Reviews for Autofill Forms
Autofill Forms by Benthum
12 reviews
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 14496582, 4 years agoAutofills forms when set up properly: I did "inspect element" to find the name of the input field I needed.
However, Alt-Shift-F opens the file menu rather than trigger the extension, and I don't know how to get around this. When speed matters, this is a bigger deal than if it doesn't matter. - Rated 4 out of 5by boulon, 5 years agoFine on Windows 10, but for some reasons it doesn't save any data on Android.
- Rated 4 out of 5by Md shohag, 6 years ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 14998133, 6 years ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 14651442, 6 years ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by Sindbad103, 6 years agoOnce configured, it works flawlessly.
Two disadvantages, though:
1. Login-Data are stored unencrypted.
2. No export function. You have to go the hard way and find the "storage.js" via Windows Explorer. - Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 14184582, 7 years agoReally great. Took me a bit to become familiar with the CSS Selectors. It would be extremely helpful if we were able to set up multiple profiles for each URL. Thanks
- Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 13847359, 7 years agoI like that the input rules are flexible enough to understand most web forms. The inputs are very similar to regular expressions. If you don't know what that means, this is not the form-filler for you.
What would give this 5-stars, is the ability to export form rules, AND support for multiple profiles (Home, work, School, etc).
The "Rules" window on the options page is too small. Even with a 24" monitor, I can't see more than 9 rules at a time because they are in a frame.
There is no way to sort or group rules. There might be several ways web designers chose to ask for state. I'd like to be able to put all the state rules together, for instance. - Rated 4 out of 5by Firefox user 13945354, 7 years agoIt's work good, but could you support multi-profile of rules? thx.
- Rated 4 out of 5by _duke_, 7 years agoWorks in 90% percents of cases, don't know why (will add an example later)
Quiet flexible: use any attribute of a DOM element to set "value" attribute.
Here is an example:
I'm trying to apply for a job on a game development studio website:
http://crytek.com/career/offers/overview/frankfurt/art-animation/junior-ui-artist
The form and DOM elements look like that:
https://monosnap.com/file/0jW46DvODCLTtKMeTNUGB2iUtqErWl
As you can see all the fields was filled successfully, except the "website".
Here is the selection row for such field:
input[name*='web'], input[name*='url'], input[name*='work'], input[name*='link'], input[name*='Portfolio'], input[name*='portfolio'], input[name*='Url'], input[name*='site']
Looks like "site" and and "link" should solve the problem. But it doesn't work at this particular form.