Hi Chris. You're a genious. I never knew this. Even easier.

Thanks,

Josh



> There's an even easier way to do this. In Studio, select File, Open from
Web
> and type in the url to the css or js document and it will bring it right
> into Studio!
>
> Chris
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: JW [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, March 09, 2001 3:26 PM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: Re: Useful tool for looking at code
>
>
> Hi, Codelifter is great Dave, thanks for bringing this to the attention of
> the group.
> Micheal, Codelifter allows you to view hidden .css and .js files such as:
>
> <LINK REL="STYLESHEET" HREF="#REQUEST.webroot#/fonts_ie.css"
> TYPE="text/css">
> <SCRIPT SRC="#REQUEST.webroot#/JavaScriptForm.js"></SCRIPT>
>
> The above are not readily available to view by clicking view sourse.
>
> Josh
>
>
> > Yea but even if you right click on a page and view the source,  thats
the
> > same as codelifter,  or am I mistaken
> >
> >
> > "David Adams" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> > 012b01c0a8c8$76b62cf0$ab01bfce@adams">news:012b01c0a8c8$76b62cf0$ab01bfce@adams...
> > > Web Monkey has reported a very interesting tool called "Code Lifter"
> that
> > allows you to grab hidden JS, PL and CSS files from a web page.
> > >
> > > Very useful for bug fixing.  http://www.codelifter.com/index.html
> > >
> > > Dave Adams
> > > CFUG Ottawa
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Structure your ColdFusion code with Fusebox. Get the official book at 
http://www.fusionauthority.com/bkinfo.cfm

Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/cf-talk@houseoffusion.com/
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

Reply via email to