> On 11 Mag, 23:06, Shawn Milochik wrote:
>> How is the form "written in JavaScript"? Is it dynamically generated?
>>
>> In any case, can you just send a POST request if you know the values
>> required?
>
> The problem is indeed that the form is dynamically generated.
> That's the .js file:
T
In article <3f9c74cf-72f4-45e2-8724-3939366d1...@e24g2000vbe.googlegroups.com>,
Matteo wrote:
>
>I have to fill a web form to authenticate and connect to the internet.
>I thought it would have been easy to make a script to do that
>automatically on startup.
>
>Unfortunately, it turned out that th
On Tue, May 12, 2009 at 9:15 AM, Matteo wrote:
> On 11 Mag, 23:06, Shawn Milochik wrote:
> > How is the form "written in JavaScript"? Is it dynamically generated?
> >
> > In any case, can you just send a POST request if you know the values
> required?
>
> The problem is indeed that the form is d
On 11 Mag, 23:06, Shawn Milochik wrote:
> How is the form "written in JavaScript"? Is it dynamically generated?
>
> In any case, can you just send a POST request if you know the values required?
The problem is indeed that the form is dynamically generated.
That's the .js file:
if (navigator.appV
How is the form "written in JavaScript"? Is it dynamically generated?
In any case, can you just send a POST request if you know the values required?
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Hi everybody,
I have to fill a web form to authenticate and connect to the internet.
I thought it would have been easy to make a script to do that
automatically
on startup.
Unfortunately, it turned out that the form is written in JavaScript,
and
urllib2 therefore fails to even fetch the form.
The