Caută ajutor

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.

Află mai multe

Acest fir de discuție a fost arhivat. Adresează o întrebare nouă dacă ai nevoie de ajutor.

New Tab Page Shortcut Icons

  • 4 răspunsuri
  • 0 au această problemă
  • 30 de vizualizări
  • Ultimul răspuns de bilyo41

more options

On the New Tab Page, is it possible to get more rows of shortcuts? I currently have settings set for 4 rows which appears to be the maximum.

On the New Tab Page, is it possible to get more rows of shortcuts? I currently have settings set for 4 rows which appears to be the maximum.

Soluție aleasă

There are not any preferences for the number or spacing of columns. Currently, the layout is designed to adapt fluidly to the zoom level and window width.

If you have a tinkering mindset, it is possible to inject your own style rules into the page using an unofficial, community-support option: a userContent.css file. That's the lesser known cousin of the userChrome.css file some people create to tweak the user interface (toolbars/menus). Since Firefox changes frequently, it can be a challenge to find working rules, but the wizards over on https://www.reddit.com/r/FirefoxCSS/ usually can provide a quick solution.

Citește acest răspuns în context 👍 1

Toate răspunsurile (4)

more options

You can set browser.newtabpage.activity-stream.topSitesRows directly on the about:config page.

You can open the about:config page via the location/address bar. On the warning page, you can click "Accept the Risk and Continue" to open about:config.

Modificat în de cor-el

more options

That worked great. Thanks. Now. Is there a similar way to add a column and to reduce the spacing? I scrolled through the about:config commands, but didn't see anything obvious to me.

more options

Soluție aleasă

There are not any preferences for the number or spacing of columns. Currently, the layout is designed to adapt fluidly to the zoom level and window width.

If you have a tinkering mindset, it is possible to inject your own style rules into the page using an unofficial, community-support option: a userContent.css file. That's the lesser known cousin of the userChrome.css file some people create to tweak the user interface (toolbars/menus). Since Firefox changes frequently, it can be a challenge to find working rules, but the wizards over on https://www.reddit.com/r/FirefoxCSS/ usually can provide a quick solution.

more options

Thanks, but it is not important enough to get that involved. Thanks for the help.