Az oldal korlátolt funkcionalitással fog rendelkezni, amíg elvégezzük a felhasználói élményt javító karbantartást. Ha egy leírás nem oldja meg a problémáját, és kérdést tenne fel, akkor a támogatási közösségünk a @FirefoxSupport Twitter oldalon tud segíteni, vagy az /r/firefox oldalon a Redditen.

Támogatás keresése

Kerülje el a támogatási csalásokat. Sosem kérjük arra, hogy hívjon fel egy telefonszámot vagy osszon meg személyes információkat. Jelentse a gyanús tevékenységeket a „Visszaélés bejelentése” lehetőséggel.

További tudnivalók

A témacsoportot lezárták és archiválták. Tegyen fel új kérdést, ha segítségre van szüksége.

search engine dropdown: no search engine names, no possibility to select a search engine before entering a query

  • 4 válasz
  • 25 embernek van ilyen problémája
  • 1 megtekintés
  • Utolsó üzenet ettől: Sirus

more options

Firefox 34.0, Windows.

I have some problems with the new search engine bar design.

1. I often chose a search engine BEFORE entering the search query (e.g. when dragging a picture to search for it with TinEye reverse image search or just to quickly get to the search engine start page by entering an empty query). Now it's complicated: drag a picture url into the search field, get a wrong search result with some wrong search engine, click into the search field, select TinEye, search again. Yes, I know there is a TinEye addon, but I prefer to avoid addons if I'm basically satisfied with existing onboard functionality.

Sure, I can always switch a default search engine, but it takes 5 clicks instead of 2.

2. I have 3 Wikipedia search engines (for 3 languages) - all of them have the same icon. Another 2 search engines have no icon at all. I cannot distinguish them until mousover. Very time-wasting.

Is there a sort of setting to restore a good old search engine dropdown with search engine names which also allows to select a search engine before entering a query?

Firefox 34.0, Windows. I have some problems with the new search engine bar design. 1. I often chose a search engine BEFORE entering the search query (e.g. when dragging a picture to search for it with TinEye reverse image search or just to quickly get to the search engine start page by entering an empty query). Now it's complicated: drag a picture url into the search field, get a wrong search result with some wrong search engine, click into the search field, select TinEye, search again. Yes, I know there is a TinEye addon, but I prefer to avoid addons if I'm basically satisfied with existing onboard functionality. Sure, I can always switch a default search engine, but it takes 5 clicks instead of 2. 2. I have 3 Wikipedia search engines (for 3 languages) - all of them have the same icon. Another 2 search engines have no icon at all. I cannot distinguish them until mousover. Very time-wasting. Is there a sort of setting to restore a good old search engine dropdown with search engine names which also allows to select a search engine before entering a query?

Módosította: pelod,

Összes válasz (4)

more options

Sorry sir but we have no idea to solve your problem but, If you like you can download earlier version of firefox of your choice by clicking link below :

https://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/releases/]

but we suggest you to use latest one for security reasons. thanks,

more options

To get the old search bar back:

1. Navigate to about:config (accept prompts/warnings) 2. Search for "browser.search.showOneOffButtons" 3. Change the property to false. 4. Restart Firefox.

more options

If you miss being able to switch search engines without going crazy with menus, try this out;

Context Search {web link} Expands the context menu's 'Search for' item into a list of installed search engines, allowing you to choose the engine you want to use for each search.

more options

I replied to a similar question a few minutes ago. I think you'll find all the details you might need, along with instructions, pictures and warnings:

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1034562#answer-661061

Sirus

Módosította: Sirus,