This fork intends to update dotjs to ensure it works in recent versions of
Google Chrome, without changing the philosophy of keeping Javascript in ~/.js
.
dotjs is a Google Chrome extension that executes JavaScript files in ~/.js
based on their filename.
If you navigate to http://www.google.com/
, dotjs will execute
~/.js/google.com.js
.
This makes it super easy to spruce up your favorite pages using JavaScript.
On subdomains such as http://gist.github.com
dotjs will try to load
~/.js/gist.github.com.js
as well as ~/.js/github.com.js
and ~/.js/com.js
.
Bonus: files in ~/.js
have jQuery 1.9 loaded, regardless of whether the site
you're hacking uses jQuery.
Double bonus: ~/.js/default.js
is loaded on every request, meaning you can
stick plugins or helper functions in it.
GreaseMonkey user scripts are great, but you need to publish them somewhere and
re-publish after making modifications. With dotjs, just add or edit files in
~/.js
.
In ~/.js/github.com.js
:
// swap github logo with trollface
$('a[class^=header-logo-]').html(
$('<img>')
.attr('src', '//bit.ly/ghD24e')
.css({'width': 'auto', 'height': '22px'})
);
Chrome extensions can't access the local filesystem, so dotjs runs a tiny web server on port 3131 that serves files out of ~/.js.
You don't have to worry about starting or stopping this web server because we put a pretty great plist into ~/Library/LaunchAgents that handles all that for us.
The dotjs Chrome extension then makes ajax requests to http://localhost:3131/convore.com.js any time you hit a page on convore.com, for example, and executes the returned JavaScript.
- OS X
- Ruby 1.9+
- Rake (
gem install rake
) - Google Chrome
/usr/local/bin
in your $PATH
git clone https://github.com/jcf/dotjs
cd dotjs
rake install
Now open https://localhost:3131 in Chrome and follow these steps:
- Click the "X" Padlock icon in the address bar
- Click "Certificate Information"
- Drag the large cert icon to your desktop
- Open it with Keychain
- Configure its Trust section as shown: http://cl.ly/Pdny
Finally install the Google Chrome extension:
rake uninstall
- Icon: http://raphaeljs.com/icons/
- jQuery: http://jquery.com/
- Ryan Tomayko for:
"I almost wish you could just stick JavaScript in ~/.js. Do you know what I'm saying?"