Close Twitter tab after tweet - mobile - twitter

Is there a way to close a Twitter tab/window after a successful tweet on mobile? I need it to close a) to go back to my site b) to record the callback
When I use the following it works perfectly on a desktop device, the Twitter window closes when tweet is sent, but on mobile it does not.
I will add that I do a similar thing for Facebook and it works perfectly and closes itself after a successful post.
Here's what I'm using:
Tweet
// twitter set up
window.twttr = (function (d,s,id) {
var t, js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js=d.createElement(s); js.id=id;
js.src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
return window.twttr || (t = { _e: [], ready: function(f){ t._e.push(f) } });
}(document, "script", "twitter-wjs"));
// twitter callback
twttr.ready(function (twttr) {
twttr.events.bind('tweet', function (event) {
console.log("Tweet successful");
});
});

I've found an answer to this so posting in case anyone has same problem.
The answer is you can't (as of 24th March 2015), it's a few different forces at work preventing it apparently.
More information here from Twitter

Related

hide browser back button after user gets logout [duplicate]

I am doing an online quiz application in PHP. I want to restrict the user from going back in an exam.
I have tried the following script, but it stops my timer.
What should I do?
The timer is stored in file cdtimer.js.
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack()
{
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
<body onLoad="noBack();" onpageshow="if (event.persisted) noBack();" onUnload="">
I have the exam timer which takes a duration for the exam from a MySQL value. The timer starts accordingly, but it stops when I put the code in for disabling the back button. What is my problem?
There are numerous reasons why disabling the back button will not really work. Your best bet is to warn the user:
window.onbeforeunload = function() { return "Your work will be lost."; };
This page does list a number of ways you could try to disable the back button, but none are guaranteed:
http://www.irt.org/script/311.htm
It is generally a bad idea overriding the default behavior of the web browser. A client-side script does not have the sufficient privilege to do this for security reasons.
There are a few similar questions asked as well,
How can I prevent the backspace key from navigating back?
How can I prevent the browser's default history back action for the backspace button with JavaScript?
You can-not actually disable the browser back button. However, you can do magic using your logic to prevent the user from navigating back which will create an impression like it is disabled. Here is how - check out the following snippet.
(function (global) {
if(typeof (global) === "undefined") {
throw new Error("window is undefined");
}
var _hash = "!";
var noBackPlease = function () {
global.location.href += "#";
// Making sure we have the fruit available for juice (^__^)
global.setTimeout(function () {
global.location.href += "!";
}, 50);
};
global.onhashchange = function () {
if (global.location.hash !== _hash) {
global.location.hash = _hash;
}
};
global.onload = function () {
noBackPlease();
// Disables backspace on page except on input fields and textarea..
document.body.onkeydown = function (e) {
var elm = e.target.nodeName.toLowerCase();
if (e.which === 8 && (elm !== 'input' && elm !== 'textarea')) {
e.preventDefault();
}
// Stopping the event bubbling up the DOM tree...
e.stopPropagation();
};
}
})(window);
This is in pure JavaScript, so it would work in most of the browsers. It would also disable the backspace key, but that key will work normally inside input fields and textarea.
Recommended Setup:
Place this snippet in a separate script and include it on a page where you want this behavior. In the current setup it will execute the onload event of the DOM which is the ideal entry point for this code.
Working DEMO!
It was tested and verified in the following browsers,
Chrome.
Firefox.
Internet Explorer (8-11) and Edge.
Safari.
I came across this, needing a solution which worked correctly and "nicely" on a variety of browsers, including Mobile Safari (iOS 9 at time of posting). None of the solutions were quite right. I offer the following (tested on Internet Explorer 11, Firefox, Chrome, and Safari):
