[Solved - Firefox extension SingleFile converts the page to a .html file that can be accessed without login!] Any tricks to saving chapters in a digital, online-based textbook as a PDF?
Print-to-PDF is locked down. There's a print option as part of the software, but it slaps my student email diagonally across every single page, which makes reading it kind of obnoxious.
I don't intend to distribute (which I'm assuming is why it's locked up so tight), but needing to log in and navigate to the text is getting cumbersome, so I'm hoping to just save a chapter at a time to my phone and whip that out to tackle my reading assignments.
Also hoping to preserve images, since a lot of the info is charts and such, so PDF seems like the best target, but open to any ideas.
...I suppose I could just suck it up and deal with their annoying software, but at this point I hate to admit defeat lol.
Locked down how? You say this is online, but also mention software, so I'm not sure if this is browser-based or not. If a browser, can you use an addon like this:
It's all in-browser; by software I just mean whatever code that makes the page tick. When I do the usual ctrl+p, the print preview is a single page with a line of text in the middle saying to use the print feature built into the site. Using the print feature gets me the giant, super distracting watermark.
No luck. That extension only saves a single 'screen' worth as a PDF, not the entire webpage as it advertises. I'd guess this is more the fault of the textbook restrictions than any actual issue with the extension.
Tried a few similar ones, and they either did the same thing, or saved that print preview I mentioned earlier (so, effectively just a shortcut to print-to-pdf).
I may just be SOL.
This makes me want to seed a torrent of it or something if/when I find a working option, just out of spite. >_<
Noscript is another addon, it blocks Javascript completely. You probably won't be able to log in, but it's worth a shot.
I just looked at the Elsevier page, it looks like what I expected. I'm sure there's a way to get the docs, I just don't have much access right now to search for it. My last recommendation is to try and find the book on a torrent site. My second last recommendation is to ask at !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com (I don't know if that link will work) if someone knows about Elsevier, they're pretty helpful, and you're just trying to read a book you already have access to.
Some websites will fall back to a "simple" version when the javascript they prefer isn't allowed. it's good design. My guess is that these parasites will design their website without such accessibility principals and prevent you from using it except on their terms. But it's worth a shot.