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What is automated or additional dialogue replacement (ADR)?
Why is the popup dialog shown if the time passed?
What happens if a user disables a confirmation dialog?
Is ADR a 'looping' or 'dubbing'?
Many Google Maps users have encountered a pop-up message that says 'Prevent this page from creating additional dialogues' when they try to use some features. This thread explains what this message means, why it appears, and how to deal with it. You can also find answers from Google Maps experts and other users who have faced the same issue.
Dec 29, 2011 · I just made 2 alert in my example.js file. alert ("test-javascript1"); alert ("test-javascript2"); nothing else in my file. and in my second alert box I got this message prevent this page from creating additional dialogs.
- That is a browser thing to help users get rid of annoying sites. If you click on that, alerts will still be fired, but you won't see them (which is...
- The following steps show you how disable this Firefox feature: Start Firefox, and type about:config in the url bar. Firefox will show the preferen...
- This alert has nothing to do with your code (apart from the fact that your alert calls triggered it), it's functionality found in some browsers to...
- Have a look at this related answer: Why "Prevent this page from creating additional dialogs" appears in the alert box?
You can't. It's a browser feature there to prevent sites from showing hundreds of alerts to prevent you from leaving. You can, however, look into modal popups like jQuery UI Dialog. These are javascript alert boxes that show a custom dialog.
Aug 14, 2014 · This behaviour can be controlled by setting the config parameter dom.successive_dialog_time_limit. This integer value represents a time window in seconds since the last pop-up. If a website generates a new pop-up within that window, Firefox will instead trigger the "Prevent..." dialog. To set this value:
Dec 16, 2020 · ADR stands for Automated or Additional Dialogue Replacement. ADR is the process of re-recording audio in a more controlled environment to improve the audio quality or reflect changes in the story.
Formerly known as “looping” and sometimes called “Automatic Dialogue Replacement,” ADR is re-recording cinematic dialogue in a sound booth after a scene has already been filmed. ADR is sometimes confused for “dubbing,” which involves replacing one language’s dialogue with another.
ADR stands for “Automated Dialogue Replacement,” though some say Additional Dialogue Replacement or Additional Dialogue Recording. Regardless, all of these terms mean the same thing. Put simply, ADR is a post-production process where actors’ dialogue is rerecorded in a controlled environment such as a sound studio.