חיפוש בתמיכה

יש להימנע מהונאות תמיכה. לעולם לא נבקש ממך להתקשר או לשלוח הודעת טקסט למספר טלפון או לשתף מידע אישי. נא לדווח על כל פעילות חשודה באמצעות באפשרות ״דיווח על שימוש לרעה״.

מידע נוסף

How to make address bar less smart?

  • 2 תגובות
  • 1 has this problem
  • 2 views
  • תגובה אחרונה מאת cor-el

more options

How can I make the address bar in Firefox to:

1. Only treat the input as URL if it looks like a valid URL (i.e. starts with scheme://...)

2. Only search if the input is prefixed with a search keyword. E.g. "g foobar" would do Google search for "foobar"

3. Anything else (including non-FQDN addresses and the likes) would just show an error page, without trying to resolve the address or perform a search with it.

How can I make the address bar in Firefox to: 1. Only treat the input as URL if it looks like a valid URL (i.e. starts with scheme://...) 2. Only search if the input is prefixed with a search keyword. E.g. "g foobar" would do Google search for "foobar" 3. Anything else (including non-FQDN addresses and the likes) would just show an error page, without trying to resolve the address or perform a search with it.

השתנתה ב־ על־ידי zirahvi

כל התגובות (2)

more options

1. No this is no longer possible from my testing. I am still looking for a bug.

2. This used to work, I could not get it to Keywords: https://www-archive.mozilla.org/docs/end-user/keywords.html per reddit thread I found, tags worked:

However, that did not appear to work either. The Keyword Bookmarks add on is no longer supported in the

3. I don't see this a possible at the moment. I disabled all the search features and could not get an error, it always defaulted to a search on the default search engine.

Perhaps others have a suggestion?

more options

You can set keyword.enabled to false to stop Firefox from searching if you type only one word. Firefox will however still try to add the http:// protocol and fixup the URL (prefix www. and postfix .com, see the browser.fixup.alternate.* prefs; fixup only works for the http protocol). If this fails then you get the error page. I'm not aware of a way to prevent Firefox from adding the http: protocol.