A collection of helpful snippets to use inside of browser devtools.
View them all on a single page: http://bgrins.github.io/devtools-snippets/ or all of them inside of github. I have a more long winded article about snippets detailing why you might use them and additional features that would be nice, if you are interested.
If you have a useful snippet or updates to an existing one that you'd like to share, please contribute it or open an issue! Feel free to use, modify, or share any of these snippets.
Note: snippets are enabled by default in Chrome Canary and will be usable without changing your settings soon. You can read more about snippets at the Chrome developer tools documentation.
- Open Chrome.
- Navigate to
chrome://flags
->Enable Developer Tools experiments
. - Open Devtools ->
Settings
->Developer Tools Experiments
->Enable "Snippets support"
. - Close and reopen devtools.
- Open "Sources" panel.
- Go to "Snippets" tab, and add whichever ones you want.
Note: you can read more about scratchpad at the Firefox developers tools documentation.
- Open Firefox.
- Go to
Tools
>Web Developer
>Scratchpad
. - Copy/paste and Cmd-R / Ctrl-R to run.
File
>Save
, thenFile
>Open Recent
to reuse them.
Or, view all on a single page with code: http://bgrins.github.io/devtools-snippets/
Includes jQuery onto a page if it is not yet included.
Adds a log
function to window object.
Pretty prints the HTTP headers for the current page into the console. Uses console.table.
Convert all images on the page to data URLs. Note: this only works for images that are on the same domain as the current page.
Print out all colors from computed styles used in elements on the page. Uses styled console.log calls to visualize each color.
Print out information about the window.performance object. Uses console.table and grouping to organize the information.
Script for unminifying and prettifying a CSS file written by addyosmani and sindresorhus. View the cssprettifier-bookmarklet project on github.
Handy way to find the closest linkable element on a page. Run it, then click on an element, and it will give you the closest #link to that page.
Print a table of query string (GET) values. This can be helpful, especially when trying to read the values from a long or complicated URL that may otherwise need to be pasted into another editor to read. Implementation by mattpass.