 1.1 to 1.2
There are not many error logs in PDF.js. I accidently hardcoded a wrong URL where even the server is non existent... and no error log, not even the then(...).catch(...) is called?
It is working now in Firefox but not in IE and I cannot see any reason for this. The Info message about Cannot use postMessage Transfers is also only displayed in IE (using IE 11).
It does work now. I am not sure what I did to fix it, but I will update this answer when I know. I think it has something to do with the directory structure of the PDF.js files. Previously I just uploaded all JS files (there were no errors though).
Still there is no exception handling when the PDF does not exist.

Recover javascript logs and errors on Internet Explorer without F12 tool

The main idea is to run a random page on Internet Explorer and get javascript errors and logs.
Is there a way to recover javascript console logs and execution error
from a random web page without accessing the F12 tool on Internet
Explorer?
I found that with Chrome based browser, you can get it on your AppData file log by adding --enable-logging --v=1 args when launching.
Any solution with any language are welcome.
Thank you for your answer.
NOTE :
random page on Internet Explorer means that I do not have the access on the source code.
Basic solution to this would be:
1. Use Exception Handling to catch the errors.
2. Log errors in a Global Array
3. Log the errors in a file using Blob and URL.createObjectURL. All recent browsers support this.
Have you considered using a Bookmarklet that:
Overrides window.console.log and window.console.error (to intercept messages)
Logs incoming messages somewhere using createObjectURL?
Or you could use something like firebuglite and auto-enable it like this:
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://getfirebug.com/firebug-lite.js">
{
overrideConsole: false,
startInNewWindow: true,
startOpened: true,
enableTrace: true
}
</script>
More instructions are here: http://getfirebug.com/firebuglite
If the F12 tool is not of your interest, then what about the Event Viewer? Open Event Viewer from Control Panel -> System and Security -> Administrative Tools -> Event Viewer.‌ Then select the log Applications and Services Logs\Internet Explorer.
By default no events are being logged for Internet Explorer, to enable them create a new DWORD registry value named Feature_Enable_Compat_Logging under the following registry key:
HKCU\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Internet Explorer\Main \FeatureControl
and set the registry value to 1.
Check the logs you get to see if it's what you're looking for.
One idea would be to write a browser extension which listens for window.onerror and writes to a file. Definitely not as elegant as the Chrome solution, but it would work fairly well.
Using local proxy might be a good one-time solution.
Charles web debugging proxy app has nice UI and it allows to replace any response with local resource.
So basically you'll need:
Download one any of the js files used on target page
add any code you wish to saved version
set up Charles to serve you your local version instead of remote one
You might try Fiddler. It's got its own logging and has amazing inspection power. It won't capture IE specific errors, since it's at a different layer, but it will definitely get you any code that's coming over the wire.

(NS_ERROR_DOCUMENT_NOT_CACHED) through firefox same code works for safari

I am getting (NS_ERROR_DOCUMENT_NOT_CACHED) error when I try to access the Javascript code through firefox.I get this error in the contents tab of HTTPFOX.
I googled and set the parameters of browser in config file as specified in this site but it still doesn't work.
http://code.google.com/p/httpfox/issues/detail?id=20
Can somebody suggest whats going wrong since the same code works fine for safari browser..
If anyone is interested in a solution to this, I believe it's to do with the plugin noscript. Disabling it fixed this, but I have yet to work out what part of noscript was causing the issue. Will update if I find out.
Edit:My issues was with a twitter auth callback. In the Advanced settings of noscript under ABE, in the SYSTEM ruleset, on the line "Accept from LOCAL" I added "*.twitter.com". This allowed callback requests from *twitter.com to return to a local address.
On my macbook I had to uninstall firefox completely to correctly get the content of an ajax response with httpfox. This also implies to remove the firefox profile bij removing this Firefox folder (I could only find it via the terminal and not via Finder):
/Users/<YOURUSER>/Library/Application Support/Firefox
Then install firefox again and install the httpfox add-on.
I tried many cache settings also by entering about:config in the firefox URL however without succes. Be aware that removing the profile settings like I describe will also remove all your personal firefox customization. It concerned firefox 18.0.2 and httpfox 0.8.11.
We used to get the same error when our JavaScript made an XMLHTTPRequest to the server. On the server side, we had java, and the java response, the content type was not explicitly set to "text/html". When that was done
resp.setContentType("text/html");
the error went away.

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