Janne, Xinha (HTMLArea spinoff) has support for Firefox cut'n'paste without any user.js edits, but they stole it from FCKEditor , a bit more about it here.
Xinha might be something for Moodle 2.0? Don't know if it's less work or not because it's based on HTMLArea. At least the demos look very promising.
I been meaning to take a look at Xinha as soon as I got time for it
I had an idea for support at least two javascript (htmlarea/xinha and tinymce) based editor and one java based editor (kafenio).
The problem with supporting two js editors is that there should be a dialog routine compatible with both editors, but in other hand this would free us to use whatever js editor we want.
So definitely I'm going to check that Xinha
I had an idea for support at least two javascript (htmlarea/xinha and tinymce) based editor and one java based editor (kafenio).
The problem with supporting two js editors is that there should be a dialog routine compatible with both editors, but in other hand this would free us to use whatever js editor we want.
So definitely I'm going to check that Xinha
Hi all
Its much more simple ...
Go to C:\Programs\Mozilla Firefox and open the folder greprefs like this:
C:\Programs\Mozilla Firefox\greprefs
Open the file all.js with your WordPad MFC Editor and search for:
Clipboard
There you will find to lines like this:
// Clipboard
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.cutcopy", "noAccess");
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.paste", "noAccess");
Change it to (red marking)
// Clipboard
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.cutcopy", "allAccess");
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.paste", "allAccess");
Thats all! Save it and start Firefox new and you will see it works!
Bye Andy
Its much more simple ...
Go to C:\Programs\Mozilla Firefox and open the folder greprefs like this:
C:\Programs\Mozilla Firefox\greprefs
Open the file all.js with your WordPad MFC Editor and search for:
Clipboard
There you will find to lines like this:
// Clipboard
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.cutcopy", "noAccess");
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.paste", "noAccess");
Change it to (red marking)
// Clipboard
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.cutcopy", "allAccess");
pref("capability.policy.default.Clipboard.paste", "allAccess");
Thats all! Save it and start Firefox new and you will see it works!
Bye Andy
That's a good reminder.
I was really vague in my original post, and now realize that it didn't come across at all as I meant. I was directing it to Janne, and the essence was: "there is a way to have copypaste to work in Firefox with Ctrl-V without any client end .js file editings".
Current ways to paste text in Firefox are the Shift+Insert, choosing Edit Paste from the menus or editing user.js (or similar) to allow for Ctrl-V.
Ctrl-V is important because that's what everybody tries at first, and 95% leave it at that if it doesn't work.
I was really vague in my original post, and now realize that it didn't come across at all as I meant. I was directing it to Janne, and the essence was: "there is a way to have copypaste to work in Firefox with Ctrl-V without any client end .js file editings".
Current ways to paste text in Firefox are the Shift+Insert, choosing Edit Paste from the menus or editing user.js (or similar) to allow for Ctrl-V.
Ctrl-V is important because that's what everybody tries at first, and 95% leave it at that if it doesn't work.
Chardelle, I do/did get the popup window, but it's unfortunately the same majority that doesn't read any of the alert-box texts, but close them "as a reflex". Fortunately they mostly use IE though But it doesn't chance the fact that Ctrl-V didn't work in Firefox. (But in 1.5.2 it does, without any user hacks, great Janne!)