Rechercher dans l’assistance

Évitez les escroqueries à l’assistance. Nous ne vous demanderons jamais d’appeler ou d’envoyer un SMS à un numéro de téléphone ou de partager des informations personnelles. Veuillez signaler toute activité suspecte en utilisant l’option « Signaler un abus ».

En savoir plus

FF 10: cannot load local html files by dragging to FF; links in email don't open

  • 3 réponses
  • 2 ont ce problème
  • 1 vue
  • Dernière réponse par njensen

more options

Just upgraded to FF 10. I cannot open a local html file by dragging it to to FF, or by clicking the file name. Clicking the file name brings up an error message: There was a problem sending the command to the program. Dragging just shows a circle with a slash.

I can open a local file by typing "file///<file location>" in the location bar.

Also, clicking a link in an email to any site does not open the site.

Just upgraded to FF 10. I cannot open a local html file by dragging it to to FF, or by clicking the file name. Clicking the file name brings up an error message: There was a problem sending the command to the program. Dragging just shows a circle with a slash. I can open a local file by typing "file///<file location>" in the location bar. Also, clicking a link in an email to any site does not open the site.

Toutes les réponses (3)

more options

Hi,

Please see this. You can start Firefox in Safe Mode to check if an add-on is causing the problem. You can also try to Open with by right-clicking on the HTML file and choose Firefox and enable Always use the selected program to open this kind of file.

more options

Thanks, but none of that helped. I'm getting an entirely different error message than the one in your linked page (it's a different problem), starting in Safe Mode made no difference at all, and doing a right-click/Open with did not work. So I'm still puzzled and frustrated.

more options

I just switched back to FF 9.0.1, and opening local html files by double-clicking works as it always did before 10.0.

Modifié le par njensen