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function (event)
{
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
});
Note the following:
history.forward() (my old solution) does not work on Mobile Safari --- it seems to do nothing (i.e., the user can still go back). history.pushState() does work on all of them.
the third argument to history.pushState() is a url. Solutions which pass a string like 'no-back-button' or 'pagename' seem to work OK, until you then try a Refresh/Reload on the page, at which point a "Page not found" error is generated when the browser tries to locate a page with that as its URL. (The browser is also likely to include that string in the address bar when on the page, which is ugly.) location.href should be used for the URL.
the second argument to history.pushState() is a title. Looking around the web most places say it is "not used", and all the solutions here pass null for that. However, in Mobile Safari at least, that puts the page's URL into the history dropdown the user can access. But when it adds an entry for a page visit normally, it puts in its title, which is preferable. So passing document.title for that results in the same behaviour.
<script>
window.location.hash = "no-back-button";
// Again because Google Chrome doesn't insert
// the first hash into the history
window.location.hash = "Again-No-back-button";
window.onhashchange = function(){
window.location.hash = "no-back-button";
}
</script>
For restricting the browser back event:
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
window.onpopstate = function () {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
};
This code will disable the back button for modern browsers which support the HTML5 History API. Under normal circumstances, pushing the back button goes back one step, to the previous page. If you use history.pushState(), you start adding extra sub-steps to the current page. The way it works is, if you were to use history.pushState() three times, then start pushing the back button, the first three times it would navigate back in these sub-steps, and then the fourth time it would go back to the previous page.
If you combine this behaviour with an event listener on the popstate event, you can essentially set up an infinite loop of sub-states. So, you load the page, push a sub-state, then hit the back button, which pops a sub-state and also pushes another one, so if you push the back button again it will never run out of sub-states to push. If you feel that it's necessary to disable the back button, this will get you there.
history.pushState(null, null, 'no-back-button');
window.addEventListener('popstate', function(event) {
history.pushState(null, null, 'no-back-button');
});
How to block coming backwards functionality:
history.pushState(null, null, location.href);
window.onpopstate = function () {
history.go(1);
};
None of the most-upvoted answers worked for me in Chrome 79. It looks like Chrome changed its behavior with respect to the Back button after version 75. See here:
https://support.google.com/chrome/thread/8721521?hl=en
However, in that Google thread, the answer provided by Azrulmukmin Azmi at the very end did work. This is his solution.
<script>
history.pushState(null, document.title, location.href);
history.back();
history.forward();
window.onpopstate = function () {
history.go(1);
};
</script>
The problem with Chrome is that it doesn't trigger onpopstate event
unless you make browser action ( i.e. call history.back). That's why
I've added those to script.
I don't entirely understand what he wrote, but apparently an additional history.back() / history.forward() is now required for blocking Back in Chrome 75+.
React
For modal component in React project, the open or close of the modal, controlling browser back is a necessary action.
The stopBrowserBack: the stop of the browser back button functionality, also get a callback function. This callback function is what you want to do:
const stopBrowserBack = callback => {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
window.onpopstate = () => {
window.history.pushState(null, "", window.location.href);
callback();
};
};
The startBrowserBack: the revival of the browser back button functionality:
