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Hierdie gesprek is in die argief. Vra asseblief 'n nuwe vraag as jy hulp nodig het.

remove google search predictions

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can not remove google search predictions (please view all images) I have exhausted all searches and read multiple forums on this matter, simply put; after the latest upgrade (104.0) 64bit you can not remove google search predictions on google search in the firefox web browser . when typing in the firefox google search page... start with the 1 (H) letter and below is a list of un-necessary predictions (see attached image) I have followed and tried many suggested instruction (see attachment) and still nothing changes. If there is no solution for this I will go back to chrome ugg... the ony work around is to use search in the title bar.

can not remove google search predictions (please view all images) I have exhausted all searches and read multiple forums on this matter, simply put; after the latest upgrade (104.0) 64bit you can not remove google search predictions on google search in the firefox web browser . when typing in the firefox google search page... start with the 1 (H) letter and below is a list of un-necessary predictions (see attached image) I have followed and tried many suggested instruction (see attachment) and still nothing changes. If there is no solution for this I will go back to chrome ugg... the ony work around is to use search in the title bar.
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All Replies (1)

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Sorry, but Firefox's settings only relate to its own built-in address bar and search bar, they don't modify how Google's own pages work.

To hide or strip elements from web pages, you could use an add-on for removing elements, a user script (through a user script engine add-on), or a user style (custom style rule). For example, this style rule hides the drop-down, although it doesn't fix the styling of the search box:

form[action="/search"] div[jscontroller][jsmodel][jsaction] > div[jscontroller][jsname][jsaction],
form[action="/search"] div[jscontroller][jsmodel][jsdata] > div[jscontroller][jsname][jsaction] {
    display: none !important;
}

You can apply that rule, or others that you find, to Google pages using the Stylus extension:

https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/styl-us/

Of course, I just came up with that now, so it isn't time tested and because Google does so many weird things in their code, I can't guarantee it will work for everyone or for how long it will work.