Alright then. As for the cache files, if I understand this correctly, I don't think those pages are necessarily traces of WebParser itself, but rather traces of browser history (Edge, Chrome, maybe WebView as well?). However, if by any chance the WebView environment (not the plugin) produces such traces and you can identify the names of those pages, you could parse them as local files in WebParser measures afterwards (i.e. after they're created and stored there). So, if WebView eventually gets you the webpage behind Cloudflare and it's temporarily stored in those IE cache locations, maybe you can parse the existing local file normally with WebParser. That will be up to you to see if it's feasible and can be done - I have no way of knowing such details on your system. Plus, you already have examples of how to parse local files, from what we've discussed until now. Image may be NSFW.For my purposes, it turns out that there is no point in continuing.
But I will think about other options.
For example, force a browser to cache data and read data from the disk cache.
I have not yet found such an opportunity with WebWiev. but at the same time I discovered in the IE cache all the weather pages with which the rainmeter works. Are these traces of webparser work?
Clik here to view.

Statistics: Posted by Yincognito — April 4th, 2024, 6:19 pm — Replies 105 — Views 57611