Tag Archives: extension

For my next trick…

It didn’t take long for another Firefox extension idea to come along.

Prof. Greg Wilson recently sent me an email, saying the following:

I’d like a Firefox plugin that does ‘wc’, i.e., counts characters, words, and lines on the current web page, and displays the results in the status bar.

Cool, I thought.  No problem.  That doesn’t sound too hard.

But I’ve been mulling and chewing this around in my head, and it’s actually a harder problem than it first sounds.

wc“, short for word-count, is a small, simple, yet extraordinarily useful Unix utility that reads in some file, and spits out the number of words, characters, and lines for that file.

So what’s the problem?  What’s so hard about coding something like this for web pages?

Well, for starters, users of this proposed extension are probably only interested in the visible, readable text on a web page.  That means filtering out all of the HTML tags, all of the JavaScript, etc.  Also, many modern web pages make use of IFRAME’s, hidden DIV’s, etc.  Not to mention, most browsers do automatic word-wrapping, which could throw off the “line” counting.  How should I treat these cases?

I certainly don’t think this is an impossible task, just harder than it first sounded.

So here’s what I’m going to do:

First, I’m going to take care of the base case.  I’m going to take care of the case where users are viewing a page of all text, with almost zero HTML.

My test page will be an “etext” copy of Shakespeare’s Hamlet (first folio), hosted by Project Gutenberg.

According to OpenOffice Writer, this text has 32230 words, 173543 characters, and 4257 lines.

So that’s my target.  I’m going to create an extension that sits as a button on the status bar.  When the button is clicked, an alert will pop up with the statistics.  If all goes well, the numbers will match.

Sure, it’s not the most elegant interface, but it’ll do for now.

I’ll post more as it comes.

Overriding Firefox’s Window.Alert – Part 4

So, I think I’m more or less done the extension.

Someday, when I’ve got more extension development experience under my belt, I’ll probably come back to this and fix it up.  Until then, this will have to do.

Click here to download.

If you’re interested in looking at the source, just change the file extension from “.xpi” to “.zip”, and decompress.  It’s all there.

There’s no license on this thing, no GPL, MIT, nothing.  Use it however you want.  If you find it useful though, I’d love to hear from you – send me email, post a comment, Facebook, Twitter, whichever.

Whew.  I think I’m going to reward myself with some orange sherbet.  Om nom nom…

Here’s a really annoying website to test the extension with.  I really don’t recommend that you visit it without my extension installed.

The window hops around a bit, so just double click on the location bar, and type in something like “http://www.google.ca”.  This will start up the flood of alerts, and (hopefully) you’ll be able to suppress them after the first one hits.

Here’s the site.  Visit at your own risk.

UPDATE:

I’ve moved the extension to Mozilla Addons, and added Firefox 3.5 compatibility.

I’ve updated alertCheck.xpi so that it’ll play nice with Firefox 3.0b5, and hopefully Firefox 3.1.*.  Let me know if there are any behaviour foulups, and I’ll do my best to fix them.

Overriding Firefox’s Window.Alert – Part 2

Ok, so there have been some developments.

Before I go into this though, I just want to make it clear that I have very little knowledge or experience working with XUL, or writing Firefox extensions in general.  I’ve dabbled, but I’m mostly ignorant.  So all you Firefox aficionados out there…go easy on me.

So, developments:

Using this site, I created a skeleton for my extension, calling it “alertCheck”.

And then I hit a brick wall right away, trying to find the right “alert” to override.

Let me explain.  Mozilla extension development is strange for me because of all of the various layers to Firefox, and the distance between the JavaScript in the extension, and any page that is loaded in the browser.  It feels like a security layer – and it makes sense:  you really don’t want the Javascript on a website to monkey around with the internals of your browser.

Thankfully, this forum and this forum provided some help.

Now, after the appcontent is loaded, I wait for the DOMContentLoaded event to fire, and then write my new alert function to here:

document.getElementById('content').contentWindow.wrappedJSObject.alert

The problem is, if I wait for the DOMContentLoaded event to fire, the alert override happens (obviously) after all of the DOM Content is loaded into the browser.  This is only useful if the alert’s that we want to capture are fired using <body onLoad> or some other function that detects when the DOM has been loaded.  It’s no good for inline Javascript alerts, since these commands are parsed and executed line by line as the HTML is processed.

Phew.  Big mouthful.

So, where does that leave me?  Well, I was just hanging out in irc.mozilla.net in the #extdev channel.  Here’s a chunk of what was said:

<mike_conley> Hey all - I'm trying to write an extension to override window.alert, with an alertCheck that allows users to disable future alerts.
<mike_conley> So far, I'm able to override alert by writing to document.getElementById('content').contentWindow.wrappedJSObject.alert
<mike_conley> however, now it's a matter of timing - I'm doing the override after the DOMContentLoaded event is fired
<mike_conley> But this means that it doesn't catch alerts that are fired using inline javascript.
<mike_conley> So my question is, when should I do the override?
<Mook> I suspect just overriding commonDialog.xul is easier
<Mook> trying to poke the content JS's definition is going to be full of pain
<mike_conley> Cool, I'll look into that - thanks!
<Mook> (the content JS starts around http://mxr.mozilla.org/mozilla/source/dom/src/base/nsGlobalWindow.cpp#4022 and goes the the prompt service which pokes that xul)
<mike_conley> Excellent - I appreciate it.

So maybe there’s another approach that I should be taking – I’m going to look into overriding commonDialog.xul… I’ll write more when I have it.

Overriding Firefox’s Window.Alert – Part 1

Window.alert is a native function built into Firefox – but that doesn’t mean it can’t be overridden.

Check this out:

Open Firebug, and get to the console.  Then, click that little red arrow at the end of the input line so that you get the large box input on the right side of the screen.

Type this into the input box:

var alert_count = 0;
var old_alert = window.alert;
var alert_max = 5;
window.alert = function(alert_text) {
  if (alert_count < alert_max) {
    ++alert_count;
    old_alert(alert_text);
  } else {
    console.log("Reached maximum alerts");
  }
}

Now, hit “Run” at the bottom of that input window.  We’ve just overridden the window.alert function during runtime.

Hit “Clear” at the bottom of the input window, and type in:

for (i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
  alert(i);
}

Hit “Run”.  Click “OK” for the first 5 alert windows, and watch as the rest of them are spewed out to the console.  Nice.

So, I don’t think this helps me much in creating my plug-in, but it’s interesting to see how window.alert is malliable at run-time.

This seems to be a more relevant discovery – Mozilla’s Chrome lets me create an alert popup with a checkbox using alertCheck.  I think this is exactly what I’m looking for.

I’ll tinker with it over the next few days, and post some code.