Izimpendulo zakamuva ze-What happened to the search engine drop down menuhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/10250882014-12-11T22:45:34-08:00Locking this thread which was for Firefox 32.0.3 as the "problems" with Firefox 34 are quite differe2014-12-11T22:45:34-08:00the-edmeisterhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-663924<p><em>Locking this thread which was for Firefox 32.0.3 as the "problems" with Firefox 34 are quite different. Please ask a new question for help with your problem.</em>
</p><p><a href="https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/new" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/new</a>
</p>I don't like this. Now in 34.0.5, if I want to use a different search engine, I have to click on thr2014-12-11T22:41:42-08:00thetechladyhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-663921<p>I don't like this. Now in 34.0.5, if I want to use a different search engine, I have to click on three different things rather than just one click on the drop-down menu. BRING BACK THE DROP DOWN MENU!
This feels like Mozilla is trying to force us to use its search engine by making it more difficult to use another. I may have to change my default search away from Duckduckgo, if this continues. I can't stand it when an organization tries to force us to use their products. It's bad enough that I have to put up with that crap from Microsoft and Google. I didn't expect it from Mozilla.
</p>jscheer2000,
This issue is NOT solved.
We know how to use the drop-down menu in the search bar. We w2014-12-11T22:30:57-08:00thetechladyhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-663916<p>jscheer2000,
</p><p>This issue is NOT solved.
We know how to use the drop-down menu in the search bar. We would use it if it were there. In Firefox 34.0.5 the little arrow pointing down no longer is there. When I pass my cursor over the magnifying glass, I get "Change search settings." Nothing drops down. I don't want to change my search settings. I simply would like to use a different search occasionally. Why don't we have a choice anymore?
</p>Hi brianvt, if you find the new design less productive, it is possible to switch back to the old sea2014-12-10T04:10:33-08:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-663108<p>Hi brianvt, if you find the new design less productive, it is possible to switch back to the old search bar. Here's how:
</p><p>(1) In a new tab, type or paste <strong>about:config</strong> in the address bar and press Enter. Click the button promising to be careful.
</p><p>(2) In the search box that appears above the list, type or paste <strong>search</strong> and pause while the list is filtered
</p><p>(3) Double-click the <strong>browser.search.showOneOffButtons</strong> preference to switch it from true to false
</p><p>This doesn't affect the current window, but each new window you open (Ctrl+n) will have the old Search bar.
</p>I'll wait for the next version. This isn't crucial.
Though I will say, having used the new feature 2014-12-10T03:02:23-08:00brianvthttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-663073<p>I'll wait for the next version. This isn't crucial.
</p><p>Though I will say, having used the new feature a few times now, that the old way was much more logical, i.e. choosing which browser to use before starting to type in a search.
</p>Hi brianvt, the order should be the same as it was before the update.
At some point, you will be abl2014-12-09T08:16:53-08:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-662676<p>Hi brianvt, the order should be the same as it was before the update.
</p><p>At some point, you will be able to change the order in the Options dialog on the Search panel. However, that feature wasn't ready in time for Firefox 34.0.5. Hopefully in Firefox 35.0.
</p><p>Search engine sequence is stored in a settings file named search-metadata.json in your currently active profile folder. These JSON-format data files are difficult to edit because they are in a very compact format meant to be read by computers and not humans. However, if you squint at it very hard, or search it in a text editor, you will see for each different search plugin:
</p><pre>"order":
</pre>
<p>followed by a number. If changing the sequence is really critical, <s>you could try editing this file (with Firefox closed), but it's probably a good idea to create a backup in case something goes terribly wrong.</s> <u>see the tool listed in cor-el's post above: <a href="https://support.mozilla.org/questions/1025088#answer-662668" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/questions/1025088#answer-662668</a>.</u>
</p>You can change the order via the previously used "Manage Search Engines" window that you can open vi2014-12-09T08:08:49-08:00cor-elhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-662668<p>You can change the order via the previously used "Manage Search Engines" window that you can open via this chrome URI via the location bar (or bookmark).
</p>
<ul><li>chrome://browser/content/search/engineManager.xul
</li></ul>
<p>This order is stored in the search-metadata.json file in the profile folder.
</p>
<ul><li>browser.search.useDBForOrder = true
</li></ul>OK, this works. Thanks. How do I change the sequence of search engine icons that show up? Some ic2014-12-09T07:11:32-08:00brianvthttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-662626<p>OK, this works. Thanks. How do I change the sequence of search engine icons that show up? Some icons are more intuitive than others.
</p>Note that this thread is about Firefox 32.
