5

I visit a website with a javascript file in the head of the HTML

<script language="javascript" src="javscript.js"></script>

The code inside this file is:

// keypress management 
if (document.layers) document.captureEvents(Event.KEYPRESS)
function update(e) {        
    if (document.all) {             // Explorer
        if (event.keyCode==13) document.forms[0].submit();  // 13 = ENTER
        else if (event.keyCode==26) runHelp(hplk);          // 26 = CTRL+Z
        return;
    } else {                                                // mozilla
        if (e.which==13) document.forms[0].submit();        // 13 = ENTER
        else if (e.which==26) runHelp(hplk);                // 122 = CTRL+Z     
        return;         
    }
}
document.onkeypress=update;

I want to disable/remove/replace this function with Greasemonkey.

I tried it with

unsafeWindow.update = function(){}

with no result! (got no errors in the console)

is there a way to kill this function?

5
  • See if the answer to this question works for you. Haven't used GreaseMonkey in awhile, but it seems to make sense.
    – Joe Enos
    Mar 7, 2013 at 22:13
  • 1
    Is this on Firefox 2, with older Greasemonkey, like your previous questions? Mar 7, 2013 at 22:38
  • i tried the code and added alert('TEST'); the code would created in the head but it doesn't fire "test"
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 22:42
  • @BrockAdams nice to read you.. no its on new FF and GM :D
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 22:43
  • @BrockAdams but the old question :D shame
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 22:50

1 Answer 1

8

It's not clear that update is a global function. If it isn't then that approach won't work.

But you can override the keypress handler with:

unsafeWindow.document.onkeypress = function(){};



For a general, high-powered way to selectively block, or replace, any JS (on Firefox), use @run-at document-start and the checkForBadJavascripts function, like so:

// ==UserScript==
// @name        _Replace select javascript on a page
// @include     http://YOUR_SERVER.COM/YOUR_PATH/*
// @require     https://gist.github.com/raw/2620135/checkForBadJavascripts.js
// @run-at      document-start
// @grant       GM_addStyle
// ==/UserScript==
/*- The @grant directive is needed to work around a design change
    introduced in GM 1.0.   It restores the sandbox.
*/

checkForBadJavascripts ( [
    [   false,
        /document\.onkeypress\s*=\s*update/,
        function () {
            addJS_Node (myKeypressFunction.toString() );
            addJS_Node ('document.onkeypress = myKeypressFunction;');
        }
    ]
] );


function myKeypressFunction (evt) {
    /*  DO WHATEVER HERE BUT USE NO GREASEMONKEY FUNCTIONS INSIDE
        THIS FUNCTION.
    */
    console.log ("Keypress function fired.");
}

See this answer, for more information on checkForBadJavascripts.

5
  • I LOVE YOU BROCK ADAMS :D unsafeWindow.document.onkeypress = function(){}; works perfect :D included this part to the old script and works perfect! i hope this part is definitely finished :D i will test this next week on the terminal and let you know. than we can finish this part and drink a beer.. or two :D THANKS
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 23:42
  • can't use checkForBadJavascripts because the terminal has no internet-connection!
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 23:45
  • 1
    You're welcome! Remember, Stack Overflow questions are not about a "part" of whatever project you are working on. They are about a single, specific, programming problem. Mar 7, 2013 at 23:46
  • 1
    It sounds like you don't need checkForBadJavascripts in this case. If you did, and without an internet connection, you would just copy and paste the entire utility code into your script. It's fairly short. Mar 7, 2013 at 23:48
  • Sorry! I know. Believe me... this Script drives me crazy and gave me some nightmares :D
    – bernte
    Mar 7, 2013 at 23:52

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