This link has been bookmarked by 59 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Jun 2006, by Jesper Kamstrup Linnet.
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The active ingredient is XUL, a markup language (the eXtensible [or "XML-Based"] User-interface Language,
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XUL will provide the interface. JavaScript handles the functionality.
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Gary BurgeToday let's take a look at how one goes about creating these magical extensions. The active ingredient is XUL, a markup language (the eXtensible [or "XML-Based"] User-interface Language, to be precise) that describes things like toolbars, menus, keyboard
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Firefox, the fun open-source browser that some ten percent of the web uses, has a secret.
No, not about:mozilla — that's old news. Firefox's secret is the same as Jessica Simpson's: its effortless, glamorous style is the result of — shhh — extensions!
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20 Sep 06
Greg GannicottShort guide to creating a Firefox Extension. Might be a bit of fun.
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let's take a look at how one goes about creating these magical extensions
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12 Sep 06
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Daniel AndrlikAnother nice intro to writing an extension for firefox.
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If you've ever worked with XML, then XUL will look familiar. Every XUL script starts with a namespace declaration, and has its content inside tags like
and . Firefox's XUL parser sits right next to its parsers for things like HTML and JavaScript, and they work along similar lines. If you need to
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Andy BrudtkuhlToday let's take a look at how one goes about creating these magical extensions. The active ingredient is XUL, a markup language (the eXtensible [or "XML-Based"] User-interface Language, to be precise) that describes things like toolbars, menus, keyboard
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David ClayFirefox's extensions add specific functions, things the creators never intended, neatly integrated into the browser. Now you can learn how to make your own. Join Paul as he introduces us to the world of extension-crafting.
Bookmarks firefox_extensions firefox programming extension tutorial howto development
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