Removing a script element does not do anything. If you can somehow access a script element, it was executed a long time ago and removing it will have no effect.
So we need to work around it. If your script element is at the top of the page like this:
<head>
<script src="yourscript.js"></script>
You could make a synchronous ajax request to the same page, so you can parse its content into a new document, modify all script tags and then replace
the current document with the modified document.
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest,
content,
doc,
scripts;
xhr.open( "GET", document.URL, false );
xhr.send(null);
content = xhr.responseText;
doc = document.implementation.createHTMLDocument(""+(document.title || ""));
doc.open();
doc.write(content);
doc.close();
scripts = doc.getElementsByTagName("script");
//Modify scripts as you please
[].forEach.call( scripts, function( script ) {
script.removeAttribute("src");
script.innerHTML = 'alert("hello world");';
});
//Doing this will activate all the modified scripts and the "old page" will be gone as the document is replaced
document.replaceChild( document.importNode(doc.documentElement, true), document.documentElement);
Unfortunately this cannot be set up in jsfiddle or jsbin. But you should be able to copy paste this code exactly as it is into this
page's console in google chrome. You should see the alerts and when you inspect the live dom, each script was modified.
The difference is that we are running this after scripts have been executed on the page, so the old scripts should still have a working effect on the page.
That's why, for this to work, you need to be the very first script on the page to do it.
Tested to work in google chrome. Firefox is completely ignoring the doc.write
call for some reason.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…