8 reviews
- Rated 3 out of 5by phloo, 4 years agoCurrently broken on instagram.com. Until then it is one hell of great addon and helps a lot. But now it's useless for me.
- Rated 3 out of 5by NC, 5 years agoThis could be a 5 star extension, it is the best available for what it does. I do however wish I could manipulate more than 1 variable for the regex captures, for example to combine part of the :pagetitle: and part of the :pageurl: into a single filename. Currently it only works with one or the other, unless you don't customize the variable and take the whole mess to create one giant filename. Alternatively a regex replace option could offer the cleanup needed prior to saving. Also, if this extension could be triggered via javascript or an extension that would be amazing, would love to be able to use hotkeys to pass a resource url to Save-In... for acquisition.
- Rated 3 out of 5by mad_muffinz, 6 years agoIt won't save images with direct urls that don't end in the format type, such as ones from Twitter. Example:
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D8QhvV_UYAAlvAw?format=jpg&name=orig - Rated 3 out of 5by Firefox user 12529534, 6 years agoOptions in preferences disappear in Firefox 67 and hotkeys stop work. But plugin so good!
- Rated 3 out of 5by Marsu42, 6 years ago
- Rated 3 out of 5by alexg, 7 years agoneed a savelink extension functionality, since that one is dead (save url of the page as an .url file in a predefined directory with predefined filename pattern, with a single button click)
- Rated 3 out of 5by zakgj, 7 years agoFor saving out of the default (on Windows) you can use application called "Link Shell Extension" a graphical mklink install then on the target directory right click & chose "pick link source" then right click on default directory & chose "Drop As.." & chose symbolic link or Junction then you will have the target directory in the default directory & the directory name to "Save in" setting.
http://schinagl.priv.at/nt/hardlinkshellext/linkshellextension.html
You need Administrator right - Rated 3 out of 5by Firefox user 12086402, 7 years agoI have a lot of links like "download.php&id=1234". This extension saves all those links as file with "download.php" name. While FF itself honors Content-Disposition response header (filename parameter).
Developer response
posted 7 years agoThe addon is already checking for Content-Disposition, but not much can be done if the HEAD request for Content-Disposition fails. Actually hooking into Firefox's download filename has to wait until Firefox implements Chrome's onDeterminingFilename API.
Rewriting the filename might work as a stopgap.