Summary: | Web Inspector Does Not Highlight Elements | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | [Applications] rekonq | Reporter: | Zachary Klein <zak> |
Component: | general | Assignee: | Andrea Diamantini <adjam7> |
Status: | RESOLVED UPSTREAM | ||
Severity: | normal | CC: | pano_90 |
Priority: | NOR | ||
Version: | unspecified | ||
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Platform: | openSUSE | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Latest Commit: | Version Fixed In: |
Description
Zachary Klein
2010-02-18 18:26:54 UTC
I thoguht I'd mention that I am running rekonq from the gitorious repo (mainline branch); so I'd be able to test drive changes right away. ;) it looks like this is a missing feature in QtWebKit, as in arora the stuff is not highlighted either. (btw: Doesn't Opera use its own Web rendering engine, called Presto?) I reported it on the (Qt)WebKit bug tracker: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35125 putting this as upstream for now On Thursday 18 February 2010 18:26:55 Zachary Klein wrote:
> https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=227547
>
> Summary: Web Inspector Does Not Highlight Elements
> Product: rekonq
> Version: unspecified
> Platform: openSUSE RPMs
> OS/Version: Linux
> Status: NEW
> Severity: normal
> Priority: NOR
> Component: general
> AssignedTo: adjam7@gmail.com
> ReportedBy: zak@silver-chalice.com
>
>
> Version: 0.3.93 (using KDE 4.4.0)
> OS: Linux
> Installed from: openSUSE RPMs
>
> First of all I should mention that I absolutely love rekonq. It's the first
> browser that I have been able to use effectively since Firefox (I've tried
> Konqueror, Opera). However, the one thing that kept me tied to FF was
> Firebug; I can't work without it. I am now trying to use Web Inspector
> (I've used it in Opera before) and it almost matches feature to feature as
> far as my workflow goes.
>
> But I do have one big problem with WI in rekonq; it does not *highlight
> elements on a page* when the mouse is hovered over the element's node in
> the DOM inspector. This is a big deal for me, as it has often helped me
> track down layout issues in my pages. I know Web Inpector can do this,
> because it did in Opera, and as far as I can tell in Safari it has the
> same behavior (http://www.codeofficer.com/gallery/image_full/75/). So this
> appears to be specific to rekonq.
>
> This is a very important feature to me personally, and I would think it
> would also be to anyone who uses rekonq for web development.
I need it, too. :)
Unfortunately, QtSoftware decided to drop support for this and wait for Qt
4.7.
It's quite annoying, I have to admit. We'll have this feature in rekonq 0.6
(first release based on Qt 4.7).
Well, that's certainly a disappointment. I may still need to fire up Firefox (is that a pun?) occasionally, but at least my normal browsing sessions will be in a lovely KDE browser. ;) Do you have any sources for your information? Mailing list post, bug report, etc? I'd like to stay informed on this. On Friday 19 February 2010 02:12:58 Zachary Klein wrote:
> https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=227547
>
>
>
>
>
> --- Comment #4 from Zachary Klein <zak silver-chalice com> 2010-02-19
> 02:12:57 --- Well, that's certainly a disappointment. I may still need to
> fire up Firefox (is that a pun?) occasionally, but at least my normal
> browsing sessions will be in a lovely KDE browser. ;)
>
> Do you have any sources for your information? Mailing list post, bug
> report, etc? I'd like to stay informed on this.
I'll provide you some links ASAP. in the meanwhile just search google for
WebInspector QWebPage integration.
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