David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/15/2020 9:46 AM, David E. Ross wrote:
On 2/11/2020 12:35 PM, Tom Pamin wrote:
I would like some of my bookmarks, and passwords for bookmarks, to
appear and be printed in red. Any way to do this?
For bookmarks, have you considered adding comments instead of
color-coding? A comment can be something simple such as #, $, %, *, A,
x, etc, to flag the bookmark.
To add a comment:
1. On the SeaMonkey menu bar, select [Bookmarks > Manage Bookmarks].
2. On the Bookmarks Manager window, select any single bookmark and then
select the More button near the bottomm-left of the right-hand pane.
3. Now select any single bookmark that you wish to highlight. In the
Description area, type a character.
NOTE: The Description area appears only when a single bookmark is
selected. Whatever you enter will appear below the bookmark.
Alternatively, you can append -- with leading spaces -- flagging
characters at the end of the names of bookmarks. In this case, what you
enter will appear on the same line as the bookmark.
Whichever way you do this, the characters you enter will appear whenever
you export your bookmarks to an HTML file. I export my bookmarks every
time I terminate SeaMonkey. In my profile, I inserted the following
into file user.js:
user_pref("browser.bookmarks.autoExportHTML", true);
// automatically export bookmarks into an HTML file
The semi-colon (;) at the end of the first line is mandatory. The
second line is merely a comment -- indicated by the double virgules (//)
at the beginning -- to remind me why I have this.
As for your passwords, there is no equivalent. I would question
printing out your passwords from SeaMonkey unless you are going to
deposit the printout in a safe deposit box at a bank.
On the other hand, if you have passwords for sites where you do not have
critical data (e.g., not personal or financial), you might try
something similar to what I do. When I set such a password, I first
enter it into a text file before entering it into SeaMonkey. My text
file does not allow colors, but you could use a Word file that allows
the use of colors. Just remember that this is not appropriate for
passwords you want to keep secure.
I have three lists of passwords on my PC:
* One is plain text for passwords for sites where logging-on merely
brings up the settings I want to use. These generally are for
site-specific forums. I do not care if someone discovers these
passwords.
* The second is also plain text but saved with strong encryption. This
too is for sites where logging-on merely brings up the settings I want
but could be subject to serious malicious actions by others. These are
generally for sites where I make purchases.
* The third is a spread sheet that is also saved with strong
encryption. This is for financial services, modem, router, utilities,
Medicare, Social Security, ISPs, etc, sites where I could lose
significant funds or suffer identity theft. I change these passwords at
last annually, and no two sites have the same passwords.
NOTE: All three lists contain passwords that are NOT dictionary words.
They are random strings of letters, numbers, and symbols. I do not need
dictionary words if I have these lists.
Actually I do put a copy with the bank. I'm not clear on how you enter
your text files into SM?
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