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How can I disable ligatures and still allow pages to use their own fonts?

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I often save to PDF or mark text then transfer it into a document. Firefox renders many letter combinations as ligatures: ff, fi, ffi, fl, and more. I don't want ligatures. The cures proposed have involved forbidding pages to use their own fonts. Is there another way?

I often save to PDF or mark text then transfer it into a document. Firefox renders many letter combinations as ligatures: ff, fi, ffi, fl, and more. I don't want ligatures. The cures proposed have involved forbidding pages to use their own fonts. Is there another way?

Ausgewählte Lösung

You can override CSS rules supplied by the webpage with your own rules in userContent.css by appending the "!important" flag to each property value.

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You could possibly use code in userContent.css to disable ligatures.


More info about userChrome.css/userContent.css in case you are not familiar:

You need to set this pref to true in about:config to enable userChrome.css and userContent.css in Firefox 69+.

I'm talking about pages authored by others, not myself.

Ausgewählte Lösung

You can override CSS rules supplied by the webpage with your own rules in userContent.css by appending the "!important" flag to each property value.

Thanks. I've never written a CSS so I took a minute to figure it out. For those as slow as I am:

body{

   font-variant-ligatures:	none; !important

}

in chrome/userContent.css

It annoys me that it's in the 'chrome' subdirectory, a subdirectory I didn't have until now. Why doesn't Firefox have its own?

Firefox uses the "chrome://" protocol to access its internal files and use chrome in other cases like userChrome.css/userContent.css (no relation with Google Chrome).

Thanks. Chrome seems like a poor choice of words. What is it supposed to mean? And why use ligatures inappropriately? Many instances of ff and ffi in English aren't ligatures - one knows because the word should be separately into syllables by dividing them there; one can't do that with 'real' ligatures such as æ and œ.