IP | Country | PORT | ADDED |
---|---|---|---|
194.182.163.117 | ch | 3128 | 55 minutes ago |
50.168.72.115 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
190.58.248.86 | tt | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.217.226.47 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
103.216.49.233 | kh | 8080 | 55 minutes ago |
211.128.96.206 | 80 | 55 minutes ago | |
122.151.54.147 | au | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.223.246.237 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
213.143.113.82 | at | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.174.7.152 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
23.247.136.245 | sg | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.239.72.18 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
185.10.129.14 | ru | 3128 | 55 minutes ago |
203.19.38.114 | cn | 1080 | 55 minutes ago |
50.175.212.74 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
201.148.32.162 | 80 | 55 minutes ago | |
41.207.187.178 | tg | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
176.9.239.181 | de | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.168.72.118 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
50.202.75.26 | us | 80 | 55 minutes ago |
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There are two options: setting up through the software of the TV itself. To do this, you will need to install a third-party application to redirect traffic. The second option is to organize a connection through a proxy on the router, through which the TV gets access to the Internet. Naturally, both of these options are relevant for modern TVs with Smart TV support.
In the messenger settings, go to "Data and storage" and then, in the "Proxy settings" section, click "Add proxy". You can see whether a proxy is connected in Telegram by the presence of the shield icon located in the top menu bar.
If you want to parse JSON data and display it in a TreeView in a Windows Forms application using C#, you can use the Newtonsoft.Json library for parsing JSON and the TreeView control for displaying the hierarchical structure. Below is an example demonstrating how to achieve this
Install Newtonsoft.Json
Use NuGet Package Manager Console to install the Newtonsoft.Json package:
Install-Package Newtonsoft.Json
Create a Windows Forms Application:
Design the Form:
TreeView
control and a Button
on the form.Write Code to Parse JSON and Populate TreeView:
using System;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using Newtonsoft.Json.Linq;
namespace JsonTreeViewExample
{
public partial class MainForm : Form
{
public MainForm()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void btnLoadJson_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
// Replace with your JSON data or URL
string jsonData = @"{
""name"": ""John"",
""age"": 30,
""address"": {
""city"": ""New York"",
""zip"": ""10001""
},
""emails"": [
""[email protected]"",
""[email protected]""
]
}";
// Parse JSON data
JObject jsonObject = JObject.Parse(jsonData);
// Clear existing nodes in TreeView
treeView.Nodes.Clear();
// Populate TreeView
PopulateTreeView(treeView.Nodes, jsonObject);
}
private void PopulateTreeView(TreeNodeCollection nodes, JToken token)
{
if (token is JValue)
{
// Display the value
nodes.Add(token.ToString());
}
else if (token is JObject)
{
// Display object properties
var obj = (JObject)token;
foreach (var property in obj.Properties())
{
TreeNode newNode = nodes.Add(property.Name);
PopulateTreeView(newNode.Nodes, property.Value);
}
}
else if (token is JArray)
{
// Display array items
var array = (JArray)token;
for (int i = 0; i < array.Count; i++)
{
TreeNode newNode = nodes.Add($"[{i}]");
PopulateTreeView(newNode.Nodes, array[i]);
}
}
}
}
}
btnLoadJson_Click
event handler simulates loading JSON data. You should replace it with your method of loading JSON data (e.g., from a file, a web service, etc.).PopulateTreeView
method recursively populates the TreeView
with nodes representing the JSON structure.Run the Application:
TreeView
.This example assumes a simple JSON structure. You may need to adjust the code based on the structure of your specific JSON data. The PopulateTreeView
method handles objects, arrays, and values within the JSON data.
To run Firefox with Selenium and connected extensions, you'll need to use the FirefoxDriverService and FirefoxOptions. You can also set the path to the Firefox executable and the path to the extensions' .xpi files using the FirefoxBinary and FirefoxProfile classes. Here's an example of how to do this:
Install the required NuGet packages:
Install-Package OpenQA.Selenium.Firefox.WebDriver -Version 3.141.0
Install-Package OpenQA.Selenium.Support.UI -Version 3.141.0
Create a method to add extensions to the Firefox profile:
using OpenQA.Selenium;
using OpenQA.Selenium.Firefox;
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
public static IWebDriver CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions(string[] extensionPaths)
{
var firefoxOptions = new FirefoxOptions();
var firefoxBinary = new FirefoxBinary(Path.GetDirectoryName(FirefoxDriverService.DefaultServicePath));
var firefoxProfile = new FirefoxProfile();
// Add extensions to the Firefox profile
foreach (var extensionPath in extensionPaths)
{
var extensionFile = new FileInfo(extensionPath);
if (extensionFile.Exists)
{
firefoxProfile.AddExtension(extensionPath);
}
}
firefoxOptions.BinaryLocation = firefoxBinary.Path;
firefoxOptions.Profile = firefoxProfile;
// Start the FirefoxDriverService with the specified Firefox binary
var driverService = FirefoxDriverService.CreateDefaultService(firefoxBinary.Path, FirefoxDriverService.DefaultPort);
driverService.EnableVerboseLogging = true;
// Create the FirefoxDriver with the specified options
var driver = new FirefoxDriver(driverService, firefoxOptions);
return driver;
}
Use the CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions method in your test code:
using OpenQA.Selenium;
using System;
namespace SeleniumFirefoxExtensionsExample
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Paths to the extensions' .xpi files
string[] extensionPaths = new[]
{
@"path\to\extension1.xpi",
@"path\to\extension2.xpi"
};
// Create the FirefoxDriver with connected extensions
using (var driver = CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions(extensionPaths))
{
// Set up the WebDriver
driver.Manage().Window.Maximize();
// Navigate to the target web page
driver.Navigate().GoToUrl("https://www.example.com");
// Perform any additional actions as needed
// Close the browser
driver.Quit();
}
}
}
}
In this example, we first create a method called CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions that takes an array of extension paths as input. Inside the method, we set up the FirefoxOptions, FirefoxBinary, and FirefoxProfile to include the specified extensions. Then, we start the FirefoxDriverService with the specified Firefox binary and create the FirefoxDriver with the specified options.
In the test code, we call the CreateFirefoxDriverWithExtensions method with the paths to the extensions' .xpi files and use the returned IWebDriver instance to interact with the browser.
Remember to replace "path\to\extension1.xpi" and "path\to\extension2.xpi" with the actual paths to the extensions' .xpi files you want to connect.
To close a Firefox pop-up window using Selenium Python, you can use the close() method. Here's an example:
from selenium import webdriver
# Open Firefox and navigate to a web page
driver = webdriver.Firefox()
driver.get('https://example.com')
# Click on a link or button that opens a pop-up window
driver.find_element_by_link_text('Open Popup').click()
# Switch to the pop-up window
driver.switch_to.window(driver.window_handles[-1])
# Close the pop-up window
driver.close()
# Switch back to the main window
driver.switch_to.window(driver.window_handles[0])
This code will open Firefox, navigate to a web page, click on a link or button that opens a pop-up window, switch to the pop-up window, and then close it. After closing the pop-up window, it switches back to the main window.
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