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Nov 29 at 23:13 comment added Nanigashi @Makyen, if there's a way to make XUL-based TamperData work in current Firefox, I estimate there are about 3.8×10⁷⁰ people who would love to know it.
Nov 29 at 22:35 comment added Makyen Mod Keep in mind that turning off the ability to use XUL-based add-ons was merely a switch that Mozilla flipped, not a removal of the actual functionality (the fundamentals are a core part of how Firefox works). Mozilla themselves released XUL-based extensions that ran as specially-privileged extensions well after FF57.
Nov 29 at 22:32 comment added Makyen Mod It actually worked well after FF57, but required progressively more elaborate workarounds to be ale to use it (e.g., only enabled on Nightly, must be an "experiment", must be a Mozilla written add-on). I'd suspect, given how it was handled well after FF57, that it's possible to use an SDK-based extension even on the current Nightly version of Firefox. However, it's much more likely that anyone who would be able to use an SDK-based add-on would just use an XUL-based one, as the SDK is just a wrapper/library for XUL-based extensions, which abstracts-away some of the commonly performed tasks.
Nov 29 at 22:11 comment added Nanigashi @chivracq, "The SDK was deprecated in Firefox 53 ..." was preexisting text added in 2018, as was "EOL'd" BTW. My (suggested) edit wasn't a wholesale rewrite, just a sorely needed update. Since the edit hasn't been accepted yet, I added it back in the info section. See my edit above.
Nov 29 at 21:58 history edited Nanigashi CC BY-SA 4.0
Add Pale Moon and Basilisk references
Nov 29 at 16:54 comment added chivracq @ThomA Ah..., alright, about "deprecated", thanks... Then, well, 7 years later, the "important info" is that it works/ed until FF56 (which was super buggy because trying to support both 'XUL' + 'WebExtensions', hence FF v55.0.3 was the last stable FF version). Also "interesting info" for current use of the Tag (in 2024+) is to know which Browsers still work with the SDK. ('Pale Moon' and 'Basilisk' are still maintained, 'Waterfox Classic' is not anymore, if I'm correct...). // "EOL" is a very standard abbreviation in that area...
Nov 29 at 16:35 comment added Thom A Deprecated doesn't mean "doesn't work", @chivracq , it means that the feature is no longer being worked on and may (or is planned to be) removed in a future version. Or, in shorter words "Don't use this feature anymore, it will stop working one day." The suggested edit, in fact, says it wasn't made end of life (though uses the acronym EOL, which is less "ideal") until Firefox 57; which suggests that it worked until then.
Nov 29 at 14:50 comment added chivracq Hum, pity you dropped your intention tp mention 'Pale Moon' & 'Waterfox Classic' indeed, and 'Basilisk' also. // Not sure if "The SDK was deprecated in Firefox 53" is correct, as it worked/works until FF56 (buggy-wise though, FF v55.0.3 (that I still use(d - until very recently, need to reinstall on a new Laptop), oops!) was/is much more stable).
Nov 29 at 11:41 history answered Nanigashi CC BY-SA 4.0