I'm enhancing a React front end with Tampermonkey , by adding highlights to show cursor location in a grid, and allowing users to directly enter data , rather than then enter data.
After 2 or 3 cursor moves or data entry the grid refreshes or updates - no page change - and looses the highlighting I set up.
I'd like to catch the refresh/update and reset the highlighting.
I'm a noob..
The network tab shows post events so I tried https://jsbin.com/dixelocazo/edit?js,console
var open = window.XMLHttpRequest.prototype.open,
send = window.XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send;
to try and use POST events to detect the refresh. No joy !
I also looked at ajax events.
No luck :(
Can someone point me in the right direction here ?
Once I catch the event, I can then reset the highlighting to fix the problem
Since normally the userscripts run in a sandbox, JavaScript functions or objects cannot be used directly by default, here's what you can do:
Disable the sandbox:
// #grant none
You won't be able to use any GM functions, though.
Run in the page context via unsafeWindow:
const __send = unsafeWindow.XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send;
unsafeWindow.XMLHttpRequest.prototype.send = function () {
this.addEventListener('loadend', e => {
console.log('intercepted', e);
}, {once: true});
__send.apply(this, arguments);
};
Use MutationObserver to detect changes in page DOM:
const observer = new MutationObserver(mutations => {
const matched = [];
for (const {addedNodes} of mutations) {
for (const n of addedNodes) {
if (!n.tagName)
continue;
if (n.matches('.prey:not(.my-highlight)')) {
matched.push(n);
} else if (n.firstElementChild) {
matched.push(...n.querySelectorAll('.prey:not(.my-highlight)'));
}
}
}
// process the matched elements
for (const el of matched) {
el.classList.add('my-highlight');
}
});
observer.observe(document.querySelector('.surviving-ancestor') || document.body, {
subtree: true,
childList: true,
});
.surviving-ancestor means the element that isn't replaced/recreated by the page script. In devtools element inspector it's the one that isn't highlighted temporarily during DOM updates.
See also Performance of MutationObserver.
I got a json response like this. It is dynamic and I want to add the details in range slider. The slider max value must dynamically increases when there will be new element in array.
"time": [
"2018-05-24T06:30:00",
"2018-05-24T07:00:00",
"2018-05-24T07:30:00"
]
I have never worked on slider before . Any suggestion how to achieve this ?
You can use angularjs-slider library (which has ui-bootstrap as dependency). It offers lot customization in sliders & very handy with angularjs.
For your case after every new value added to array you can reload the slider by 1st deleting it & then loading it again. Or you can use their rzSliderForceRender custom event for that. Using this
Your HTML will look like:
<rzslider rz-slider-model="slider_dates.value"
rz-slider-options="slider_dates.options"></rzslider>
And in controller slider config code as:
$scope.dates = ["2018-05-24T06:30:00",
"2018-05-24T07:00:00"];
var datesObjests = [];
for (var i = 0; i < $scope.dates.length; i++) {
datesObjests.push(new Date($scope.dates[i]));
}
$scope.slider_dates = {
value: datesObjests[0],
options: {
stepsArray: datesObjests,
translate: function(date) {
if (date !== null) return date.toLocaleString();
return '';
},
},
};
Working Plunker Example for your requirement.
I need some help with meteor.
I created a publish in the server side and after subscription in the client side I added a helper to get my data.
this.helpers({
tags() {
var tags = Tag.find();
return tags;
}
})
What I need to do is add a Key called Cheked = true to tags.
How can I do this please ? because if I do it in the init it will not work since the suscription is not ready yet.
Thank you
You can use .map() to map the cursor and add a key to each document:
this.helpers({
tags() {
let tags = Tag.find().map(doc=>{
doc.checked = true;
return doc;
});
return tags;
}
})
Try with that way:
Template.myTemplateName.helpers({
tags(){
//You should use also find().fetch()
return Tag.find().fetch();
}
});
show your subs code.
If you want to add key to the object you should use
Tag.update(id,{$set: {keyName: value}}) on selected id or all elements.
How do I convert Deltas to pure HTML? I'm using Quill as a rich text editor, but I'm not sure how I would display the existing Deltas in a HTML context. Creating multiple Quill instances wouldn't be reasonable, but I couldn't come up with anything better yet.
I did my research, and I didn't find any way to do this.
Not very elegant, but this is how I had to do it.
function quillGetHTML(inputDelta) {
var tempCont = document.createElement("div");
(new Quill(tempCont)).setContents(inputDelta);
return tempCont.getElementsByClassName("ql-editor")[0].innerHTML;
}
Obviously this needs quill.js.
I guess you want the HTML inside it. Its fairly simple.
quill.root.innerHTML
If I've understood you correctly, there's a quill thread of discussion here, with the key information you're after.
I've quoted what should be of most value to you below:
Quill has always used Deltas as a more consistent and easier to use (no parsing)
data structure. There's no reason for Quill to reimplement DOM APIs in
addition to this. quill.root.innerHTML or document.querySelector(".ql-editor").innerHTML works just fine (quill.container.firstChild.innerHTML is a bit more brittle as it depends on child ordering) and the previous getHTML implementation did little more than this.
Simple, solution is here:
https://www.scalablepath.com/blog/using-quill-js-build-wysiwyg-editor-website/
The main code is:
console.log(quill.root.innerHTML);
This is a very common confusion when it comes to Quilljs. The thing is you should NOT retrieve your html just to display it. You should render and display your Quill container just the same way you do when it is an editor. This is one of the major advantages to Quilljs and the ONLY thing you need to do is:
$conf.readOnly = true;
This will remove the toolbar and make the content not editable.
I have accomplished it in the backend using php.
My input is json encoded delta and my output is the html string.
here is the code , if it is of any help to you.This function is still to handle lists though and some other formats but you can always extend those in operate function.
function formatAnswer($answer){
$formattedAnswer = '';
$answer = json_decode($answer,true);
foreach($answer['ops'] as $key=>$element){
if(empty($element['insert']['image'])){
$result = $element['insert'];
if(!empty($element['attributes'])){
foreach($element['attributes'] as $key=>$attribute){
$result = operate($result,$key,$attribute);
}
}
}else{
$image = $element['insert']['image'];
// if you are getting the image as url
if(strpos($image,'http://') !== false || strpos($image,'https://') !== false){
$result = "<img src='".$image."' />";
}else{
//if the image is uploaded
//saving the image somewhere and replacing it with its url
$imageUrl = getImageUrl($image);
$result = "<img src='".$imageUrl."' />";
}
}
$formattedAnswer = $formattedAnswer.$result;
}
return nl2br($formattedAnswer);
}
function operate($text,$ops,$attribute){
$operatedText = null;
switch($ops){
case 'bold':
$operatedText = '<strong>'.$text.'</strong>';
break;
case 'italic':
$operatedText = '<i>'.$text.'</i>';
break;
case 'strike':
$operatedText = '<s>'.$text.'</s>';
break;
case 'underline':
$operatedText = '<u>'.$text.'</u>';
break;
case 'link':
$operatedText = ''.$text.'';
break;
default:
$operatedText = $text;
}
return $operatedText;
}
Here's a full function using quill.root.innerHTML, as the others didn't quite cover the complete usage of it:
function quillGetHTML(inputDelta) {
var tempQuill=new Quill(document.createElement("div"));
tempQuill.setContents(inputDelta);
return tempQuill.root.innerHTML;
}
This is just a slight different variation of km6 's answer.
For Quill version 1.3.6, just use:
quill.root.innerHTML;
Try it online: https://jsfiddle.net/Imabot/86dtuhap/
Detailed explaination on my blog
This link if you have to post the Quill HTML content in a form
quill.root.innerHTML on the quill object works perfectly.
$scope.setTerm = function (form) {
var contents = JSON.stringify(quill.root.innerHTML)
$("#note").val(contents)
$scope.main.submitFrm(form)
}
I put together a node package to convert html or plain text to and from a Quill Delta.
My team used it to update our data model to include both Quill's Delta and HTML. This allows us to render on the client without an instance of Quill.
See node-quill-converter.
