• 📛Maven
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    English
    21 year ago

    I don’t, tbh. I did, for 15 years, because it was the most customizable and feature-rich browser on the market, but when they killed XUL support all my important shit broke, 15 years of customizations and getting things just how I wanted them, and instead of spending that again I migrated to Vivaldi essentially out of spite.

      • @ConsciousCode@beehaw.org
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        fedilink
        21 year ago

        It’s an HTML-like language that defines the browser’s interface, you can use it to change the shapes, positions, colors, whatever of your toolbars and tabs. Also they do still have customization via userChrome.css and I think you can re-enable XUL if you dig enough? It does get mixed a bit with HTML-namespaced tags too.

      • 📛Maven
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        1 year ago

        Among other things, it powered legacy extensions, and let them do far more than the essentially crippled WebExtensions