Tue 09 Jun 2009
Tags: delicious_css, delicious, css, user styles
Further to my Delicious CSS post, here's a javascript
bookmarklet to make adding delicious css tags that much easier:
http://delicious.com/save?url='+encodeURIComponent(window.location.host)+'&title='+encodeURIComponent(window.location.host)+'&tags=delicious_css%2520delicious_css%253d'+encodeURIComponent(window.location.host)+'&v=5&';a=function(){if(!window.open(f+'noui=1&jump=doclose','deliciousuiv5','location=yes,links=no,scrollbars=no,toolbar=no,width=550,height=550'))location.href=f+'jump=yes'};if(/Firefox/.test(navigator.userAgent)){setTimeout(a,0)}else{a()}})()">Delicious CSS
Just drag it to your bookmarks toolbar somewhere, and click to use.
Unfortunately, the latest version of the delicious tag form doesn't accept
tag arguments in the URL, which is what we need to preset the delicious_css
tags we need. To workaround this, you need to also install the
Auto-Fill Delicious Tag Field
greasemonkey script.
Sat 30 May 2009
Tags: delicious_css, delicious, css, user styles
And from the quick-weekend-hack department ...
Ever wanted to quickly add a style to a page you were on to make it
more usable? If you're a Firefox user with Firebug installed you can
do that directly, but it's a temporary and local-only solution. User
stylesheets are more permanent, but at least in Firefox
(as I've complained before)
they're relatively difficult to use, and they're still a single-host
solution.
I've wanted a lightweight method of defining and applying user styles
on the network for ages now, and this weekend it struck me that a simple
and relatively elegant hack would be to just store user styles as
delicious tags, applying them to a page via
a greasemonkey script.
So here it is: available at userscripts.org is a
relatively trivial Delicious CSS
greasemonkey script. It looks for delicious bookmarks belonging to a list
of specified delicious usernames that are tagged with
delicious_css=<current_domain>
,
and applies any 'style tags' it finds on that bookmark to the current
page.
Say if for example you wanted to hide the sidebar on my blog and make
the content wider, you might do this in CSS:
div#sidebar { display: none }
div#main { width: 100% }
To define these rules for Delicious CSS you'd just create a bookmark
for www.openfusion.net
with the following tags:
delicious_css
delicious_css=www.openfusion.net
div#sidebar=display:none
div#main=width:100%
Note that since delicious tags are space-separated, you have to be
careful to avoid spaces.
The general format of the style tags is:
ELT[,ELT...]=STYLE[;STYLE...]
so more complex styles are fine too. Here for example are the styles
I'm using for the Sydney Morning Herald:
div.header,div.sidebar,div.aside,div.ad,div.footer=display:none
div#content,div.col1,.span-11=width:100%
body=background:none
which turns this:
into this:
And to setup a new machine, all you need to do is install the
Delicious CSS greasemonkey script, adjust the usernames you're
trusting, and all your styles are available immediately.
I'll be setting up my userstyles under my 'gavincarr' delicious account,
so you should be able to find additional examples at
http://delicious.com/gavincarr/delicious_css.
Wed 16 Jan 2008
Tags: css, user css, user styles
I've been messing with user stylesheets the last couple of days, almost
getting what I want, but not quite.
I'm a happy little firefox user, but the stock firefox functionality in
this area really isn't that useful. My gripes:
first, firefox/mozilla seems to only support a single global user
stylesheet, which gets huge and unwieldy awfully fast. Opera does
this much better than firefox, I hear.
because of this, to apply styles to a particular site you have to use
a magic @-moz-document domain
style modifier, and this doesn't
seem to play nicely with @media
modifiers, so afaict there doesn't seem
to be a way of specifying print styles for a particular site, say.
If I'm wrong about this, I'd be happy to hear about it.
user stylesheets are local files, which means they don't follow me around
across the different machines I use, and I don't get any
network effects from the work of others, as is available using a
'cloud' solution like greasemonkey
(more minor) I know it's to spec, but having to specify !important
everywhere to force user styles to stick gets old fast
As usual with firefox, there's an extension/add-on that does the job
better though. The Stylish
extension - "Stylish is to CSS what Greasemonkey is to JavaScript" - does
a pretty nice job of addressing (1) and some of (3) above (the network
effects part), allowing you to import and manage multiple per-site
stylesheets pretty nicely.
My other quibbles remain, though. In particular, there doesn't seem to be
a nice way of setting up media-specific per-site styles, which is a must-have,
I think. I'd also really love a solution that would follow me across browsers,
especially given the number of sites you might want to tweak is typically much
larger than the number of extensions you typically have installed.
Hmmmm.