Daniel Dawson wrote:
David E. Ross wrote:

For the US English version:
<https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/seamonkey/addon/saved-password-
editor/>

Question:  Does this work on split logins, where the user ID is
entered on one Web page and the password is entered on the next page?

Unfortunately, no. That would require a fundamental redesign of Gecko's
password manager, which is certainly outside the scope of Saved Password
Editor. How common is this, anyway? Probably not enough for Mozilla to
bother with. Other workarounds may be possible, though, through
Greasemonkey or something similar, i.e. modify the page so it has a
regular login form; I think that should work so long as the server will
accept a single request containing both credentials.

Sorry to be a "bother." It's more common than you think. Financial institutions are using it more and more as an advanced security feature.

At two of my banks, I Sign In on one page, then I confirm a SiteKey that I have chosen earlier to insure I'm on a real bank web page, and that's where I enter my Password. After I edited the nsLoginManager.js, SM 2.0.14 saved both, 2.1 doesn't.

I'm sure I'll figure out a work around but it worked in an earlier version so perhaps a "fundamental redesign" is not necessary, just a little tweak? 8-)

--
 JD..
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