Hi John

Thank you very much for the insight

On Oct 21, 10:53 pm, John J Barton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> window.console.firebug is the same value Firebug users see when they
> hover on the status bar icon and the same value as on the .xpi file
> name. It is a concatenation of VERSION and RELEASE read during Firebug
> start up from the content/firebug/branch.properties file.  I try to
> keep the result in the mozilla toolkit version format.
>
> But your Fb sniffer should fail in general. The console object is
> injected only if the Firebug user activates the Console panel (or uses
> the CommandLine but then only on demand).  Otherwise Firebug should
> not be visible to web page code.   Since the console is probably not
> the source of performance issues, your test is probably not that
> useful.
>
> jjb
>
> On Oct 21, 12:38 pm, tan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi
> > window.console.firebug gives me the version number of my Firebug
> > installation.
> > The format is #.#.#
>
> > I have three questions regarding this and hope somebody knows about
> > this
>
> > 1. Has the number always been in this format?
> > 3. For how long has this property existed
> > 2. How is the format for eg. betas
>
> > The reason for asking is that I want to make a Fb sniffer.
> > I love Fb and it works realy good, but in some cases it downgrades the
> > performance of my app and I just want to try to give som advice when
> > things go slow.
>
> > Thanks in advance for answers
>
> > t
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