A few months ago I came up with a few posts/questions here complaining about the bad usability that StackExchange sites, in general, have.
I created a question suggesting the possibility of fixing them using a Chrome Extension instead of just commenting them here, but it did not attract much attention:
After a long time, I have finally added a few extra features and improvements in general to make it more attractive for other people to install it (previously it was just an anemic extension that injected a few lines of messy CSS
).
You can download it (or just check its current features) from the Chrome Store:
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/stackoverflow-steroids/hmpehldkjbnpdhebfangeaoabhphihic
From the Chrome Store:
It's main features are:
New design for the top navigation bar that keeps visible as many elements as possible, even in narrow windows, and fixes it at the top of the page.
Side-to-side editor (if window is wide enough) that makes it easier for you to write long questions or answers without being continuously scrolling up and down to see the preview. It's design has also been tuned a bit.
Prevent page scrolling when the answer or code editors are focused (when using keys) or the mouse is over them (when using scroll wheel), so that everything is in place while you are working.
New overlay design for the editor help.
Here you can see a screenshot of the options popup:
Comments and suggestions are welcomed, as well as contributions. The extension is published at GitHub, so anyone can open a pull request with new features or improvements on the current ones:
https://github.com/Danziger/StackOverflow-Steroids
I would like to know if someone is missing any important feature that he or she thinks that should be introduced as soon as possible.
The main improvements made so far are in the editor, as you can see in this screenshot:
NOTE: This question is duplicated in stackapps.com. Martijn Pieters suggested to post this there and it seems a good idea, but I did not know that forum before...
manifest
you have to specify in which URL patterns you want to inject yourCSS
andJS
files. Previously I had just*://*.stackoverlow.com/*
and*://*.stackexchange.com/*
. However, there are some sites, like security.stackexchange.com that break with the changes of the extension, that's why it's limited to StackOverflow. I should probably take some time to test the extension on the main StackExchange sites to see in which ones I can use it too and how I can do that without having too many URL rules.CSS
code is injected directly by SO Steroids, depending on a URL match, while SOUP uses a (big) JS file.