I'd like to dynamically change some of the standard JS DOM objects from within a web browser.
For instance, when I execute:
var site = location;
I want to specify a new value for my browser's "window.location" object other than the "correct" one (the URL used to access the requested page) at run time, either through a debugger-like interface or even programmatically if need be.
Although Firebug advertises the capability to do something similar via its "DOM Inspector," whenever I try to modify any of the DOM values while I've paused the Javascript via its debugger, it simply ignores the new value I enter. After doing some research, it seems that this is a known issue according to this bug report: http://code.google.com/p/fbug/issues/detail?id=1707 .
Theoretically, I could write a program to simply open up an HTTP socket and emulate a browser "user agent," but this seems like a lot of trouble for my purposes. While I'm asking, does anyone know a good Java/C# library with functions/objects that emulate HTTP headers and parse the received HTML/JS? I've long dreamt about the existence of such a library but most of the ones I've tried (Java's Apache HttpClient, C#'s System.Net.HttpWebRequest) are far too low-level to make anything worthwhile with minimal planning and a short period of time.
Thanks in advance for recommendations and advice you can provide!