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You can edit Firefox's appearance with CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). To be more general, you can alter ANY web page with CSS. This is achieved with the usage of userstyles. To use and take complete advantage of them, you need a userstyle manager. | You can edit Firefox's appearance with CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). To be more general, you can alter ANY web page with CSS. This is achieved with the usage of userstyles. To use and take complete advantage of them, you need a userstyle manager. | ||
Revision as of 20:42, 25 January 2016
You can edit Firefox's appearance with CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). To be more general, you can alter ANY web page with CSS. This is achieved with the usage of userstyles. To use and take complete advantage of them, you need a userstyle manager.
In Firefox's case, this would be Stylish: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/stylish/
Note: if you're hell-bent on using Nightly, you'll probably notice your interface userstyles don't work well with Australis. To mitigate this, download Holly - which is pretty much Nightly without Australis. You can get it here: https://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/nightly/latest-holly/
The Stylish button that appears after you install it is useful. For instance, to write a userstyle for Firefox, you need to go to:
chrome://browser/content/browser.xul
And select Write new style -> For this URL, and it'll have a template set up.
The most useful feature in writing userstyles is the Inspector. You pop it up by pressing Ctrl+Shift+C and it'll let you see what elements you can style on the page.
You can learn how to write CSS in: