On 20 May 2006, at 9:28 PM, Timothy Hatcher wrote:
This was never a feature of WebKit. It sounds like you have
SafariStand installed, a unsupported third-party extension that
adds this feature to Safari. The reason it stopped working is that
we recently changed how WebKit loads standalone images and text. So
extensions like this will break if they depend on internal
implementation details.
http://bugzilla.opendarwin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8921
I do indeed have SafariStand installed, and I hadn't realized that it
was a Stand feature and not a WebKit one.
Thanks.
On May 20, 2006, at 6:15 PM, Kevin Broderick wrote:
Earlier versions of WebKit offered the ability to view EXIF info
for embedded images if one opened the image in its own window or
tab and then opened a context menu (i.e. right-clicked it).
Current ToT does not, and this functionality appears to have
disappeared somewhere between r14382 (which has 'Show EXIF data'
as a context menu option) and r14434 (which does not). I know
that there has been some changing of how images are handled when
they are viewed alone in a window or tab, and I'm guessing this is
related. For what it's worth, as a photo nerd, I rather liked the
ability to do this without having to drag the image to Photoshop.
So:
a) any chance this functionality is coming back?
b) could it, perchance, work on *any* image, not just one opened
in its own window or tab? (this would be nice)
c) should I file an entry in Bugzilla, and does this count as a
regression? (it appears to be a feature removal, and I don't know
if it was an unsupported feature and thus doesn't count, or if it
might be intentional)
Thanks,
Kevin Broderick
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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