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PUBLIC MARKS with tags firefox & code

2020

đź›  CHROME - LOADED from FIREFOX ADDON - Linkify Plus Plus

by decembre (via)
This extension can be installed on Chrome. However, it is not hosted on Chrome Webstore. You have to download the source code and load the extension as an unpacked extension. Download and extract the ZIP file. Navigate to chrome://extensions/. Enable "Developer mode". Click "LOAD UNPACKED" button and select the extension folder that is previously extracted. Other explanation: https://developer.chrome.com/extensions/getstarted#manifest

2009

Page Speed – Google Code

by piouPiouM
Page Speed is an open-source Firefox/Firebug Add-on. Webmasters and web developers can use Page Speed to evaluate the performance of their web pages and to get suggestions on how to improve them.

2008

Jiffy Firefox Extension - Documentation

by camel
The Jiffy Firefox Extension is written Bill Scott of Netflix. It adds an additional panel to Firebug that provides a visual view of the Javascript time measurements captured by Jiffy-Web. The extension is available under Creative Commons license. Jiffy-Web is a fine-grained and flexible website performance tracking and analysis suite written by Scott Ruthfield and the team at Whitepages.com. The library provides a simple way to insert and capture time measurements in your Javascript code and save them to a backend service for later analysis.

BlueGriffon.org

by greut & 3 others, 1 comment (via)

In the beginning was Netscape Gold. Then Mozilla Composer. From the ashes of Netscape and the code of Mozilla Composer came Nvu. Nvu had a cousin, KompoZer. But all this tools now belong to History and are extinct or on path to extinction.

In the meantime, Mozilla brought Firefox to the masses and its rendering engine, Gecko, has the power to fuel a next-generation wysiwyg editor for the World Wide Web. This editor is BlueGriffon™. Stay tuned !

Uzzah!

Un plugin jQuery pour générer des plans automatiquement - Prendre un Café

by camel & 1 other
Quelques heures de boulot plus tard, jqplanize[1] est né et permet de générer automatiquement une table des matières extraite de la hiérarchie induite de la séquence des titres d'un document HTML[2]. La doc est sur la page d'accueil du projet (hébergée chez Google), ou plus exhaustivement sur cette page dédiée du présent site, avec quelques exemples live. Le code semble fonctionner sous Firefox 3 RC2 et Safari 3.1, mais ça ne marche curieusement pas sous Opera 9, et j'ai pas testé sous IE donc attendez vous à des updates[3].

2007

2006

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