const startBrowserBack = () => {
window.onpopstate = undefined;
window.history.back();
};
The usage in your project:
handleOpenModal = () =>
this.setState(
{ modalOpen: true },
() => stopBrowserBack(this.handleCloseModal)
);
handleCloseModal = () =>
this.setState(
{ modalOpen: false },
startBrowserBack
);
This is the way I could it accomplish it.
Weirdly, changing window.location didn't work out fine in Google Chrome and Safari.
It happens that location.hash doesn't create an entry in the history for Chrome and Safari. So you will have to use the pushstate.
This is working for me in all browsers.
history.pushState({ page: 1 }, "title 1", "#nbb");
window.onhashchange = function (event) {
window.location.hash = "nbb";
};
history.pushState(null, null, document.URL);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, document.URL);
});
This JavaScript code does not allow any user to go back (works in Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and Edge).
This article on jordanhollinger.com is the best option I feel. Similar to Razor's answer but a bit clearer. Code below; full credits to Jordan Hollinger:
Page before:
<a href="/page-of-no-return.htm#no-back>You can't go back from the next page</a>
Page of no return's JavaScript:
// It works without the History API, but will clutter up the history
var history_api = typeof history.pushState !== 'undefined'
// The previous page asks that it not be returned to
if ( location.hash == '#no-back' ) {
// Push "#no-back" onto the history, making it the most recent "page"
if ( history_api ) history.pushState(null, '', '#stay')
else location.hash = '#stay'
// When the back button is pressed, it will harmlessly change the url
// hash from "#stay" to "#no-back", which triggers this function
window.onhashchange = function() {
// User tried to go back; warn user, rinse and repeat
if ( location.hash == '#no-back' ) {
alert("You shall not pass!")
if ( history_api ) history.pushState(null, '', '#stay')
else location.hash = '#stay'
}
}
}
<html>
<head>
<title>Disable Back Button in Browser - Online Demo</title>
<style type="text/css">
body, input {
font-family: Calibri, Arial;
}
</style>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="noBack();" onpageshow="if (event.persisted) noBack();" onunload="">
<H2>Demo</H2>
<p>This page contains the code to avoid Back button.</p>
<p>Click here to Goto NoBack Page</p>
</body>
</html>
This code was tested with the latest Chrome and Firefox browsers.
<script type="text/javascript">
history.pushState(null, null, location.href);
history.back();
history.forward();
window.onpopstate = function () { history.go(1); };
</script>
Try it with ease:
history.pushState(null, null, document.title);
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, document.title);
});
You can just put a small script and then check. It won't allow you to visit previous page.
This is done in JavaScript.
<script type="text/javascript">
function preventbackbutton() { window.history.forward(); }
setTimeout("preventbackbutton()", 0);
window.onunload = function () { null };
</script>
The window.onunload function fires when you try to visit back or previous page through browser.
Very simple and clean function to break the back arrow without interfering with the page afterward.
Benefits:
Loads instantaneously and restores original hash, so the user isn't distracted by URL visibly changing.
The user can still exit by pressing back 10 times (that's a good thing), but not accidentally
No user interference like other solutions using onbeforeunload
It only runs once and doesn't interfere with further hash manipulations in case you use that to track state
Restores original hash, so almost invisible.
Uses setInterval, so it doesn't break slow browsers and always works.
Pure JavaScript, does not require HTML5 history, works everywhere.
Unobtrusive, simple, and plays well with other code.
Does not use unbeforeunload which interrupts user with modal dialog.
It just works without fuss.
Note: some of the other solutions use onbeforeunload. Please do not use onbeforeunload for this purpose, which pops up a dialog whenever users try to close the window, hit backarrow, etc. Modals like onbeforeunload are usually only appropriate in rare circumstances, such as when they've actually made changes on screen and haven't saved them, not for this purpose.
