On 7/3/2014 10:26 PM, Barry Edwin Gilmour wrote:
> David E. Ross wrote on 07/04/2014 12:53 PM:
>> On 7/3/2014 7:52 PM, Barry Edwin Gilmour wrote:
>>> To expand on Hartmut's answer yesterday, they are no longer in the
>>> profile folder, but kept in the application-folder's omni.ja java
>>> archive folder (For Linux, that's at /seamonkey/omni.ja
>>> (/defaults/profile/chrome/userChrome-example.css and /seamonkey/omni.ja
>>> (/defaults/profile/chrome/userContent-example.css). HTH
>>>
>> How, then, is someone supposed to extract userChrome.css and
>> userContent.css (or userChrome-example.css and userContent-example.css
>> to use as templates to create the others) from omni.ja and place them
>> into the chrome directory of a profile?
>>
> Sorry about that. I use an archive application to copy out of the Java 
> archive folder.
> Copying the attached style sheets into the user's profile chrome 
> directory, and editing in your text editor is the way to go. HTH.
> 

Actually, my question was rhetorical.  My updates of SeaMonkey have
continued to use the userChrome.css and userContent.css that I created
in my profile some years ago.  My question was intended to address the
situation of a somewhat experienced computer user who has just now
changed to SeaMonkey (or to Firefox), someone who understands CSS and
who quickly learns about Mozilla's chrome.

Why were userChrome.css, userContent.css, userChrome-example.css, and
userContent-example.css hidden in omni.ja?  Why is it now impossible to
even look into omni.ja?

-- 

David E. Ross
<http://www.rossde.com/>

On occasion, I filter and ignore all newsgroup messages
posted through GoogleGroups via Google's G2/1.0 user agent
because of spam, flames, and trolling from that source.
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