This is with respect to Linux only ...Frank Lion wrote:...
The Stylish extension for Chrome - same extension, same people - lets users add and manage only userContent.css styles to change the appearance/functionality only of websites.
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There is also no userChrome.css file in Google Chrome.
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#1. Does Chrome's UI contain no .css at all?
#2. Is the Chrome UI so perfect that not one user has ever wanted to change any of it?
#3. Is something else going on?
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Chrome has made the move to gtk3 from gtk2. The current dev version (and maybe also the current beta) is gtk3-based. This means that at least some customization of the UI is possible in that Chrome will take some of the css values in your theme's gtk.css.
I like a darkish UI overall and I'm moderately happy with the move to gtk3 (until the GNOMEs do something to "improve" the user experience).
Here are two bugs:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/is ... ?id=132847
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/is ... ?id=706448
One can also change the scrollbars to some extent via Stylish. Instead of the defaults, I have
Code: Select all
::-webkit-scrollbar-button,::-webkit-scrollbar-track{display:none}
::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 10px; height: 10px;}
::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb{background-color:#000d1a}
::-webkit-scrollbar{background-color:#4e4e4e}
::-webkit-scrollbar-corner {background-color:#333}