3/16/2021 0 Comments Chrome Web Store Tampermonkey
This unofficial modification of the official Greasemonkey for Firefox is available instead, and up-to-date as of this writing (Feb 2015). (There is also another unofficial modified version here which is VERY outdated, not recommended.For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.Using multiple different browsersvariants that can run simultaneously allows you to do different things on or off of MTurk in separate environments, with or without having multiple computers.
Except where specifically stated otherwise, this is talking about browsers for desktopslaptops running WindowsMacLinux. Mobile possibilities are more limited; the browsers available for mobile OSes that call themselves by the same names as desktop-OS browsers dont have the same features. A competing extension called Scriptish is also available, but it hasnt been updated since June 2013 and has issues, so just stick with the better-known and better-supported Greasemonkey for Firefox. Chrome and its variants, including Chromium, SRWare Iron, and Comodo Dragon (and Chromebooks) Tampermonkey for Chrome (TM) - Chrome Web Store page - website From Feb 2010 v4 through May 2014 v35 (though it already became somewhat more difficult after July 2012 v21 ), Chrome was able to run some userscripts as natively-installed pseudo-extensions without Tampermonkey being installed. But that method doesnt support some script features; and since May 2014, Chrome on Windows will disable any such pseudo-extensions (and manually-installed regular extensions) every time you restart the browser, because they didnt come from the official Chrome Web Store. Just install Tampermonkey instead, which also provides more advanced script-management options and feature support, and then install your userscripts into Tampermonkey. Chrome on Mac and Linux arent affected by that policy change, but youre still better off using Tampermonkey anyway.) A competing extension called NinjaKit (primarily intended for Safari) is also available, but it hasnt been updated since June 2013 and has issues, so just stick with the better-known and better-supported Tampermonkey for Chrome. Opera From 2012 v15 through present, Opera Next controversially became a Chrome variant. For this generation of Opera, use: Tampermonkey for Opera Next - Opera Add-Ons page - website Opera Classic (aka Opera Presto) included built-in basic support for userscripts from April 2005 v8 through 2012 v12 (and small updates to v12 in 2013 and 2014), through an inconvenient interface and with limited feature support. But on v15, which doesnt have its own built-in scripts support, Tampermonkey supports more features than ViolentMonkey. Opera Classic (v12) does not support IndexedDB, a storage method used by a few of the more complex scripts, including HitDB. Safari Tampermonkey for Safari - website Quietly released in Nov 2014; not available in Apples official Safari extensions site, but can be downloaded from the official Tampermonkey site. Supports Safari v5 and higher, on both Mac and Windows (Safari hasnt released versions for Windows since v5.1.7 in May 2012). As of Feb 2015, has a minor bug where if the first website you visit after restarting Safari has one or more userscripts set up to run on it, the scripts wont load properly until you refresh the page or visit another website. Safari versions before v7.1 do not support IndexedDB, a storage method used by a few of the more complex scripts, including HitDB. Previous options for running userscripts in Safari, which were buggy and had limited feature support, included: Creammonkey (2006-2007) and GreaseKit (2007-2008) (only for Safari on Mac, up to v4; require SIMBL framework), and NinjaKit ( 2010 -2012) (for Safari v5 on Mac and Windows). Internet Explorer GreasemonkIE - for IE7 - website - Crossrider install page Released in Aug 2014. Built using the Crossrider extension framework, which says it supports IE7 and up (IE8, IE9, IE10, IE11.). The author says Ive accounted for some differences between Firefox and IE, but Im sure Ive missed a few., so expect unknown feature limitations. One of IEs particularly odd feature limitations (which I dont know if any of the above userscript-running tools build in fixes for) is that it refuses to run any Javascript containing console.log statements, which are used by many userscript authors, unless you have the Developer Tools console open at the time. Press F12 to open Dev Tools, and then you can minimize its area, or manually adjust the height as short as possible, or detach it into a separate window that can then be minimized. SeaMonkey Based on FirefoxNetscape, but has limited extension availability. Scriptish for SeaMonkey - Mozilla Add-Ons page - archived website Scriptish hasnt been updated since June 2013, the developer is non-responsive, and its website is dead as of this writing (Feb 2015). But it reportedly still works in recent SeaMonkey versions, and the only other option is unofficial: Greasemonkey for SeaMonkey - website There was previously an official Greasemonkey version that supported SeaMonkey, but that appears to no longer be the case. This unofficial modification of the official Greasemonkey for Firefox is available instead, and up-to-date as of this writing (Feb 2015). There is also another unofficial modified version here which is VERY outdated, not recommended.
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