How to I move the tabs below the address bar, and add text with icon
Before FireFox29 decided to look like Internet Explorer my toolbars were perfect.
Is there a way I can post a picture of it? I have it from screen shots.
Used to look like this:
File Toolbar Functions Toolbar: back, forward, stop, reload, home, new tab, new window, history, downloads, copy, cute, paste, print Address Bar Tabs
Now:
1: I can't find a way to move the tabs back underneath the address bar where they naturally should be.
2: I can't find a way to make it so the address bar is on a separate line all by itself without any of the functions beside it
3: I can't find a way to have the text showing for the function icons
Any help? I'm told there is a 'classic theme add-on' but that sounds like 'Firefox screwed up, and instead of fixing it you have to do extra work'.
Alle Antworten (2)
Edit: I've figured out the Address bar on it's own line and how to add the text with the icons.
I still need to know how to put the tabs below the address bar
Also. Is there a way to change the colour? Old firefox let me have it black, now it looks like internet explorer blue....
You also used to be able to click the blank space next to a tab and a new tab would open up. Is this no longer possible? Can you only open a new tab with your mouse if you click the new tab?
The reply let me post a picture. This is what I want it to look like.
Geändert am
You can move the tabs to the lower position just above the browsing area without using an extension with code in userChrome.css as basically you only need to give the Tab bar a higher -moz-box-ordinal-group value (most toolbars have a default -moz-box-ordinal-group:1 to show them in DOM order).
- [/questions/997353] How can I put the Tabs back below the navigation bar?
Add code to the userChrome.css file below the default @namespace line.
@namespace url("http://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.xul"); /* only needed once */ #TabsToolbar{-moz-box-ordinal-group:10000!important}
The customization files userChrome.css (user interface) and userContent.css (websites) are located in the chrome folder in the Firefox profile folder.
- Create the chrome folder (lowercase) in the <xxxxxxxx>.default profile folder if this folder doesn't exist
- Use a plain text editor like Notepad to create a (new) userChrome.css file in this folder (the names are case sensitive)
- Paste the code in the userChrome.css file in the editor window and make sure that the userChrome.css file starts with the default @namespace line
- Make sure that you select "All files" and not "Text files" when you save the file via "Save file as" in the text editor as userChrome.css. Otherwise Windows may add a hidden .txt file extension and you end up with a not working userChrome.css.txt file
You can use this button to go to the currently used Firefox profile folder:
- Help > Troubleshooting Information > Profile Directory: Show Folder (Linux: Open Directory; Mac: Show in Finder)