This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

Search Support

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.

Learn More

Mulongo oyo etiyamaki na archive. Tuna motuna mosusu soki osengeli na lisalisi

Open markdown file with md extension in Firefox

more options

I’m clicking on a link that links to a markdown file ending in the extension .md. As I know that this is just a plain text file, I would like to open it in a new tab as plain text. However, Firefox opens a download prompt. How can I teach Firefox to display the file as text?

I’m clicking on a link that links to a markdown file ending in the extension .md. As I know that this is just a plain text file, I would like to open it in a new tab as plain text. However, Firefox opens a download prompt. How can I teach Firefox to display the file as text?

Solution eye eponami

If this is a text file then prefix the link with the view-source: protocol to open the file as a text file in a tab. You can usually copy the link to the clipboard via the right-click context menu (Copy Link Location).

  • view-source:https://....
Tanga eyano oyo ndenge esengeli 👍 2

All Replies (3)

more options

Windows Firefox can display text files. Save a .md file to your hard drive. Open your file explorer and right-click the file. Set its properties to treat the file as a text file. (Windows)

more options

Solution eye oponami

If this is a text file then prefix the link with the view-source: protocol to open the file as a text file in a tab. You can usually copy the link to the clipboard via the right-click context menu (Copy Link Location).

  • view-source:https://....
more options

Where is the .md file coming from?

If it's from a site like Github that is conversant with the extension, the "Raw" link will serve the file as plain text (Content-Type: text/plain):

HTML: https://github.com/jscher2000/google-uk-search/blob/master/README.md Raw: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jscher2000/google-uk-search/master/README.md

Some other sites may indicate the correct Content-Type but push the file as a forced download (Content-Disposition: attachment).

Yet others may send a non-matching Content-Type to bypass viewing in the browser.

If you'll allow a little self-promotion, I have an add-on for that. You can use it to associate text/plain with the .md file extension and to override forced downloading. (Those are separate features.)

https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/addon/content-type-fixer/

After installation, it is dormant. Click the Zzzz button to wake it up and trigger the download. Then use the button's drop-down menu to view the log and you can associate the correct Content-Type with .md files.

Now... many sites also serve HTML pages with the .md extension, so you probably only want to turn on this new association when you run across a problem. You can turn off the extension completely the rest of the time, or use the Enable/Disable types list to manage .md.

Ezalaki modifié na jscher2000 - Support Volunteer