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Typing "amazon <some string>" in the url bar always searches "some string" at amazon.com

  • 9 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 1 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 FredMcD

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I just noticed that when I type "amazon" on the location bar - it takes me to amazon.com, and if I type "Amazon <anything>" it takes me to the amazon search results.

I can reproduce this in safe mode on OS X Yosemite, Firefox 38.

How do I disable this behavior?

Edit: I just realized that this happens for my other search engines as well. If I type "duckduckgo is a good browser" it searches ddg for "is a good browser". Why does it do this and how can I disable it?

I just noticed that when I type "amazon" on the location bar - it takes me to amazon.com, and if I type "Amazon <anything>" it takes me to the amazon search results. I can reproduce this in safe mode on OS X Yosemite, Firefox 38. How do I disable this behavior? Edit: I just realized that this happens for my other search engines as well. If I type "duckduckgo is a good browser" it searches ddg for "is a good browser". Why does it do this and how can I disable it?

由varunkvv于修改

被采纳的解决方案

For what it's worth, that doesn't happen for me on Windows.

Firefox does have another "keyword" feature that would let you specify something short like g for Google or y for Yahoo to specifically send address bar searches to a particular search engine. It's possible that you somehow got keywords assigned to your search engines. To check that, you need to call up a hidden configuration page by pasting the following in the address bar and pressing Enter:

chrome://browser/content/search/engineManager.xul

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<deleted>

由varunkvv于修改

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When you type one word in the address bar, the browser first checks to see if it is a web link, as Amazon + .com is. For one word searches, you should use the search bar instead.

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Thanks for your reply FredMcD. The problem is that the search query "Amazon removed 1984 from kindle" searches amazon.com for "removed 1984 from kindle". What I expect is it would search the whole thing on my default search engine (which is google).

I don't want firefox to try and be smart about which site I want to search.

I updated my title to make my issue a little clearer.

由varunkvv于修改

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cor-el - the second link you posted has certain instructions which would supposedly fix this issue, however it does not for me.

Specifically, it suggests setting "keyword.enabled" to false in about:config.

This does not work though - typing "amazon kindle" still takes me to amazon.com.

Does nobody else have this issue on their firefox? Perhaps it's better to submit this as a bug?

由varunkvv于修改

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选择的解决方案

For what it's worth, that doesn't happen for me on Windows.

Firefox does have another "keyword" feature that would let you specify something short like g for Google or y for Yahoo to specifically send address bar searches to a particular search engine. It's possible that you somehow got keywords assigned to your search engines. To check that, you need to call up a hidden configuration page by pasting the following in the address bar and pressing Enter:

chrome://browser/content/search/engineManager.xul

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Actually, there's another place to possibly find "smart keyword" search associations and that is in your bookmarks. I can't figure out a way to search for them, however. Hmm...

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I don't know what gives, but the link above was not the link I wanted.

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/search?esab=a&w=1&q=keyword

Okay, this one is.