11

I want to insert a div into a fixed position using a chrome extension. It will overlay the page that you are currently viewing. My concern is that I want this to work on any page without altering it (other than inserting my fixed div), but I don't know if that is possible with the way that I'm doing it. Currently, the button won't show up, and I had a lot of trouble getting the div to show up. By the way, the positioning is just temp for now, I will position it correctly once I get it on the page! :) Here's what I have:

Here is my manifest:

{
    "name":"poop",
    "version":"0.1",
    "manifest_version":2,
    "description":"shitty app I'm making",
    "background":{
        "scripts":[
            "scripts/modernizr.min.js", 
            "scripts/background.js"
            ],
        "persistent": false
    },
    "permissions":[
        "contextMenus", 
        "tabs",
        "http://*/*",
        "https://*/*"
        ],
    "icons":{
        "16":"images/icon_16.png",
        "128":"images/icon_128.png"
    }
}

Here is the function in background.js that will be performing this functionality:

function insertUIDiv()
{       
    var prepHtmlStyle   =   "document.documentElement.style.height = '100%';" +
                            "document.body.style.height = '100%';" +
                            "document.documentElement.style.width = '100%';" +
                            "document.body.style.width = '100%';";

    var insertDiv       =   "var div = document.createElement( 'div' );" +
                            "var btnForm = document.createElement( 'form' );" +
                            "var btn = document.createElement( 'input' );" +
                            //append all elements
                            "document.body.appendChild( div );" +
                            "div.appendChild( btnForm );" +
                            "btnForm.appendChild( btn );" +
                            //set attributes for div
                            "div.id = 'myDivId';" +
                            "div.style.position = 'fixed';" + 
                            "div.style.top = '50%';" +
                            "div.style.left = '50%';" +
                            "div.style.width = '100%';" +   
                            "div.style.height = '100%';" + 
                            "div.style.backgroundColor = 'red';" + 
                            //set attributes for btnForm
                            "btnForm.action = '';" +
                            //set attributes for btn
                            //"btn.removeAttribute( 'style' );" +
                            "btn.type = 'button';" +
                            "btn.value = 'hello';" +
                            "btn.style.position = 'absolute';" +
                            "btn.style.top = '50%';" +
                            "btn.style.left = '50%';";



    chrome.tabs.executeScript( null, { code: prepHtmlStyle } );     
    chrome.tabs.executeScript( null, { code: insertDiv } );             

}
0

1 Answer 1

24

Manipulating content from background.js is a very bad idea. Why don't you use content script?

manifest.json

{
    "name":"poop",
    "version":"0.1",
    "manifest_version":2,
    "description":"shitty app I'm making",
    "background":{
        "scripts":[
            "scripts/modernizr.min.js", 
            "scripts/background.js"
            ],
        "persistent": false
    },
    "content_scripts": [
      {
        "matches": ["https://*/*", "http://*/*"],
        "js": ["content.js"],
        "run_at": "document_end"
      }
    ],
    "permissions":[
        "contextMenus", 
        "tabs",
        "http://*/*",
        "https://*/*"
        ],
    "icons":{
        "16":"images/icon_16.png",
        "128":"images/icon_128.png"
    }
}

content.js

document.documentElement.style.height = '100%';
document.body.style.height = '100%';
document.documentElement.style.width = '100%';
document.body.style.width = '100%';

var div = document.createElement( 'div' );
var btnForm = document.createElement( 'form' );
var btn = document.createElement( 'input' );

//append all elements
document.body.appendChild( div );
div.appendChild( btnForm );
btnForm.appendChild( btn );
//set attributes for div
div.id = 'myDivId';
div.style.position = 'fixed';
div.style.top = '50%';
div.style.left = '50%';
div.style.width = '100%';   
div.style.height = '100%';
div.style.backgroundColor = 'red';

//set attributes for btnForm
btnForm.action = '';

//set attributes for btn
//"btn.removeAttribute( 'style' );
btn.type = 'button';
btn.value = 'hello';
btn.style.position = 'absolute';
btn.style.top = '50%';
btn.style.left = '50%';
4
  • 1
    Why is it a bad idea to manipulate content from background? I don't want to insert the div on page load. It will wait for an event to be triggered, insert the div, wait for the user to click a "close" button, and then remove the div. Is this possible using content script? Aug 1, 2013 at 13:13
  • Of course it's possible. just wrap the code in a function all call it where you want. Which event should it wait that to be triggered? Aug 1, 2013 at 16:11
  • In the background script I have more code that listens for a context menu (right click menu) option. When that context menu option is pressed I want the div to be inserted. I think I will be able to handle the rest :) Thanks for the help & explanation! Aug 1, 2013 at 17:25
  • 1
    Suppose I want to insert a huge html fragment into a page. How do I go about it? I obviously cannot build it using DOM API since it would take forever to code.
    – Andrei LED
    Sep 28, 2016 at 22:21

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