How It Works
Executes on page load
Saves your original hash (if one is in the URL).
Sequentially appends #/noop/{1..10} to the hash
Restores the original hash
That's it. No further messing around, no background event monitoring, nothing else.
Use It In One Second
To deploy, just add this anywhere on your page or in your JavaScript code:
<script>
/* Break back button */
window.onload = function(){
var i = 0;
var previous_hash = window.location.hash;
var x = setInterval(function(){
i++;
window.location.hash = "/noop/" + i;
if (i==10){
clearInterval(x);
window.location.hash = previous_hash;
}
}, 10);
}
</script>
In a modern browser this seems to work:
// https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/History_API
let popHandler = () => {
if (confirm('Go back?')) {
window.history.back()
} else {
window.history.forward()
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('popstate', popHandler, {once: true})
}, 50) // delay needed since the above is an async operation for some reason
}
}
window.addEventListener('popstate', popHandler, {once: true})
window.history.pushState(null,null,null)
I had this problem with React (class component).
And I solved it easily:
componentDidMount() {
window.addEventListener("popstate", e => {
this.props.history.goForward();
}
}
I've used HashRouter from react-router-dom.
You simply cannot and should not do this. However, this might be helpful:
<script type = "text/javascript" >
history.pushState(null, null, 'pagename');
window.addEventListener('popstate', function(event) {
history.pushState(null, null, 'pagename');
});
</script>
This works in my Google Chrome and Firefox.
This seems to have worked for us in disabling the back button on the browser, as well as the backspace button taking you back.
history.pushState(null, null, $(location).attr('href'));
window.addEventListener('popstate', function () {
history.pushState(null, null, $(location).attr('href'));
});
Just run code snippet right away and try going back
history.pushState(null, null, window.location.href);
history.back();
window.onpopstate = () => history.forward();
<script src="~/main.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
window.history.forward();
function noBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
</script>
Try this to prevent the backspace button in Internet Explorer which by default acts as "Back":
<script language="JavaScript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$(document).unbind('keydown').bind('keydown', function (event) {
var doPrevent = false;
if (event.keyCode === 8 ) {
var d = event.srcElement || event.target;
if ((d.tagName.toUpperCase() === 'INPUT' &&
(
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'TEXT' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'PASSWORD' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'FILE' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'EMAIL' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'SEARCH' ||
d.type.toUpperCase() === 'DATE' )
) ||
d.tagName.toUpperCase() === 'TEXTAREA') {
doPrevent = d.readOnly || d.disabled;
}
else {
doPrevent = true;
}
}
if (doPrevent) {
event.preventDefault();
}
try {
document.addEventListener('keydown', function (e) {
if ((e.keyCode === 13)) {
//alert('Enter keydown');
e.stopPropagation();
e.preventDefault();
}
}, true);
}
catch (err) {
}
});
});
</script>
It's basically assigning the window's "onbeforeunload" event along with the ongoing document 'mouseenter' / 'mouseleave' events so the alert only triggers when clicks are outside the document scope (which then could be either the back or forward button of the browser)
$(document).on('mouseenter', function(e) {
window.onbeforeunload = null;
}
);
$(document).on('mouseleave', function(e) {
window.onbeforeunload = function() { return "You work will be lost."; };
}
);
Just set location.hash="Something". On pressing the back button, the hash will get removed from the URL, but the page won't go back.
This method is good for preventing going back accidentally, but for security purposes you should design your backend for preventing reanswering.