It features the following functions:
- convertTextToDelta
- convertHtmlToDelta
- convertDeltaToHtml
Behind the scenes it uses an instance of JSDOM. This may make it best suited for migration scripts as performance has not been tested in a typical app request lifecycle.
Try
console.log ( $('.ql-editor').html() );
Here is how I did it, for you Express folks. It seems to have worked very well in conjunction with express-sanitizer.
app.js
import expressSanitizer from 'express-sanitizer'
app.use(expressSanitizer())
app.post('/route', async (req, res) => {
const title = req.body.article.title
const content = req.sanitize(req.body.article.content)
// Do stuff with content
})
new.ejs
<head>
<link href="https://cdn.quilljs.com/1.3.2/quill.snow.css" rel="stylesheet">
</head>
...
<form action="/route" method="POST">
<input type="text" name="article[title]" placeholder="Enter Title">
<div id="editor"></div>
<input type="submit" onclick="return quillContents()" />
</form>
...
<script src="https://cdn.quilljs.com/1.3.2/quill.js"></script>
<script>
const quill = new Quill('#editor', {
theme: 'snow'
})
const quillContents = () => {
const form = document.forms[0]
const editor = document.createElement('input')
editor.type = 'hidden'
editor.name = 'article[content]'
editor.value = document.querySelector('.ql-editor').innerHTML
form.appendChild(editor)
return form.submit()
}
</script>
express-sanitizer (https://www.npmjs.com/package/express-sanitizer)
document.forms (https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Document/forms)
My view only has one form, so I used document.forms[0], but if you have multiple or may extend your view in the future to have multiple forms, check out the MDN reference.
What we are doing here is creating a hidden form input that we assign the contents of the Quill Div, and then we bootleg the form submit and pass it through our function to finish it off.
Now, to test it, make a post with <script>alert()</script> in it, and you won't have to worry about injection exploits.
That's all there is to it.
Here is a proper way to do it.
var QuillDeltaToHtmlConverter = require('quill-delta-to-html').QuillDeltaToHtmlConverter;
// TypeScript / ES6:
// import { QuillDeltaToHtmlConverter } from 'quill-delta-to-html';
var deltaOps = [
{insert: "Hello\n"},
{insert: "This is colorful", attributes: {color: '#f00'}}
];
var cfg = {};
var converter = new QuillDeltaToHtmlConverter(deltaOps, cfg);
var html = converter.convert();
Refer https://github.com/nozer/quill-delta-to-html
For a jQuery-style solution that allows getting and setting the Quill value I am doing the following:
Quill.prototype.val = function(newVal) {
if (newVal) {
this.container.querySelector('.ql-editor').innerHTML = newVal;
} else {
return this.container.querySelector('.ql-editor').innerHTML;
}
};
let editor = new Quill( ... );
//set the value
editor.val('<h3>My new editor value</h3>');
//get the value
let theValue = editor.val();
quill-render looks like it's what you want. From the docs:
var render = require('quill-render');
render([
{
"attributes": {
"bold": true
},
"insert": "Hi mom"
}
]);
// => '<b>Hi mom</b>'
If you want to render quill using nodejs, there is a package quite simple based on jsdom, usefull to render backside (only one file & last update 18 days from now) render quill delta to html string on server
Just use this clean library to convert from delta from/to text/html
node-quill-converter
example:
const { convertDeltaToHtml } = require('node-quill-converter');
let html = convertDeltaToHtml(delta);
console.log(html) ; // '<p>hello, <strong>world</strong></p>'
I m trying to set value to combobox in extjs, this is working in chrome but not in firefox. I used the following code:
function callFromController(comboitemid,itemvalue) {
Ext.ComponentQuery.query(comboitemid)[0].setValue(itemvalue);
};
AS a general guidence I would use:
function callFromController(comboitemid,itemvalue) {
// make sure you add a # to your Id string or use Ext.getCmp insted.
var foundComponents = comboitemid && Ext.ComponentQuery.query(comboitemid);
if (foundComponents.length) {
// I would add to see in your console.log('foundComponents[0]=%o',foundComponents[0])
// to check the value of the found component
foundComponents[0].setValue(itemvalue);
}
};