On 01/21/2017 06:36 PM, David Hedlund wrote: > QuickJava can already do this: > https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/quickjava/
No, I wasn't talking about a button to enable and disable JavaScript. There are tons of extensions that can enable and disable JavaScript; even QuickJava would be superfluous for that purpose. I was talking about a button to show the *current page* with JavaScript active, while otherwise leaving JavaScript disabled, for a limited designated period of time (probably just until the user navigates away from the page). Because of the way Firefox handles JavaScript, a Firefox extension should be able to do this by enabling JavaScript, releading the page, and then disabling JavaScript again once the page loads. But that's just an implementation detail and I don't know for sure that it will continue to work in future Firefox releases. The important thing is for JavaScript to be globally disabled, but temporarily allowed on a particular site at the push of a button. -- Julie Marchant https://onpon4.github.io Protect your emails with GnuPG: https://emailselfdefense.fsf.org
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
-- http://gnuzilla.gnu.org
