"It's a feature, not a bug!" Fortunately, it is also an easy "feature" to fix: open about:config, search for context, and set dom.event.contextmenu.enables to false. Restart your browser, wash, rinse, repeat.
On 10/22/06, David Fedoruk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I have a question about Operating System and Application etiquette for > lack of a better term. Should an application override the operating > system's built-in menus? > > Specifically I want to reference the Control-click contextual menus > giving access to spell check. In Writely, and now Blogger, the Mac OS > contextual menus are overridden with the web application's menus. This > means I have no access to the built-in spell check in Tiger (or > Panther). This is extremely annoying. Writely has its own spell check, > but I peferr using the Mac OS spell check since it makes spell > checking standard across all applications for me if I wish. > > I used the Mac OS spell checker for this email, thanks to Camino > making the operating system's spell check available. Writely takes > that away. > > Who's bug is this, Camino's, or Writely's? Is it a bug at all? Is > there a way to override Writely's actions? > > -- > David Fedoruk > B.Mus. UBC,1986 > Certificate in Internet Systems Administration, UBC, 2003 > > > http://recordjackethistorian.blogspot.com > "Music is enough for one's life time, but one life time is not enough > for music" Sergei Rachmaninov > _______________________________________________ > Camino mailing list > [email protected] > http://mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino > -- Joshie Surber, <http://joshie.surber.us> Source code is free speech. _______________________________________________ Camino mailing list [email protected] http://mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino
