為了改善您的使用體驗,本網站正在進行維護,部分功能暫時無法使用。若本站的文件無法解決您的問題,想要向社群發問的話,請到 Twitter 上的 @FirefoxSupport 或 Reddit 上的 /r/firefox 發問,我們的社群成員將很快會回覆您的疑問。

搜尋 Mozilla 技術支援網站

防止技術支援詐騙。我們絕對不會要求您撥打電話或發送簡訊,或是提供個人資訊。請用「回報濫用」功能回報可疑的行為。

了解更多

Presentation starts 5" from the left side of screen and pushes intellegence off the screen to the right.

more options

The top of my screen is normal: the tool bar starts "File, Edit...

The body of the screen while running Firefox-and during typing of this message- is full of lite. The actual data: starting from the top of this page- "Firefox Help... Ask a new..." etc. starts 5 1/4 inches from the left of the page.

It's as if Firefox were presenting a wider page with the presentation moved to the right. This pushes the last, normal, 5" of the presentation off the screen.

The rite end of the bar which starts out: http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/fx/

is off the page, so the facilities at the rite end are lost.

Any presentation, including Amazon.com and Youtube.com are similarly pushed off the rite side of the screen by 5".

I have no access to the rite-most 5" of any internet presentation.

The sliders that move the presentation up and down and left/ rite are off the screen.

I have shrunk the display down so small, i can barely see the numbers: Control panel\ display \ settings \ 1920 by 1200. This gives the ILLUSION of centering the presentation, but still no sliders. At this setting, i can see the full width of Amazon. Youtube appears centered, with 4 1/4" on both left and rite, but no edge sliders.

I dropped the 'setting' to 1440 x 900.

Lost about 3" off the rite side of Amazon; barely on the rite edge of Youtube.

None of my local programming has a problem: Excel, pictures, videos, Word, even Internet Explorer goes full page and centered.

I un-installed Firefox and downloaded it fresh. It did NOT ask me to reboot my puter, so i didn't .

I can supply pictures (screen shots) of the phenomenon on request.

The top of my screen is normal: the tool bar starts "File, Edit... The body of the screen while running Firefox-and during typing of this message- is full of lite. The actual data: starting from the top of this page- "Firefox Help... Ask a new..." etc. starts 5 1/4 inches from the left of the page. It's as if Firefox were presenting a wider page with the presentation moved to the right. This pushes the last, normal, 5" of the presentation off the screen. The rite end of the bar which starts out: http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/fx/ is off the page, so the facilities at the rite end are lost. Any presentation, including Amazon.com and Youtube.com are similarly pushed off the rite side of the screen by 5". I have no access to the rite-most 5" of any internet presentation. The sliders that move the presentation up and down and left/ rite are off the screen. I have shrunk the display down so small, i can barely see the numbers: Control panel\ display \ settings \ 1920 by 1200. This gives the ILLUSION of centering the presentation, but still no sliders. At this setting, i can see the full width of Amazon. Youtube appears centered, with 4 1/4" on both left and rite, but no edge sliders. I dropped the 'setting' to 1440 x 900. Lost about 3" off the rite side of Amazon; barely on the rite edge of Youtube. None of my local programming has a problem: Excel, pictures, videos, Word, even Internet Explorer goes full page and centered. I un-installed Firefox and downloaded it fresh. It did NOT ask me to reboot my puter, so i didn't . I can supply pictures (screen shots) of the phenomenon on request.

被選擇的解決方法

- Open Firefox -> got to Help Menu -> select "Restart with Add-ons Disabled"

Firefox will close then it will open up with just basic Firefox. You can enable the Add-ons later. Check if its working.

從原來的回覆中察看解決方案 👍 5

所有回覆 (2)

more options

選擇的解決方法

- Open Firefox -> got to Help Menu -> select "Restart with Add-ons Disabled"

Firefox will close then it will open up with just basic Firefox. You can enable the Add-ons later. Check if its working.

more options

Thank you so much, mha007 ! It fixed the problem.

-Bobby