I'm writing some scripts that are using the HTML 5 file API in FireFox 3.6. I got some deflated (compressed) files, and I need to inflate (uncompress) them.
I found a few scripts while googling, but none of them have tests. So I'm a bit reluctant to use them.
My question is: Browsers can inflate. Can I somehow piggyback on the inflation by forging A XHR request? Or piggyback in any other way? Keep in mind, the script is currently FireFox 3.6 exclusive. It can't be an extension, though, I want it to be a regular webpage.
Alternatively, are there any scripts that you know of that has tests written for it?
I found an existing library. Wrote a test. Wrapped it in a function so that it didn't pollute the global namespace, that's about it.
Update of my post is: http://pastie.org/1588170
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I use DEFLATE encoder and decoder implementation in Javascript at http://github.com/dankogai/js-deflate
I use Google's V8 Javascript engine (url ) on server side to run Javascript code which I run on client side in web browser.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2171875/javascript-inflate-implementation-possibly-ff-3-6-only