12

I'm noob with JavaScript and Greasemonkey and I'd like to write a simple script.

I know that Greasemonkey wraps your code with an anonymous function so your variables won't exist after leaving the current page. However, I need a global variable. I tried to use the unsafeWindow and window objects something like this:

if (window.myVar == undefined) {
   window.myVar = "myVar";
}

If I refresh the page the condition's value is always true.

Is there a way to use global variables with Greasemonkey?

4 Answers 4

24

You have to use unsafeWindow in order to create a global variable that is available to the page's javascript scope.

if (unsafeWindow.myVar == undefined) {
   unsafeWindow.myVar = "myVar";
}

But you can't expect this variable to exist when you refresh the page, because normal javascript does not work that way. If you want to save some data across page loads then I suggest that you use GM_setValue & GM_getValue

2
  • Is there a way to save variables besides strings, booleans, and numbers across multiple pages (like GM_setValue and GM_getValue)? I saw a script for Greasemonkey that could do this once, but I don't remember which one it was. Dec 20, 2012 at 2:14
  • 2
    De-serialize the object to JSON, then serialize it when you load the variable.
    – Orvid King
    Oct 9, 2013 at 19:21
4

You are using a global variable, but global variables only last as long as the page does so when you refresh you are clearing all global variables. The only way to save data past a page refresh is with a cookie, upload to the a server, or the HTML5 storage API. With greasemonkey probably you would want to use a cookie.

0
3

To set global variables in GreaseMonkey, use @grant none, otherwise it uses unsafeWindow, which is only available to GreaseMonkey. There are some security concerns. See http://wiki.greasespot.net/@grant

1
  • 1
    That documentation page you have linked slightly contradicts what you're saying. @grant none is the default, you must specify unsafeWindow if you want it.
    – Rudey
    Feb 10, 2019 at 23:15
-5

If you're trying to maintain a variable through multiple page refreshes, you will need to store it in a cookie.

However if you simply want a global variable within the scope of a single page:

var imGlobal;
(function(){ // Greasemonkey crap...
...
imGlobal = "Totally";
})();
alert(imGlobal) // Alerts "Totally"

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.