In StackSnippets, the dropdown options (for jQuery, AngularJS etc.) are not available for most third-party scripted libraries or frameworks.
UPDATE: Ah. It turns out there is a button for third-party scripted libraries and frameworks. A button I never, ever noticed. Thank you for the heads up, @TylerH.
I referenced an external library in my stack snippet question by including an <iframe>
with a srcdoc
attribute, to which I added:
'<scr' + 'ipt>' + [... SCRIPT URL HERE...] + '</scr' + 'ipt>'
Is that an acceptable way of referencing an (unlisted) library or framework in a StackSnippet? Should I be able to do it that way?
My question concerns the question I posted in February and updated yesterday:
Is it possible to achieve this kind of presentation using conventional CSS?
The question refers to a CSS post-processor library I am developing called axe. The purpose of the question was to verify that the presentational effects I was delivering through axe selectors couldn't already be achieved via conventional CSS selectors (or even via still-theoretical CSS Level 4 syntax and / or selectors).
To ask the question properly I needed to show what axe could do. Since, when I originally posted I couldn't figure out how to access the axe.js inside a StackSnippet, I linked to an external page - which I recognise isn't ideal.
Then, yesterday, when I was answering another question about how to generate CSS Grid syntax:
Looking for CSS grid generator or configurator
I realised how I could include my axe example in a StackSnippet after all:
- Include an
<iframe>
with asrcdoc
attribute in the StackSnippet - Add a reference to the external
<script>
to thesrcdoc
attribute
The fact that I needed to break up <script>
into two strings ('<scr' + 'ipt>'
) made me wonder if I should even be doing it at all.
If the answer isn't:
Yes, that's very creative, Rounin, well done, you can include the axe library in your snippets via this method from now on.
my follow up question is:
Fair enough. I understand. In that case, how might I include the axe library in my snippets from now on (without including the entire axe.js inline)?
axe.js
(if it wasn't a security issue) as an external script is not really an MCVE.axe.js
.axe.js
, then how might I acceptably create an MCVE includingaxe.js
(in the same way that MCVEs can include jQuery)?axe.js
then that's fine, the actual code using the library will be in the stack snippet. If the question is about the behaviour ofaxe.js
itself then no, that's not an MCVE then.<iframe>
srcdoc
attribute (since the jQuery tickbox option is not available for most third-party scripted libraries or frameworks).<script src="path/to/axe.js"></script>
in the HTML section of the snippet?