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Home/ Questions/Q 1055917
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T17:38:20+00:00 2026-05-16T17:38:20+00:00

A browser element has an onpopupshowing attribute, which is a string consisting of several

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A browser element has an onpopupshowing attribute, which is a string consisting of several javascript statements.

I want to “override” that bit of javascript.

Were this a function, I’d just assign it to a variable, assign my “overriding” function to the element attribute, and (if need be) call the original function from my overriding one, pretty much like this:

var oldfunc;
function myoverrridingfunc () { my statement; oldfunc(); my other statement; }

oldfunc = element.getAttribute( "onpopupshowing" )
element.setAttribute( "onpopupshowing", myoverrridingfunc );

but element.getAttribute( “onpopupshowing” ) isn’t a function, it’s a string.

I could use the Function object to turn the string into a function, but the string includes references to this. How do I preserve the right this?

What’s the best way of intercepting/overriding this bit of script? Note: this only needs to work in Firefox, not in any version of java/ECMAscript.

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T17:38:21+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 5:38 pm
    var oldfuncStr = element.getAttribute("onpopupshowing");
    element.removeAttribute("onpopupshowing");
    var oldfunc = new Function(oldfuncStr);
    element.addEventListener("popupshowing", function()
    {
      myStatement;
      oldfunc.call(this);
      otherStatement;
    }, false);
    

    call is specifically for specifying this. I tested in Firefox, but with onclick event rather than onpopupshowing.

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