Some of the solutions here will not prevent a back event from occurring - they let a back event happen (and data held about the page in the browsers memory is lost) and then they play a forward event to try and hide the fact that a back event just happened. Which is unsuccessful if the page held transient state.
I wrote this solution for React (when react router is not being used), which is based on vrfvr's answer.
It will truly stop the back button from doing anything unless the user confirms a popup:
const onHashChange = useCallback(() => {
const confirm = window.confirm(
'Warning - going back will cause you to loose unsaved data. Really go back?',
);
window.removeEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
if (confirm) {
setTimeout(() => {
window.history.go(-1);
}, 1);
} else {
window.location.hash = 'no-back';
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
}, 1);
}
}, []);
useEffect(() => {
window.location.hash = 'no-back';
setTimeout(() => {
window.addEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
}, 1);
return () => {
window.removeEventListener('hashchange', onHashChange);
};
}, []);
I create one HTML page (index.html). I also create a one (mechanism.js) inside a script folder / directory. Then, I lay all my content inside of (index.html) using form, table, span, and div tags as needed. Now, here's the trick that will make back / forward do nothing!
First, the fact that you have only one page! Second, the use of JavaScript with span / div tags to hide and display content on the same page when needed via regular links!
Inside 'index.html':
<td width="89px" align="right" valign="top" style="letter-spacing:1px;">
<small>
<b>
IN
</b>
</small>
[ <span id="inCountSPN">0</span> ]
</td>
Inside 'mechanism.js':
function DisplayInTrafficTable()
{
var itmsCNT = 0;
var dsplyIn = "";
for (i=0; i<inTraffic.length; i++)
{
dsplyIn += "<tr><td width='11'></td><td align='right'>" + (++itmsCNT) + "</td><td width='11'></td><td><b>" + inTraffic[i] + "</b></td><td width='11'></td><td>" + entryTimeArray[i] + "</td><td width='11'></td><td>" + entryDateArray[i] + "</td><td width='11'></td></tr>";
}
document.getElementById('inOutSPN').innerHTML =
"" +
"<table border='0' style='background:#fff;'><tr><th colspan='21' style='background:#feb;padding:11px;'><h3 style='margin-bottom:-1px;'>INCOMING TRAFFIC REPORT</h3>" +
DateStamp() +
" - <small><a href='#' style='letter-spacing:1px;' onclick='OpenPrintableIn();'>PRINT</a></small></th></tr><tr style='background:#eee;'><td></td><td><b>###</b></td><td></td><td><b>ID #</b></td><td></td><td width='79'><b>TYPE</b></td><td></td><td><b>FIRST</b></td><td></td><td><b>LAST</b></td><td></td><td><b>PLATE #</b></td><td></td><td><b>COMPANY</b></td><td></td><td><b>TIME</b></td><td></td><td><b>DATE</b></td><td></td><td><b>IN / OUT</b></td><td></td></tr>" +
dsplyIn.toUpperCase() +
"</table>" +
"";
return document.getElementById('inOutSPN').innerHTML;
}
It looks hairy, but note the function names and calls, embedded HTML, and the span tag id calls. This was to show how you can inject different HTML into same span tag on same page! How can Back/Forward affect this design? It cannot, because you are hiding objects and replacing others all on the same page!
How can we hide and display? Here goes:
Inside functions in ' mechanism.js ' as needed, use:
document.getElementById('textOverPic').style.display = "none"; //hide
document.getElementById('textOverPic').style.display = ""; //display
Inside ' index.html ' call functions through links:
<img src="images/someimage.jpg" alt="" />
<span class="textOverPic" id="textOverPic"></span>
and
Introduction
In my case this was a shopping order. So I disabled the button. When the user clicked back, the button was disabled still. When they clicked back one more time, and then clicked a page button to go forward. I knew their order was submitted and skipped to another page.
In the case when the page actually refreshed which would make the button (theoretically), available; I was then able to react in the page load that the order was already submitted and redirected then too.
This code is full javascript.
Put this on your home page or whatever you need when someon goes back it brings them to the page they were previously on.
<script type="text/javascript">
function preventBack() {
window.history.forward();
}
setTimeout("preventBack()", 0);
window.onunload = function () { null };
</script>

