Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Αυτός ο ιστότοπος θα έχει περιορισμένη λειτουργικότητα, όσο εκτελούμε εργασίες συντήρησης για να βελτιώσουμε την εμπειρία σας. Αν ένα άρθρο δεν επιλύει το ζήτημά σας και θέλετε να κάνετε μια ερώτηση, η κοινότητα υποστήριξής μας είναι έτοιμη να σας βοηθήσει στο Twitter (@FirefoxSupport) και στο Reddit (/r/firefox).

Αναζήτηση στην υποστήριξη

Προσοχή στις απάτες! Δεν θα σας ζητήσουμε ποτέ να καλέσετε ή να στείλετε μήνυμα σε κάποιον αριθμό τηλεφώνου ή να μοιραστείτε προσωπικά δεδομένα. Αναφέρετε τυχόν ύποπτη δραστηριότητα μέσω της επιλογής «Αναφορά κατάχρησης».

Μάθετε περισσότερα

toolbar download item: open a file from list don't use related application

more options

Hi I'm using FF 62 on Ubuntu desktop 16.04 64bit when I download a file the button "Icon down" in the toolbar became blue. clicking on it open a list of downloaded files. clicking on a file on the list, not open the file with his related application. example: I download a pdf, then clicking on it open vscode !! If I open the download page from "history, bookmark etc" toolbar button and I click on a pdf file to open it, the file open in Document Viewer as expected. what I can do to fix ?

Hi I'm using FF 62 on Ubuntu desktop 16.04 64bit when I download a file the button "Icon down" in the toolbar became blue. clicking on it open a list of downloaded files. clicking on a file on the list, not open the file with his related application. example: I download a pdf, then clicking on it open vscode !! If I open the download page from "history, bookmark etc" toolbar button and I click on a pdf file to open it, the file open in Document Viewer as expected. what I can do to fix ?

Όλες οι απαντήσεις (1)

more options

When you open a saved file from the Downloads panel, Firefox usually looks to your OS-level association for the content. If the file has a .pdf extension on the name, that normally would be some kind of PDF reader and not VSCode. But some sites may not send a full file name, or Firefox might save under a script name such as pushpdf.php in which case it would make more sense that it opens in VSCode.

When you open content from a link in a page, Firefox takes its cue from the Content-Type header sent with the content instead of from the file extension. So if the site sends application/pdf Firefox will, by default, use the built-in PDF viewer regardless of whether it's a .pdf, .jsp, etc.