To accomplish this, it needed to be bundled up in a zip file, so
code to do that was added. (Quite possibly the zip will be able to
be renamed as an .xpi file to create the file needed for Firefox.
At the moment, you must extract this zip and "sideload" the extension
into Edge by selected the extracted folder. I read that Edge will
handle the packing into a single extension file itself.
Also, some of the features used in the extension had to be polyfilled
into Edge. And the final major change is that the "Xray" feature is
not available in Edge, so data passed from the content script to the
script injected into the page had to be moved from Xray to attributes
of the script element. This all represents more progress on #28,
Chrome(ium) is next.
Reviewed-on: #42
Co-authored-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>
Co-committed-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>
Turns on 3D viewing only for the constructions that use a 3D primitive, but loads the more extensive web3d bundle from the embedded GeoGebra package whenever any applet on the page uses 3d. (The idea is to only require the loading of one bundle per page.) Provides progress on #36.
Reviewed-on: #40
Co-authored-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>
Co-committed-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>
With this loaded in under the Firefox debugger, one can see linked WRL files and Java Geometry Applets on arbitrary web pages.
This represents significant progress on #28, but getting more controls and getting it to work in other browsers is still on deck.
Reviewed-on: #38
Co-authored-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>
Co-committed-by: Glen Whitney <glen@studioinfinity.org>