lkintact 2020-07-31 16:52:58 +03:00
parent c7c5ea046c
commit 755fb35a58
1 changed files with 3 additions and 3 deletions

@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ _Procedural_ means javascript code is used to find DOM elements which must be hi
#### Important:
1. Procedural filters must always be specific, i.e. prefixed with the hostname of the site(s) on which they are meant to apply<sup>[[exception](https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/Advanced-settings#allowgenericproceduralfilters)]</sup>. If a procedural cosmetic filter is generic, i.e. meant to apply everywhere, it will be discarded by uBO. Examples: Good, because specific: `example.com##body > div:has-text(Sponsored)`. Bad, because generic: `##body > div:has-text(Sponsored)`. The element picker always prefix automatically with the hostname to ensure created cosmetic filters are specific.
1. Procedural filters must always be specific, i.e. prefixed with the hostname of the site(s) on which they are meant to apply<sup>[[exception](https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/Advanced-settings#allowgenericproceduralfilters)]</sup>. If a procedural cosmetic filter is generic, i.e. meant to apply everywhere, it will be discarded by uBO. Examples: Good, because specific: `example.com##body > div:has-text(Sponsored)`. Bad, because generic: `##body > div:has-text(Sponsored)`. The element picker always prefixes the filter automatically with the hostname to ensure created cosmetic filters are specific.
1. Efficient procedural cosmetic filters (or any cosmetic filters really) are the ones which result in the smallest set of nodes to visit. The element picker input field will display the number of elements matching the current filter. The element picker will only consider the entered text up to the first line break, while leaving the rest as is. You can use this feature to break up your filter to find out the size of the resultset of the first part(s) of your filter: the smallest resultset the most efficient is your cosmetic filter.
@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ Introduced in uBO 1.17.5b9 to increase compatibility with AdGuard filter syntax.
Use to negate other procedural selectors. For example `:not(:has(.foo))` will match if there are no descendant matching `.foo`.
Note that if _arg_ is valid CSS selector, uBO will not consider the `:not` operator to be a procedural one, it will rather consider the operator as being part of a CSS selector. Thus this ensure compatibility with the existing
Note that if _arg_ is valid CSS selector, uBO will not consider the `:not` operator to be a procedural one, it will rather consider the operator as being part of a CSS selector. Thus this ensures compatibility with the existing
[CSS `:not(...)` pseudo-class](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/:not).
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@ -189,4 +189,4 @@ By default hiding by procedural filters is reevaluated only when nodes in sub-tr
- Examples:
- `facebook.com##:xpath(//div[@id="stream_pagelet"]//div[starts-with(@id,"hyperfeed_story_id_")][.//h6//span/text()="People You May Know"])`
The `:xpath(...)` operator is different than other operators. Whereas all other operators are used to filter down a resultset of elements, the `:xpath(...)` operator can be used both to create a new resultset or filter down an existing one. For this reason, _subject_ is optional. For example, an `:xpath(...)` operator could be use to create a new resultset consisting of all ancestors elements of a subject element, something not otherwise possible with either plain CSS selectors or other procedural operators.
The `:xpath(...)` operator is different than other operators. Whereas all other operators are used to filter down a resultset of elements, the `:xpath(...)` operator can be used both to create a new resultset or filter down an existing one. For this reason, _subject_ is optional. For example, an `:xpath(...)` operator could be used to create a new resultset consisting of all ancestors elements of a subject element, something not otherwise possible with either plain CSS selectors or other procedural operators.