silversurfer
Level 85
Thread author
Verified
Honorary Member
Top Poster
Content Creator
Malware Hunter
Well-known
- Aug 17, 2014
- 10,820
Mozilla is working on a site-specific search feature in Firefox currently that enables users of the browser to run searches on the active site from the browser's address bar.
The feature landed in the latest Firefox Nightly update and is disabled by default. Firefox Nightly users may enable it, however, to test the functionality right at this moment.
Site-specific search functionality is available on websites that support Open Search. Many sites support it, including yours truly but also others such as Wikipedia and Mozilla Add-ons.
To use the feature, simply type in the address bar after the page has loaded fully. If the site supports Open Search, you should see a "search with" search option in the list of suggestions. Select that option and Firefox loads the site's search results page.
In case you want to try it out, here is how you enable it in Firefox:
Whenever you visit a site with Open Search support, you may type in the browser's address bar to get the option to load site-specific results.
- Make sure you have the latest version of Firefox Nightly installed. Select Menu > Help > About Nightly to make sure of that. Firefox displays the current version and downloads any update that is available.
- Load about:config in the browser's address bar.
- Confirm that you will be careful if a warning message is displayed.
- Search for contextualSearch.enabled.
- Change the value of the Boolean preference to true. Just hit the toggle icon to change its value.
- Restart Firefox Nightly.
A look at Firefox's upcoming site-specific search feature - gHacks Tech News
Mozilla is working on a site-specific search feature in Firefox currently that enables users of the browser to run searches on the active site from the browser's address bar.
www.ghacks.net