Is there a way to do this with user CSS on Firefox?
The content has to have full opacity. So setting opacity through the compositor or the opacity
CSS property does not count.
Setting a background-color
with some alpha on userContent.css
technically works but because the browser itself is fully opaque, doesn't show the background. Trying to set background-related properties on #browser
on userChrome.css
doesn't have an effect. If I can make only the background of #browser
transparent, this'll work. But I don't know if that's possible.
edit: it is possible, with lots of caveats. Site-specific fixes will be required, popups are hard to read. If you have dark wallpapers enable dark reader to make site content readable on a dark background.
1- set browser.tabs.allow_transparent_browser
to true
2- in userChrome.css add #main-window, #tabbrowser-tabpanels{ background: transparent !important; }
3- userContent.css:
*{
background-color: transparent !important;
}
/* if you don't want full transparency */
html:root{
background-color: #00000080 !important;
}
Yeah, I just figured the safest option would be to only set the actual document root element transparent - in practice I think it's possibly more likely that the
<body>
element has background set by the page - although the page might as well set both. So yes, it depends on the website.I think the problem comes from
!important
not working as expected for me. Yourhtml:root
doesn't work on my setup because most websites set background onbody
and that somehow overrideshtml:root
despite the!important
. Similarly, if I set it in the body,background
orbackground-color
set in lower levels still override my usercontent (again, despite me using!important
). That's causing the webpage to have some transparent bits but a lot of elements will have regular opaque backgrounds. Any ideas?PS I don't have anything else in userContent.css or any extension that's setting CSS rules.
I think the answer depends on which elements exactly you want to make transparent. The page is a layered structure. The html root element is behind them all. Then body element is on top of that, the rest of the elements on top of body, etc.
So if you intend to have transparency all the way down, then you need to make sure that all the elements in that stack are transparent. If any single item in a stack has an opaque background then the transparency effect stops at that.
As an example, if you set
background:transparent
to just body but not the document root element, then body will indeed be transparent, but it does not matter because the root will still be opaque. Likewise, if root is made transparent, but there is any opaque layer on top of that, then only the parts of the root element that are not covered by that opaque layer will show up as transparent. If you have a glass table and put a sheet of paper on top of it, then you don't see through the part covered by the paper even though the table itself is transparent.I want the entire background of any webpage to be transparent. Like this user had here..
For me, inheritance doesn't work as you described. Inner level rules don't always inherit from outer levels (I think if an inner background-color is set equal to a variable, it doesn't inherit it's parent's background). Setting root background doesn't affect body, setting body background doesn't effect elements further down the tree (e.g. a lemmy post will still have a background color while it's surroundings are transparent).
I can achieve what I want by setting the rule globally with:
The problem with this approach is I don't actually want 100% transparency. I want at least above 75% to keep the content readable. However, with something like this:
overlapping elements' transparency stack and create regions with different opacities all over the page.
edit: writing this game me an idea and combining the two works:
Right,
background-color
is not an inherited property (compared to for examplecolor
(color of text) which is). But even if it were, inheritance is not "enforced" so if website css sets a backround-color specifically for that element then the inherited value would be lost anyway.But the way you now describe it doesn't seem possible. There is not syntax to apply style rule to "just the innermost element". I think the closest would be to have everything else have fully transparent background, but the html root element have only partial transparency:
However, you will still face a problem; many websites draw graphics or images as a
background-image
so if you use thebackground
shorthand property then those graphics will be effectively removed. On the other hand, if you instead set justbackground-color
then parts might get opaque again because a website could be drawing even opaque backgrounds as background-image instead of background-color.You're right about the background. That was me going catch-all while testing. I'll set background-color only for a while and observe how that works.
I assumed background-color would be inherited when marked
!important
since I haven't seen that noted anywhere on MDN or similar.Yeah,
!important
doesn't affect inheritance in any way. It only means that this particular rule is to be used if there are multiple rules that would set that particular property for the element in question (unless there's some other more specific rule with !important tag as well). MDN lists property inheritance in the formal definition section. You can totally make background-color inherited though - like*{ background-color: inherit }
(and then set the property to something else on the root element from which you would want to inherit from) but it would then either not apply if website set it to anything else for an element or override any other set value if you used!important
tag.One other thing worth noting is that I would not recommend the rules mentioned for userChrome.css to be used as is - at least on Windows they completely break Firefox startup - it fails to display any window if you do that. Instead you should add a
[sessionrestored]
selector to wait a bit before those rules are applied to main-window: