搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

is there anyway when viewing "show all history" to see not only "visit date" but visit duration?

more options

your view all history button is FANTASTIC... however... is there an option or feature where i can not only see when i last visited that site of path on my pc but also the duration of time i spent on that site or path?

your view all history button is FANTASTIC... however... is there an option or feature where i can not only see when i last visited that site of path on my pc but also the duration of time i spent on that site or path?

被采纳的解决方案

Although the Library dialog does not show every request for a page, only the most recent, the places.sqlite database that stores history can produce a chronological lists of requests. In theory, then, you could see the interval between page requests, but you might not have spent the entire interval viewing the page (i.e., coffee break), and if you opened many links at once and switched between them, Firefox does not record that.

One time tracking package we evaluated at my office includes a feature to record the title of the active window (which I think would include the active tab) as it changes. This allows you to reconstruct the timetable for the work you did during the day. I suspect it might not be popular with all users.

We didn't buy that program, but I see similar software out on the web that you could investigate if you like. For example:

I haven't tried these myself.

定位到答案原位置 👍 0

所有回复 (4)

more options

hello heids2503, to my knowledge the information how long you're staying on a given site isn't stored at all in firefox, so it isn't possible to retrieve that form your history.

more options

thanks for the reply and although i suppose i have to accept it - it would have been absolutely FANTASTIC. thanks for the speedy reply, all's well i will survive!!

more options

Go to the Mozilla Add-ons Web Page. There are some add-ons that will alert you when you are someplace too long. Maybe one of them has some kind if log you can use.

more options

选择的解决方案

Although the Library dialog does not show every request for a page, only the most recent, the places.sqlite database that stores history can produce a chronological lists of requests. In theory, then, you could see the interval between page requests, but you might not have spent the entire interval viewing the page (i.e., coffee break), and if you opened many links at once and switched between them, Firefox does not record that.

One time tracking package we evaluated at my office includes a feature to record the title of the active window (which I think would include the active tab) as it changes. This allows you to reconstruct the timetable for the work you did during the day. I suspect it might not be popular with all users.

We didn't buy that program, but I see similar software out on the web that you could investigate if you like. For example:

I haven't tried these myself.