On 28/02/2016 7:00 AM, EE wrote:
Daniel wrote:
On 27/02/2016 3:16 AM, David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/26/2016 12:24 AM, Daniel wrote:
On 26/02/2016 12:54 PM, David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/25/2016 3:25 PM, Ray_Net wrote:
David E. Ross wrote on 25/02/2016 16:39:
On 2/25/2016 2:53 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 2/24/2016 6:26 PM, David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/24/2016 2:04 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 2/23/2016 7:46 PM, David E. Ross wrote:
[snip]

Yes, I know the difference between a plugin and an extension.
...

But some readers, including myself [even though around since
Netscape 4.x], do not.
Could you point to an official definition of the terms "plugin"
and "extension"?
I for one have never seen the need to enhance in any way a
standard release. I explicitly disable some longtime features
such as cookies, JavaScript, and site specified
colors/backgrounds.

Go to <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plug-in#Computing>.  There
are four
bullets; the first two are relevant.

Thank you. When I said "official definition" I should have said
something like "How does SeaMonkey (or Mozilla) define the
distinction between a 'plugin' and an 'extension' ?"

   From actually using both plugins and extensions, the Wikipedia
description reflects reality.  When I open the Add-ons Manager, the
items under Extensions are indeed as described in the second
bulltet on
the Wikipedia page; and the items under Plugins are as described
in the
first bullet on that page.

So when a plugin crashes ... the browser is still alive.
When an extension crashes... the browser crashes.
Am I wrong ?


I think that is correct.

A plugin is installed separately and independently of the browser or
any
other application that might launch it (e.g., Thunderbird).  The
browser
launches the plugin to perform some task.  I generally download
plugins
via SeaMonkey.  When I install a new plugin, however, I do so with
SeaMonkey terminated.  The same plugin -- not a separate
installation --
can be used by other applications; it is not installed specifically
for
each application that uses it.

An extension is installed into a browser's profile, changing the
internal code of the browser when that profile is active.  I just now
installed an update for the Theme Font & Size Changer extension.  I
had
to install it five times, once for each of four SeaMonkey profiles and
once again for Thunderbird.

Soooo .... A "Plug-in" is applied to a *SYSTEM/O.S* where as an
"Extension" is applied to a *Program/Browser*?? Yes/No!!


Yes.

Thank you .... but that then raises the question If Plug-ins are System
wide, why are they shown with-in a Program?? Or is this suggesting that
these System Plug-ins are being used by this Program ... but none of the
other plug-ins install on this OS are being used by this Program??

The application shows you which plugins it can use, but the same plugin
might be used by other applications.

Yeap, understood, because the plug-in is installed in the system.

--
Daniel

User agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; WOW64; rv:42.0) Gecko/20100101 SeaMonkey/2.39 Build identifier: 20151028234211
or
User agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:41.0) Gecko/20100101 SeaMonkey/2.38 Build identifier: 20150903203501
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