Google+ customizing the sign-in button

When I use the built-in Google+ sign-in button, everything works as expected. The OAuth call to Google is made in the popup, the user accepts or cancels, then the callback is called.
When I try to customize my button using the example gapi.signin.render method, the Google call is made but the callback is called immediately.
I am a server-side developer trying to provide a POC for the front-end developers. I only know enough Javascript to be dangerous. Can someone tell me why the gapi.signin.render method is making an asynchronous call to the authorization, which makes the callback get called before the user has clicked anything in the popup? In the alternative, please help me correct the code in the 2nd example below to effect the callback being called only after the user clicks Accept/Cancel in the OAuth Google window. In the second alternative, please tell me how I can change the text of the built-in Google+ sign-in button.
The code that works (built-in, non-customizable Google+ sign-in button):
<SCRIPT TYPE="text/javascript">
/**
* Asynchronously load the Google Javascript file.
*/
(
function() {
var po = document.createElement( 'script' );
po.type = 'text/javascript';
po.async = true;
po.src = 'https://apis.google.com/js/client:plusone.js?onload=googleLoginCallback';
var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[ 0 ];
s.parentNode.insertBefore( po, s );
}
)();
function googleLoginCallback( authResult ) {
alert( "googleLoginCallback(authResult): Inside." );
}
</SCRIPT>
<DIV ID="googleLoginButton" CLASS="show">
<DIV
CLASS="g-signin"
data-accesstype="online"
data-approvalprompt="auto"
data-callback="googleLoginCallback"
data-clientid="[Google Client Id].apps.googleusercontent.com"
data-cookiepolicy="single_host_origin"
data-height="tall"
data-requestvisibleactions="http://schemas.google.com/AddActivity"
data-scope="https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email"
data-theme="dark"
data-width="standard">
</DIV>
</DIV>
The gapi.signin.render code that does not work:
<SCRIPT TYPE="text/javascript">
/**
* Asynchronously load the Google Javascript file.
*/
(
function() {
var po = document.createElement( 'script' );
po.type = 'text/javascript';
po.async = true;
po.src = 'https://apis.google.com/js/client:plusone.js?onload=myGoogleButtonRender';
var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[ 0 ];
s.parentNode.insertBefore( po, s );
}
)();
function myGoogleButtonRender( authResult ) {
gapi.signin.render( 'myGoogleButton', {
'accesstype': 'online',
'approvalprompt': 'auto',
'callback': 'googleLoginCallback',
'clientid': '[Google Client Id].apps.googleusercontent.com',
'cookiepolicy': 'single_host_origin',
'height': 'tall',
'requestvisibleactions': 'http://schemas.google.com/AddActivity',
'scope': 'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email',
'theme': 'dark',
'width': 'standard'
});
}
function googleLoginCallback( authResult ) {
alert( "googleLoginCallback(authResult): Inside." );
}
</SCRIPT>
<button id="myGoogleButton">Register with Google+</button>
I figured out why the code was not working for a custom button. I had the button defined within a Struts 2 form. Apparently, in lieu of the traditional Chain of Responsibility pattern, where the click event is handled by one processor, both the Struts form and the Google API were processing the click. So, what I thought was a failure of the Google gapi.signin.render call making an asynchronous call to the callback, it was the Struts form trying to submit.
To fix it, you can:
Move the button outside of the Struts form (not very elegant)
Add "onclick="return false;" clause to the button
<button id="myGoogleButton" onclick="return false;">Register with Google+</button>
Wrap the "button" in a DIV like:
<DIV ID="myGoogleButton">
<SPAN CLASS="zocial googleplus">Register with Google+</SPAN>
</DIV>
I hope this fixes someone else's problem. I spent 9 days trying to figure this out.

FB redirect issue with white page in iOS chrome

When I press the login button I get the facebook page where I have to give permission to use my facebook account.
After I give permission, it redirects to https://www.facebook.com/dialog/permissions.request and a blank page is shown. On Android the "window.FB.login" callback is called (see code below) where I can get the info and redirect the user but on Windows Phone it only shows that blank page. When I go to my facebook page, my site is registered in the app list. So the registration did work correctly.
This error has been caused due to unsafe loading of facebook js file.
For integrating Facebook app in your application you have to follow the steps instructed in Facebook app documentation.
var fbApi = {
init: function () {
$.getScript(document.location.protocol + '//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js', function () {
if (window.FB) {
window.FB.init({
appId: MY_APP_ID,
status: true,
cookie: true,
xfbml: false,
oauth: true,
channelUrl: 'http://www.yourdomain.com/channel.html'
});
}
});
},
login: function () {
/// <summary>
/// Login facebook button clicked
/// </summary>
log("login facebook button clicked");
if (window.FB) {
//Windows phone does not enter this method, Android and Iphone do
window.FB.login(function (response) {
if (response.status) {
log('it means the user has allowed to communicate with facebook');
fbAccessToken = response.authResponse.accessToken;
window.FB.api('/me', function (response) {
//get information of the facebook user.
loginService.subscribeSocialUser(response.id, response.first_name, response.last_name, fbAccessToken, "", "FaceBook", fbSucces, fbFail);
});
} else {
log('User cancelled login or did not fully authorize.');
}
},
{ scope: 'email'
});
}
}
};
channel URL is added so as to resolve any cross browser issues.
It should point to an html file which refers to the js as follows:
<script src="//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js"></script>
If once an error has been hit while initializing Facebook.js, you will not be able to login successfully.
You can load java script either synchronously or asynchronously.
(function(d, debug){
var js, id = 'facebook-jssdk', ref = d.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) {return;}
js = d.createElement('script'); js.id = id; js.async = true;
js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all" + (debug ? "/debug" : "") + ".js";
ref.parentNode.insertBefore(js, ref);
}(document, /*debug*/ false));

