A flat and clean theme for Firefox 60+
This is a bunch of CSS code to make Firefox look closer to Chrome theme.
- Go to
about:support
in Firefox. - Application Basics > Profile Directory > Open Directory.
- Copy
chrome
folder Firefox config folder. - If you are using Firefox 69+:
- Go to
about:config
in Firefox. - Search for
toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets
and set it totrue
.
- Go to
- Restart Firefox.
- Open Firefox customization panel and:
- Use Title bar option to toggle CSD if is not set by default.
- Move the new tab button to headerbar.
- Select light or dark variants on theme switcher.
- Be happy with your new gnomish Firefox.
Open userChrome.css
with a text editor and follow instructions to enable extra features. Keep in mind this file might change in future versions and your configuration will be lost. You can copy the @imports you want to enable to a new file named customChrome
directly in your chrome
directory if you want it to survive updates. Remember all @imports must be at the top of the file, before other statements.
See upstream bug.
Icons might appear black where they should be white on some systems. I have no idea why, but you can adjust them in the Matcha/colors/light.css
or Matcha/colors/dark.css
files, look for --gnome-icons-hack-filter
var and play with css filters.
If you wanna mess around the styles and change something, you might find these things useful.
To use the Inspector to debug the UI, open the developer tools (F12) on any page, go to options, check both of those:
- Enable browser chrome and add-on debugging toolboxes
- Enable remote debugging
Now you can close those tools and press Ctrl+Alt+Shift+I to Inspect the browser UI.
Also you can inspect any GTK3 application, for example type this into a terminal and it will run Epiphany with the GTK Inspector, so you can check the CSS styles of its elements too.
GTK_DEBUG=interactive epiphany
Feel free to use any parts of my code to develop your own themes, I don't force any specific license on your code.
Developed by Rafael Mardojai and contributors. Based on Sai Kurogetsu original work.