2

I want to write a style the affects all websites I visit.

If I open the style with something like this,

@-moz-document url("") {

I can save my style, and Stylish puts the words "Can affect anything" under the saved style. But in practice, it doesn't seem to affect anything.

I can actually affect everything by changing the line to this:

@-moz-document regexp("*") {

But then when I click save, it refuses to save. The save button doesn't gray out, and if I close the stylish editor, the style isn't saved.

It appears to be specific to having regexp in there... anything else saves normally.

I read somewhere I could edit the file stylish.sqlite in my profiles folder directly, without an SQlite database editor, because the style is in plain text. So I tried doing that in notepad and saving. But then stylish just gives an error when I start firefox, about "Stylish is having problems opening its database".

How can I just make a style that affects every url?

CreeDorofl
  • 173
  • 7

2 Answers2

1

A regex * is not valid since it is a quantifier without the pattern itself. You ask to match nothing/undefined value zero or more times.

A symbol matching any character but a newline is .. Thus, you could try

@-moz-document regexp(".*")

However, a regex that may match empty string can lead to unexpected results.

I suggest using

@-moz-document regexp(".+")

It will match 1 or more characters other than a newline.

Wiktor Stribiżew
  • 607,720
  • 39
  • 448
  • 563
0

Just create a global stylesheet with style rules not wrapped in any @-moz-document.

Marat Tanalin
  • 13,927
  • 1
  • 36
  • 52