4

Is there any way to "greek" HTML text, to obscure it using css and/or javascript, as shown in here: greek text sample

All the columns have normal text. The 2nd, 3rd and 4th columns have "greeked" text. Clicking on them shows normal text, and "greeks" the first column. What I need is that the characters somehow get replaced by squares, as shown in the picture, or a similar symbol. This way, they are hidden, but the text length, the words, paragraphs, everything is preserved.

5
  • 2
    Not sure if each letter has equal width, but u can write script to create greekText from orig text by regex (to *) perhaps, and insert display:none in DOM. Then some trigger to greek() and ungreek(). Cool assignment :)
    – EricG
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:40
  • Could the letters be blurred instead of squares?
    – scrblnrd3
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:41
  • If you want to preserve the text length and positioning, you could write a script that wraps each letter in a span and set the color and the background-color of the span to the same colour.
    – kei
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:44
  • you could regex replace with the ■ character. (medium square) - string.replace(/(.)/g, "■"); Dec 16, 2013 at 23:45
  • One question: how do you display the texts in those divs (with <p>, ´<span>, 'plain' text)? Dec 18, 2013 at 3:55

4 Answers 4

7

You could use a custom font where every character is a square. Then you can switch out between a readable font and the custom font by changing the CSS style. The drawback would be that the user could copy the text and paste it in a text-editor to make it visible.

Another option would be to substitute the content strings itself. Store the content of each column in javascript, not in HTML. In the .onload handler you generate an obfuscated version of each string where every non-whitespace character is replaced with the unicode character (codepoint 0x25a0). Then you assign to the .innerHTML of each div either the obfuscated or the unobfuscated version.

This option would still allow cheating by looking at the sourcecode, though. When you want the text to be completely inaccessible to the user before they are allowed to see it, you won't get around a server-sided solution.

6
  • 1
    Unfortunately, that would still be visible in the source and from copy/pasting. Unless that doesn't matter.
    – Sam Holmes
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:44
  • @SamHolmes I've added a 2nd option where this problem doesn't occur.
    – Philipp
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:47
  • @Sam: pretty much under any situation with JavaScript modification of a page the underlying source-code remains viewable, surely? Dec 16, 2013 at 23:50
  • @DavidThomas Meaning the only way to hide the data is to start with it obscured and to have the JS be able to decrypt it, correct?
    – Jasper
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:52
  • I am inclined to agree with you. You could obfuscate it without a complicated MySQL setup, just use PHPs file_get_contents() function and retrieve the data from a text file through jQuery's $.ajax(). Of course, you could also do it with MySQL, but unless obfuscating the source is very important, there is no need to go that far.
    – Sam Holmes
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:55
4

You might be able to do this in css. Blokk font is free and includes a web-font you can load via @font-face. You could then swap the font with an added (or removed) active class, or with javascript on whichever animation you want.

0
1

Using jquery would make this easier, so here's my jQuery solution that will greek the text onmouseout. Not exactly what you want, but it will be very similar

$('#div').on('mouseover',function(){
     $(this).css('color','transparent');
     $(this).css('text-shadow','0 0 5px rgba(0,0,0,0.5)');
}).on('mouseout',function(){
     $(this).css('color','black');
     $(this).css('text-shadow','none');
});
1
  • 1
    this inside a jQuery event handler refers to the DOMElement, not the jQuery object. So you will need to wrap this in a jQuery constructor for .css() to work: $(this)...
    – Jasper
    Dec 16, 2013 at 23:47
0

you could regex replace every character in each text container with the ■ character. (medium square) -

string.replace(/(.)/g, "&#9632;");
1
  • You first just get the text in a var. Then just copy it into another var that you will replace the chars with square. The first text var is still there. Dec 16, 2013 at 23:51

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.