David E. Ross wrote:
On 7/3/2014 7:52 PM, Barry Edwin Gilmour wrote:
EE wrote on 07/04/2014 07:42 AM:
David E. Ross wrote:
On 7/3/2014 1:12 AM, Daniel wrote:
On 02/07/14 22:50, Daniel wrote:
Searching for userChrome.css as I type.
Well!! I'm not seeing any green anywhere, so I must have screwed it
up!!
Time to try a different/lower level in the directory chain.
Try searching for userChrome-example.css. That file should always be
created when installing SeaMonkey. If you find it but not
userChrome.css, just copy userChrome-example.css into the same directory
and rename it as userChrome.css.
Those example files are not present in the recent versions of
SeaMonkey. They were not present when I started using SeaMonkey at
version 2.20.
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?
Use a search engine to find examples of userChrome.css code. There are
plenty of them. The userContent.css is easier because it has no need
for a namespace line.
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