td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}
Originally posted by: jliechty
Some must like it, or Jason wouldn't have put it in there. But for those who would rather not see it, try this in your usercontent.css of Mozilla or Firefox:
td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}
Originally posted by: jliechty
Some must like it, or Jason wouldn't have put it in there. But for those who would rather not see it, try this in your usercontent.css of Mozilla or Firefox:
td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}
Originally posted by: jliechty
Some must like it, or Jason wouldn't have put it in there. But for those who would rather not see it, try this in your usercontent.css of Mozilla or Firefox:
td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}
If it follows the same pattern as Mozilla, it should be in:Originally posted by: Buz2b<Warning! Noob question follows/> Uhh, where do I find the "usercontent.css" in Firefox? As you can tell I'm a little new at Firefox. 😱
under windows:Originally posted by: Buz2b
Originally posted by: jliechty
Some must like it, or Jason wouldn't have put it in there. But for those who would rather not see it, try this in your usercontent.css of Mozilla or Firefox:
td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}
<Warning! Noob question follows/> Uhh, where do I find the "usercontent.css" in Firefox? As you can tell I'm a little new at Firefox. 😱
I don't know what's in the userContent-example.css, but here's what to do: Go into Notepad, paste in the CSS I posted above, then go to File > Save, go to the folder where you found the example files, and type "userContent.css" in the filename box (with the quotes). You will need to restart your browser for the settings to take effect.Originally posted by: Buz2b
OK, I think I found the folder(s) in question, except I'm not sure. God I HATE sounding so much like a noob. Anyway, I found it under Pheonix, etc, etc, but there was nothing under Mozilla. What I found though was two .css files:
userChrome example.css
&
userContent example.css
Assuming the latter is the one I want, I opened it and saw the following: "Edit this file and copy it as userContent.css into your profile-directory/chrome/"
Soooo, do I just add the text you listed earlier at the bottom of this text box, save it and try the browser or do I edit out all the text in there (looks like there is just a bunch of example lines) and copy in the new stuff, save the file AS "userContent.css" (not userContent example.css) as the above quote seems to instruct?
Sorry for all the questions but I'm a hardware kinda guy and tend to screw things up when dealing with stuff like this.
Well, then change the first height value to be however many px looks good to you (try 3 to start, it seems 7 was the original default). You may need to delete the line that starts with "padding," for it to look right, I have no idea; since I don't like the bar at all, I have no motivation to test it otherwise. You'll have to play on your own if you want differently. 🙂Originally posted by: aircooled
I don't mind it, but it would look better about half as thick.
Originally posted by: jliechty
I don't know what's in the userContent-example.css, but here's what to do: Go into Notepad, paste in the CSS I posted above, then go to File > Save, go to the folder where you found the example files, and type "userContent.css" in the filename box (with the quotes). You will need to restart your browser for the settings to take effect.Originally posted by: Buz2b
OK, I think I found the folder(s) in question, except I'm not sure. God I HATE sounding so much like a noob. Anyway, I found it under Pheonix, etc, etc, but there was nothing under Mozilla. What I found though was two .css files:
userChrome example.css
&
userContent example.css
Assuming the latter is the one I want, I opened it and saw the following: "Edit this file and copy it as userContent.css into your profile-directory/chrome/"
Soooo, do I just add the text you listed earlier at the bottom of this text box, save it and try the browser or do I edit out all the text in there (looks like there is just a bunch of example lines) and copy in the new stuff, save the file AS "userContent.css" (not userContent example.css) as the above quote seems to instruct?
Sorry for all the questions but I'm a hardware kinda guy and tend to screw things up when dealing with stuff like this.
Hey, don't feel too bad, I knew less than that at one time myself. Many thanks to BBWF for making his excellent CSS many moons ago and for getting me started on the whole CSS thing also. 🙂Originally posted by: Buz2bThe bell rings, the light comes on and another fool is enlightened! :laugh: Thanks jliechty, that did the trick. Much less distracting now. Thanks for spending the time with me on this.
Sorry, I neglected to mention that if you are running Pheonix or Firefox the path will read "pheonix" rather than "mozilla"Anyway, I found it under Pheonix, etc, etc, but there was nothing under Mozilla.
Originally posted by: Jason Clark
Nope we're not removing it, its in alot of other forums out there and helps separate the messages, without it messages are right next to each other and it can be distracting to some users. The spacing we use is far less than some other forums out there.
Originally posted by: jliechty
Some must like it, or Jason wouldn't have put it in there. But for those who would rather not see it, try this in your usercontent.css of Mozilla or Firefox:
td.ftalternatingbarseparater {
height: 0px !important;
padding: 0px !important;
}
td.ftalternatingbarseparater img {
height: 0px !important;
}