Vanwege onderhoudswerkzaamheden die uw ervaring zouden moeten verbeteren, heeft deze website beperkte functionaliteit. Als een artikel uw probleem niet verhelpt en u een vraag wilt stellen, kan onze ondersteuningsgemeenschap u helpen in @FirefoxSupport op Twitter en /r/firefox op Reddit.

Zoeken in Support

Vermijd ondersteuningsscams. We zullen u nooit vragen een telefoonnummer te bellen, er een sms naar te sturen of persoonlijke gegevens te delen. Meld verdachte activiteit met de optie ‘Misbruik melden’.

Meer info

Deze conversatie is gearchiveerd. Stel een nieuwe vraag als u hulp nodig hebt.

How to force Firefox to remember a password?

  • 11 antwoorden
  • 5 hebben dit probleem
  • 229 weergaven
  • Laatste antwoord van Qrzysio

more options

Firefox help says "When you enter a username and password that you haven't already saved for a website, Firefox will ask if you want to save it. "

But it doesn't always. I want it to remember username/password for a particular website, but Firefox doesn't ask. I have "Ask to save logins and passwords for websites" checked, and the website is not on my saved logons list. Is there a way to force Firefox to remember the username/password for a particular site, perhaps by manually editing the saved logons list (where is it?)? Thanks.

Firefox help says "When you enter a username and password that you haven't already saved for a website, Firefox will ask if you want to save it. " But it doesn't always. I want it to remember username/password for a particular website, but Firefox doesn't ask. I have "Ask to save logins and passwords for websites" checked, and the website is not on my saved logons list. Is there a way to force Firefox to remember the username/password for a particular site, perhaps by manually editing the saved logons list (where is it?)? Thanks.

Gekozen oplossing

That login form consists of a few DIV elements with an input element (i.e. no FORM tag with a action). The input elements have an onclick handler (ajaxLogin) to the Enter and Submit action. Maybe that is why it doesn't work.

Dit antwoord in context lezen 👍 1

Alle antwoorden (11)

more options

Some websites prevent inputs from being saved or autocompleted. If the form element or the input field has the autocomplete attribute set to off, you can't save your credentials.

more options

I see - that's probably the problem. Thanks for the info.

more options

Current Firefox releases shouldn't obey autocomplete for quite some time (by default signon.storeWhenAutocompleteOff = true), so it is likely that something else is causing this. It might either be that Firefox has a problem with recognizing the login form or there is some script active that modifies the login form or otherwise transfers form data to other fields.

more options

OK, again thanks. FWIW, I've tried running Firefox in Safe Mode and still have the problem. Also, I checked and signon.storeWhenAutocompleteOff is set to true.

It's too bad there isn't some way of telling Firefox that the current website is indeed a login form and that you want it to remember username and password for it.

more options

Can you post a link to a publicly accessible page (i.e. no authentication or signing on required)?

more options
more options

Gekozen oplossing

That login form consists of a few DIV elements with an input element (i.e. no FORM tag with a action). The input elements have an onclick handler (ajaxLogin) to the Enter and Submit action. Maybe that is why it doesn't work.

Bewerkt door cor-el op

more options

Thanks for looking at it. I'll try to forward your description to the webmaster and suggest they make the login more compatible with password savers.

more options

I've found many forms have this issue. If you're competent with Javascript, you can often go into the Console, locate the `form` element, and `.submit()` it manually, which may give you the prompt you seek. Often the command to run is simply `document.querySelector('form').submit()`.

more options

In the case of this question there is no form element present. There are only input fields for name and password and a button to submit this data via JavaScript (AJAX).

more options

Sometimes even wrapping <input> fields in <form> may not help. You can try to remove all JavaScripts from a website using Inspector - <script> tags. It helps in some cases. Good luck.