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NeoGAF: Blacklists

Experimental blocking based on user-set blacklists

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey, Greasemonkey or Violentmonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey or Violentmonkey to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey or Userscripts to install this script.

You will need to install an extension such as Tampermonkey to install this script.

You will need to install a user script manager extension to install this script.

(I already have a user script manager, let me install it!)

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install an extension such as Stylus to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

You will need to install a user style manager extension to install this style.

(I already have a user style manager, let me install it!)

Fejlesztő
hateradio
Napi telepítések
0
Telepítések száma
24
Értékelések
0 0 0
Verzió
1.1
Létrehozva
2016.02.29.
Frissítve
2016.03.23.
Size
5 KB
Licensz
Ismeretlen
Érvényes

Experimental Blocking

You must manually modify the massBlock.set to add your blocking options. These require a CSS selector, an array of words or regular expressions to block, and a parent element to hide if that selector finds your blacklist text.

For example, to block posts from some users:

posts: { // block posts from these users
    selector: '.postbit-details-username a',
    parent: 'div.postbit',
    blacklist: ['user1', 'user2', 'etc-users'],
    type: 'Exact'
}

The type attribute defines whether the blocking has to match the blacklisted words exactly. There are three blocking methods: Exact, Simple, Complex.

Exact matches the selector's content with the blacklisted word. If the two are exactly the same, then it gets blocked. Complex uses regular expressions, while Simple tests that the blacklisted words are inside the selector's text. Simple is a lenient version of Exact: "something" will match the phrase "there is something here."