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1) I`ve tried to learn more searching on mozilla but every web page i could have found is obsolete or simply doesnt work anymore, like it`s deprecated. Since i want to try it out i`ve been reading other people CSS but there are tags that i believe are exclusive and couldnt find information, or a documentation about it.
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uc.css.js
A dark indigo CSS theme for Firefox and a large collection of privileged scripts to add new buttons, menus, and behaviors and eliminate nuisances. The theme is similar to other userChrome stylesheets, but it's intended for use with an autoconfig loader like fx-autoconfig, since it uses JavaScript to implement its more functional features.
this subreddit is dedicated to unsupported modifications, so there isn't much good official documentation on the subject. I have some little guides on here and userchrome.org is great, but frankly I think the easiest way to learn about this crap is practical research... basically to search the source code and use the browser toolbox.
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SurveyJS
Open-Source JSON Form Builder to Create Dynamic Forms Right in Your App. With SurveyJS form UI libraries, you can build and style forms in a fully-integrated drag & drop form builder, render them in your JS app, and store form submission data in any backend, inc. PHP, ASP.NET Core, and Node.js.
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add-custom-search-engine
Add a custom search engine to the list of available search engines in Firefox
so I can do some more research from here. in other cases I might be inclined to search for its id, placesContext_open, but I see there's a command attribute so I know the id isn't gonna help much. the fact that it has a command attribute reminds me that its id probably isn't evaluated, its command is. so I would rather search placesCmd_open on searchfox. here's the results. (I should add that to speed this up, I created a search engine for https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/search?q=%s and bound it to the keyword fox)
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archived-content
Discontinued Archived MDN Web Docs content that is not actively maintained or frequently built
MDN used to have some good documentation, back before webextensions when it was expected that third-party addon developers would be modifying the frontend directly. that's no longer supported though, so all those juicy pages on XUL and XPCOM have been removed. they can still be found on here but not in a very useful format.