Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Lolu chungechunge lwabekwa kunqolobane. Uyacelwa ubuze umbuzo omusha uma udinga usizo.

How can I add a predefined text to a search ?

more options

Hi everybody,

I recently switch to firefox from chrome. And I like it very much, but there is one feature I missed that I can find in Firefox :

In chrome you can add custom search engine with %s is the text from the search you just typed. Example : I type "php test" in the adress bar and it's like I search google with "filetype:php test".

I don't know If I've been clear enough, feel free to ask me anything.

Thanks for your help !

Hi everybody, I recently switch to firefox from chrome. And I like it very much, but there is one feature I missed that I can find in Firefox : In chrome you can add custom search engine with %s is the text from the search you just typed. Example : I type "php test" in the adress bar and it's like I search google with "filetype:php test". I don't know If I've been clear enough, feel free to ask me anything. Thanks for your help !

All Replies (2)

more options

Go to your search bar. Do you see the down arrow? Click it. This is the search engine. You will see a list of all the engines that you have. On the bottom is the Manage Search Engines. This is where you can make changes in your preference order of the engines, as well as setting a Key for each engine.

I would like to recommend;

Add to Search Bar
Make any pages' search functionality available in the Search Bar (or "search box")

Context Search
Expands the context menu's 'Search for' item into a list of installed search engines, allowing you to choose the engine you want to use for each search.

more options

I haven't used that feature in Google Chrome. In Firefox, you can create a search plugin with additional/custom features, but as far as I know, it takes some manual editing to do it.

For example, you can open this folder:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Mozilla Firefox\browser\searchplugins

and make a copy of google.xml for example as google-filetype.xml

then edit the contents of the file in a text editor. For example, where you see:

<Param name="q" value="{searchTerms}" /> 

you could try:

<Param name="q" value="filetype:{searchTerms}" /> 

(I haven't tested it.)

Also would be good to update the Short Name so you can tell it apart from regular Google search.

I suggest making a backup outside that folder (in case it gets replaced at the next Firefox update).

I'm sure there's a better way to install the custom plugin to the regular folder for personally installed search plugins, but I'm not familiar with it. Hopefully another volunteer will have a simpler/more concrete solution.

By the way, if you think a particular custom search plugin should already exist, it's worth checking this site as there are numerous plugins available for Google (and other sites) already: http://mycroftproject.com/google-search-plugins.html