Injecting Facebook JS SDK into AngularJS Controllers

I'm trying to create a facebook service for Angular so I can more easily test code that needs to use the Facebook JS SDK and Graph API for stuff.
Here's what I have so far:
app.factory('facebook', function() {
return FB;
});
window.fbAsyncInit = function () {
FB.init({
appId: 'SOME_APP_ID_HERE', // App ID
status: true, // check login status
cookie: true, // enable cookies to allow the server to access the session
xfbml: true, // parse XFBML
oauth: true
});
};
// Load the SDK Asynchronously
(function (d) {
var js, id = 'facebook-jssdk', ref = d.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) { return; }
js = d.createElement('script'); js.id = id; js.async = true;
js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js";
ref.parentNode.insertBefore(js, ref);
})(document);
Now, I know that the actual Facebook SDK part is working... but in my controller the reference is always null.
in my controller I just have something like this:
function FooCtrl($scope, facebook) {
facebook.getLoginStatus(function(response) {
if (response.status === 'connected') {
var uid = response.authResponse.userID;
var accessToken = response.authResponse.accessToken;
// do something
} else if (response.status === 'not_authorized') {
// the user is logged in to Facebook,
// but has not authenticated your app
} else {
// the user isn't logged in to Facebook.
}
});
}
Angular then gripes that it can't find a facebookProvider. Any ideas on how I can accomplish this?
Enclose your factory function with array brackets like below
app.factory('facebook', [function() {
return FB;
}]);
API docs are not clear enough. Point of having array brackets is that you can specify dependencies. It will be injected on creation of your service with AUTO.$inject. But since you don't have dependencies it will skip that task :)
Anyway, if you need dependencies you can request them like this
app.factory('facebook', ["$log", function($someCrazyLoggerService){
$someCrazyLoggerService.log("I'm Auto Injected crazy Logger");
}]);
you should take a look at this Facebook module I wrote.
First use the FacebookProvider on your app config call, something as FacebookProvider.init('yourFacebookAppIdHere');, you could also configure other settings too, and then on your controllers use the Facebook service and register to events and call methods asyncrhonously ;)
https://github.com/ciul/angularjs-facebook

Callback after posting message to Twitter [duplicate]

This question already has an answer here:
After successful tweet, execute the callback + Twitter
(1 answer)
Closed 4 years ago.
I am posting messgae to twiter via link:
http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?source=webclient&text=Hello
I am interested in if it is possible to be redirected to some url after posting message? For example Facebook has "redirect_uri" parameter added to the URL. User is redirected to this URL after the meesage is posted on the wall.
You can use events binding for Web Intents to redirect to a url after tweeting.
window.twttr = (function (d,s,id) {
var t, js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js=d.createElement(s); js.id=id;
js.src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
return window.twttr || (t = { _e: [], ready: function(f){ t._e.push(f) } });
}(document, "script", "twitter-wjs"));
twttr.ready(function (twttr) {
twttr.events.bind('tweet', function (event) { //redirect to your url } );
});
Following links might help :
https://dev.twitter.com/docs/intents/events#events
https://dev.twitter.com/discussions/671
According to the documentation, the tweet web intent does not have a parameter that allows the user to return to your website after the tweet is posted.
Most websites that I've seen present the web intent in a popup instead of sending the user away from their site.

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