From 4b612baf4f29178214edec130856d83a40bf473d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Einar Egilsson Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2011 22:53:16 +0200 Subject: Total restructuring of files and deletion of old files --- chrome/help.html | 182 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 182 insertions(+) create mode 100644 chrome/help.html (limited to 'chrome/help.html') diff --git a/chrome/help.html b/chrome/help.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4534d96 --- /dev/null +++ b/chrome/help.html @@ -0,0 +1,182 @@ + + + + Redirector Help + + + +

Redirector Help

+

Table of contents

+ + + + +

What is Redirector?

+ +

Redirector is an extension for Firefox that allows you to automatically redirect from + one webpage to another. For example, every time you visit http://abc.com you will automatically + load http://def.com instead. This can be useful for instance to always redirect articles to printer friendly + versions, redirect http:// to https:// for sites that support both, bypass advertising pages that appear before + being able to view certain pages and more.

+ + +

Basic usage

+

To add a new redirect you can go to the Tools menuitem and select Redirector. That will + open the Redirector settings window which shows all your redirects. The window can also be opened + by right clicking on the R icon in your statusbar. + There you can press the Add... button and then you can enter the details for the new redirect. A redirect + consists of a few things: +

+

+ + +

Wildcards

+ +

Wildcards are the simplest way to specify include and exclude patterns. When you create a wildcard pattern there + is just one special character, the asterisk *. An asterisk in your pattern will match zero or more characters and you can + have more than one star in your pattern. Some examples: +

+ $1, $2, $3 in the redirect urls will match the text that the stars matched. Examples: + +

+ + +

Regular expressions

+ +

Regular expressions allow for more complicated patterns but they are a lot harder to learn than wildcards. I'm not gonna + create a regex tutorial here but normal javascript regex syntax works, look at http://regular-expressions.info for + an introduction to regular expressions. $1,$2 etc. can be used in the redirect url and will be replaced with contents of captures in + the regular expressions. Captures are specified with parantheses. Example: http://example.com/index.asp\?id=(\d+) will match the url + http://example.com/index.asp?id=12345 and $1 will be replaced by 12345. (A common mistake in regex patterns is to forget to escape + the ? sign in the querystring of the url. ? is a special character in regular expressions so if you want to match an url with a querystring + you should escape it as \?).

+ + +

Examples

+ +
    +
  1. + Static redirect
    + Redirects from http://example.com/foo to http://example.com/bar +

    + Include pattern: http://example.com/foo
    + Exclude pattern:
    + Redirect to: http://example.com/bar
    + Pattern type: Wildcard
    +

    + +
  2. +
  3. + Redirect using query string parameter and wildcards
    + Redirects from http://example.com/index.php?id=12345&a=b to http://example.com/printerfriendly.php?id=12345&a=b + where 12345 could be any number. +

    + Include pattern: http://example.com/index.php?id=*&a=b
    + Exclude pattern:
    + Redirect to: http://example.com/printerfriendly.com?id=$1&a=b
    + Pattern type: Wildcard
    +

    +
  4. +
  5. + Redirect using query string parameter and regular expressions
    + Redirects from http://example.com/index.php?id=12345&a=b to http://example.com/printerfriendly.php?id=12345&a=b + where 12345 could be any number. +

    + Include pattern: http://example.com/index.php\?id=(\d+)&a=b
    + Exclude pattern:
    + Redirect to: http://example.com/printerfriendly.com?id=$1&a=b
    + Pattern type: Regular Expression
    +

    +
  6. +
  7. + Redirect to a different folder using wildcards
    + Redirects from http://example.com/category/fish/index.php to http://example.com/category/cats/index.php + where fish could be any word. The exclude pattern makes sure that there is only one + folder there, so for instance http://example.com/category/fish/cat/mouse/index.php would not match. +

    + Include pattern: http://example.com/category/*/index.php
    + Exclude pattern: http://example.com/category/*/*/index.php
    + Redirect to: http://example.com/category/cats/index.php
    + Pattern type: Wildcard
    +

    +
  8. +
  9. + Redirect http to https using wildcards
    + Redirects from http://mail.google.com/randomcharacters to https://mail.google.com/randomcharacters + where randomcharacters could be anything. +

    + Include pattern: http://mail.google.com*
    + Exclude pattern:
    + Redirect to: https://mail.google.com$1
    + Pattern type: Wildcard
    +

    +
  10. +
+ + \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2