Este site está com funcionalidades limitadas enquanto realizamos manutenção para melhorar sua experiência de uso. Se nenhum artigo resolver seu problema e você quiser fazer uma pergunta, nossa comunidade de suporte pode te ajudar em @FirefoxSupport no Twitter e /r/firefox no Reddit.

Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

Go back to old image display

  • 4 respostas
  • 24 têm este problema
  • 1 exibição
  • Última resposta de cor-el

more options

I just updated to Firefox 11 and the new image display is awful. When I go to an image URL (like this http://www.google.com.br/images/srpr/logo3w.png ) it's displayed with a dark background. It would be better if the background was soft grey... but it's too dark!

Is there a way to use the old image display, with white background or changing the background color?

I just updated to Firefox 11 and the new image display is awful. When I go to an image URL (like this http://www.google.com.br/images/srpr/logo3w.png ) it's displayed with a dark background. It would be better if the background was soft grey... but it's too dark! Is there a way to use the old image display, with white background or changing the background color?

Solução escolhida

You can install the Old Default Image Style add-on (you don't even have to restart Firefox to get it to work)

Ler esta resposta 👍 3

Todas as respostas (4)

more options

Solução escolhida

You can install the Old Default Image Style add-on (you don't even have to restart Firefox to get it to work)

more options

Thank you! But is there a way to get the old image display without extensions? With an about:aconfig tweak or with userchrome.css?

more options

There's no about:config change. You can do it with userchrome.css (I can't say how off the top of my head). However, all that extension does is overwrite the default image stylesheet and add options in about:config to let you specify a background color. So it should be pretty safe, really lightweight (and much easier to use)

more options

<strike>I don't think that you can use code in userContent.css to fix this</strike>.
<strike>There is no selector possible to set the background-color for the body if there is only an img (body > img:only-child) on that page.
Only a script would be able to accomplish that AFAIK.</strike>

It looks that I'm wrong about this.

Add this code to userContent.css in the chrome folder

@-moz-document regexp("((.*\\.(png|apng|jpg|jpeg|gif|tiff|bmp))|(^data:image\\/.*))(\\?([^#]*))?(#(.*))?") {
html > body { background-color: #E8E8E8 !important; }
html > body > img:only-child { background-color:#fff !important; box-shadow: none !important; margin: 0 !important; }
}

  • resource://gre/res/TopLevelImageDocument.css

Alterado por cor-el em