The first time, each day, I try to access a web page at work, I get redirected to an internally hosted web page with the IT guidelines and a form with two buttons "Agree" and "Disagree". Clicking "Agree" then allows external internet access for that day and sends you to the site you were originally looking for.
I want to make a Greasemonkey script that auto-submits the form, since I already have a batch file starting up all my normal apps on boot and this would allow me to just leave the PC while it's doing its 20 minute daily start-up ;)
The page only has the one form:
<form method="post">
<input type="submit" value="I Agree" class="agree" onsubmit="submitonce(this)" />
<input type="button" onclick="javascript:window.close();" value="I Disagree"
class="disagree"/>
</form>
And not sure if it matters, since I only need the click, but the function submitonce
is:
function submitonce(theform) {
//if IE 4+ or NS 6+
console.log("Submitting");
if (document.all || document.getElementById) {
//screen thru every element in the form, and hunt down "submit" and "reset"
for (i = 0; i < theform.length; i++) {
var tempobj = theform.elements[i];
if (tempobj.type.toLowerCase() == "submit" ||
tempobj.type.toLowerCase() == "reset")
//disable em
tempobj.disabled = true;
}
}
}
I have the rest of the source, but it doesn't look like there is anything else relevant. I haven't really coded before in Greasemonkey/JS, so any help would be appreciated. I'm playing around with an existing userscript that uses CtrlEnter to click the button.
Obviously I don't care if it's a virtual "click" or just a trigger of the submit function, since I'd say they are the same thing aren't they?