In the current Firefox 34 release there is a new "one-off2014-12-09T06:18:29-08:00cor-elhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-662587<p>Note that this thread is about Firefox 32.
</p><p>In the current Firefox 34 release there is a new "one-off" search bar.
You can type one letter to make a drop-down list appear where you can see suggestions and also a row at the bottom where you can select other search engines that are enabled.
</p><p>Click the search engine icon and click "Change Search Settings" to open the Search tab in Options/Preferences (positioned between Tabs and Content) to select the default search engine and select which search engines to show in the search bar drop-down list.
</p><p>See also:
</p>
<ul><li><a href="https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Search+bar" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Search+bar</a>
</li></ul>I don't understand what this 'solution' is telling me to do. The 'search settings' window looks the2014-12-09T05:43:08-08:00brianvthttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-662575<p>I don't understand what this 'solution' is telling me to do. The 'search settings' window looks the same as it always has, but the latest Firefox download only gives me one choice of search engine, i.e. what I've chosen as the default. I've tried a couple of different defaults, and neither Google nor DuckDuckGo gives me the drop-down. Do I have to go through this annoying rigamarole every time I want to use a different search engine, which I need to do quite often? Do I have to set Yahoo as the default? That didn't work either, but would be about as useful as going back to Alta Vista. C'mon folks, this is seriously annoying.
</p>thank you. i got the search bar with drop down menu back.
2014-10-13T09:24:21-07:00info_searchhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-640191<p>thank you. i got the search bar with drop down menu back.
</p>what are the steps to do this? thank you.
2014-10-13T09:23:21-07:00info_searchhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-640190<p>what are the steps to do this? thank you.
</p>Note that your System Details list shows that you have preferences that were used in previous Firefo2014-10-12T13:59:50-07:00cor-elhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-639894<p>Note that your System Details list shows that you have preferences that were used in previous Firefox versions and that are no longer supported in the current Firefox release, so it might be a good time to also delete the prefs.js file to reset all prefs.
</p>Thank you for posting your detailed configuration information. It shows that your have a user.js fil2014-10-12T13:51:59-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-639892<p>Thank you for posting your detailed configuration information. It shows that your have a user.js file, which is an optional settings file that you or a system administrator or third party software can use to override your saved Firefox settings. This article describes how to locate and inspect or delete that file in that that is what is overriding your preferred search engine: <a href="/en-US/kb/how-to-fix-preferences-wont-save" rel="nofollow">How to fix preferences that won't save</a>.
</p>The search bar works the same as always: click the icon on the left end to drop down the list of sea2014-10-12T13:50:38-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1025088#answer-639891<p>The search bar works the same as always: click the icon on the left end to drop down the list of search engines.
</p><p>On the built-in home page (about:home) and the built-in new tab page (about:newtab) there is a glitch in that if you switch from Google to another search engine plugin that hasn't encoded its icon in a particular way, the list becomes inaccessible because there's nothing to click. Or at least I haven't found a way.
</p><p>So the search bar still is the best place to make a switch. If yours is not displaying, it might have "overflowed" off the main toolbar (look for a large &gt;&gt; button) or it could be among the unused controls in the Customize dialog -- in which case you can add it back to your toolbar.
</p><p>Some articles that might help:
</p>
<ul><li> <a href="/en-US/kb/search-bar-add-change-manage-search-engines-firefox" rel="nofollow">Search bar - add, change and manage search engines on Firefox</a>
</li><li> <a href="/en-US/kb/customize-firefox-controls-buttons-and-toolbars" rel="nofollow">Customize Firefox controls, buttons and toolbars</a>
</li></ul>
<p>Success?
</p>
<hr>
<p>I don't see "Default Tab" on your extensions list, but that and some other add-ons may substitute their own search box for Firefox's search bar. If you suspect such foul play, you could test in Firefox's Safe Mode. That's a standard diagnostic tool to deactivate extensions and some advanced features of Firefox. More info: <a href="/en-US/kb/diagnose-firefox-issues-using-troubleshoot-mode" rel="nofollow">Diagnose Firefox issues using Troubleshoot Mode</a>.
</p><p>You can restart Firefox in Safe Mode using either:
</p>
<ul><li> "3-bar" menu button &gt; "?" button &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li><li> Help menu &gt; Restart with Add-ons Disabled
</li></ul>
<p>Not all add-ons are disabled: Flash and other plugins still run
</p><p>After Firefox shuts down, a small dialog should appear. Click "Start in Safe Mode" (<em>not</em> Reset).
</p><p>Any difference?
</p>