En Sat, 24 Mar 2007 15:45:41 -0300, Anton Vredegoor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió:
> Since a few days I've been experimenting with a construct that enables > me to send the sourcecode of the web page I'm reading through a Python > script and then into a new tab in Mozilla. The new tab is automatically > opened so the process feels very natural, although there's a lot of > reading, filtering and writing behind the scene. > > I want to do three things with this post: > > A) Explain the process so that people can try it for themselves and say > "Hey stupid, I've been doing the same thing with greasemonkey for ages", > or maybe "You're great, this is easy to see, since the crux of the > biscuit is the apostrophe." Both kind of comments are very welcome. I use the Opera browser: http://www.opera.com Among other things (like having tabs for ages!): - enable/disable tables and divs (like you do) - enable/disable images with a keystroke, or only show cached images. - enable/disable CSS - banner supressing (aggressive) - enable/disable scripting - "fit to page width" (for those annoying sites that insist on using a fixed width of about 400 pixels, less than 1/3 of my actual screen size) - apply your custom CSS or javascript on any page - edit the page source and *refresh* the original page to reflect your changes All of this makes a very smooth web navigation - specially on a slow computer or slow connection. -- Gabriel Genellina -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list