Are we really talking about incorrect installations here? Twitter's own @Anywhere documentation page (http://dev.twitter.com/anywhere/ begin) is throwing this same error in older browsers, including Chrome 3.0.195.
On May 15, 6:26 pm, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote: > I agree that @Anywhere should degrade gracefully when configured properly on > unsupported platforms and not prompt incorrect alert()s. But I do think > alert()s are probably the best way to notify developers of incorrect > installations. > > Abraham > > > > > > On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 11:55, Larry <la...@topsy.com> wrote: > > I can reliably reproduce this with Firefox 3.0.8 at the following url: > >http://cornsyrup.org/~larry/anywhere/index.html > > > Error console is reporting "S.get is not a function" > > > Larry > > > On May 15, 11:31 am, Larry <la...@topsy.com> wrote: > > > Our site has been running @anywhere for over a week now without error. > > > Yesterday my coworker was getting the alert(). He is running an older > > > version of Firefox (3.0.8) on Ubuntu, so there might be another cause > > > other than missing clientID or version? > > > > I still believe alert() is intrusive, especially for this case where > > > it works fine except for this edge case. Instead of users complaining > > > about broken hovercards, they are complaining about alert dialogs. > > > > Larry > > > > On May 14, 8:38 pm, Abraham Williams <4bra...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Both of which are issues that will pretty much stop @Anywhere from > > working > > > > and need to be noticed as soon as possible at installation. Hiding them > > in > > > > console.log will make it more likely that @Anywhere will be installe > > > > improperly and the admins will only find out when users complain. > > > > > Abraham > > > > > On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 15:57, Larry <la...@topsy.com> wrote: > > > > > I just came across a coworker's browser that triggered an alert() > > call > > > > > from anywhere.js. While okay for development, the use of alert() is > > > > > not friendly for production websites. Could these be converted > > > > > console.log() or some other benign mechanism? > > > > > > Grepping through anywhere.js I found two instances of alert(): > > > > > > alert("To set up @anywhere, please provide a client ID"); > > > > > > alert("No version matching "+Z); > > > > > > Cheers > > > > > Larry > > > > > -- > > > > Abraham Williams | Developer for hire |http://abrah.am > > > > @abraham |http://projects.abrah.am|http://blog.abrah.am > > > > This email is: [ ] shareable [x] ask first [ ] private. > > -- > Abraham Williams | Developer for hire |http://abrah.am > @abraham |http://projects.abrah.am|http://blog.abrah.am > This email is: [ ] shareable [x] ask first [ ] private.