![]() Īvailable options: notify: true # default false ![]() LiveReload guard has 6 options that you can set like this: guard ' livereload ', grace_period: 0.5, override_url: true do #. guard ' livereload ' do watch ( %r end Options Please read Guard doc for more info about Guardfile DSL. You can adapt your 'view' files like you want. Please read Guard usage doc and rack-livereload how it works readme section or LiveReload extension usage doc from version 1.x Guardfile Install the gem: $ gem install guard-livereloadĪdd it to your Gemfile (inside development group): group :development do gem ' guard-livereload ', ' ~> 2.4 ', require: false endĪdd guard definition to your Guardfile by running this command: $ guard init livereloadĪnd to get everything running in the browser, use rack-livereload or install the LiveReload Safari/Chrome/Firefox extension. Please be sure to have Guard installed before continuing. Supportįor any support question/issue related to livereload please ask on. LiveReload guard allows to automatically reload your browser when 'view' files are modified. ![]() Overall, while there is cool things about FF, I feel I'm using it not because its the better browser, but some vauge idea I'm helping browser diversity.:warning: Guard::LiveReload is looking for a new maintainer. I feel better that I'm hopefully leaking less data, not that I can really verify that, but I generally believe I should be better protected than if I was using chrome scrolling tab bar instead of teeny tiny tabs where you can't see anything is good "Column select" out of the box just works Just something about the aesthetics that is somehow "off" Confluence runs like a pig on Firefox for some reason, completely unusable on some pages, not strictly a FF problem, but is problematic. Copy pasting of formatted html is worse than Chrome. Mostly I use Vimium so this is not too much of a problem For some reason often when I have quite a few tabs, open link in new tab stops working, the tab appears then disappears instantly, oddly if I use Vimium to open the tab in a new link it works. I like firefox, and use it a lot at work as generally my main browser with DDG as the, but I end up going back to chrome quite a bit That is possibly why lots of people say 'fine for me' (it is for me now, yey!) but others say "it's broken" or 'slow' or whatever. It's a great browser (though Dev Tools don't seem as good to me) and I love the containers but it does seem it needs a bit more of a particular environment to operate just right whereas Chrome 'just works' more of the time. Just today I've switch to an AMD graphics card and the opensource drivers on Fedora and only now is Firefox seemingly playing nice. But Chrome carried on through again with no problem. That was caused by using an Nvidia graphics card and the proprietary drivers on Kubuntu which was a bit janky again to say the least. I've even just switched back to Linux and immediately saw Firefox stumble over scrolling frame rates. But still, Chrome carried on like a trooper. Underlying both those issues was a janky Windows install that was partially broken. Just this last month I've had Firefox crash tabs daily that Chrome handled perfectly fine, I've seen it crash the entire browser when Chrome did just fine. "Chrome handles." can be said for a lot of things really. Honestly, if you've been blaming the browser, it's more likely that you're the one being your own worst enemy. Their emails are constantly peppered with " sent from " signatures, and they claim microphone permissions are why ads target them. These are likely the same people who carry around phones on the brink of overheating while locked, and in their pocket, because they have to have a thousand apps installed, in order to feel like they're getting the $1,000 phone they paid for, I guess. Some user subcultures are retardedly dependent on browser extensions, never clear their cache, retain cookies for the lifetime of their laptop battery, and seemingly need hundreds of tabs open. I have seen user behavior that is mind-blowingly stupid, and subcultures of user activity and tendencies trace well with product loyalty trends. But there's no accounting for user behavior. I run Windows and Linux.įirefox doesn't suck, and matches Chrome. I have multiple generations of Apple machines as well. I have performance gaming rigs of all generations, and I develop software. I have used Netscape and Internet Explorer since before both existed. I have used Chrome and Firefox side-by-side, consistently since Chrome's original release.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |