Important Notice: We're experiencing email notification issues. If you've posted a question in the community forums recently, please check your profile manually for responses while we're working to fix this.

On Monday the 3rd of March, around 5pm UTC (9am PT) users may experience a brief period of downtime while one of our underlying services is under maintenance.

Prohledat stránky podpory

Vyhněte se podvodům. Za účelem poskytnutí podpory vás nikdy nežádáme, abyste zavolali nebo poslali SMS na nějaké telefonní číslo nebo abyste sdělili své osobní údaje. Jakékoliv podezřelé chování nám prosím nahlaste pomocí odkazu „Nahlásit zneužití“.

Zjistit více

When the adress contains #NameoOfASection, firefox looks it up too quickly

more options

E.g. when i open a Wikipedia page with a lot of latex content, the #NameoOfASection causes Firefox to find the right place for that exact second, way before the rest of the latex code has been sufficiently parsed/rendered for its final sizes to be found.

E.g. when i open a Wikipedia page with a lot of latex content, the #NameoOfASection causes Firefox to find the right place for that exact second, way before the rest of the latex code has been sufficiently parsed/rendered for its final sizes to be found.

Upravil uživatel rousfv dne

Všechny odpovědi (1)

more options

Yes, I've seen that on this site, where some sidebar sections expand after the initial page load, pushing the content down the page from where the "hash" or "bookmark" or "anchor" was located. I'm not aware of any workarounds, although I'd love to know of one.

When I searched for bugs on file, I found one from 2011 about this, where it was characterized as a hard problem. When I think about it, suppose the page scrolls, how does Firefox know whether that is something is needs to correct for vs. something you caused to happen? Hmm...

Bug #668213 – External link to named anchor doesn't take you to anchor point on page

About the bug tracking system:

It sounds as though there is no imminent fix in the works (although sometimes fixing a seemingly unrelated Bug B will end up fixing Bug A).