Also a valid solution, but that would require THAT greasemonkey script being on each person's computer who is viewing it, and each person viewing it using a greasemonkey'able browser.
This is literally being used in a static html file. which means NO code is loading it. just a plain simple html frameset directly loading a url all on its own. its used by different people, in different browsers. its not even hosted on a server, its sitting on a dropbox url. its meant to monitor the monitors, so it cant be down if we're down.
I'm going to let it drop, since the thing i needed doesnt exist, any solution people give will not work for what i originally asked, or will be single view hacks (also not acceptable). i'm going to just live with it i guess ><
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 3:46 PM, Platonides platonides@gmail.com wrote:
C Stafford wrote:
Cant strip it out, it isnt being parsed by anything. I've got a bunch of api urls in a frameset for monitoring
Thats why I explicitly asked the question I did in the original email. I wanted to know (and the simple answer of "there isnt one" would have sufficed) if there was a way to hide it by setting something in request.
You could strip it with greasemonkey (or perhaps with stylish, but it isn't well-classed).
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