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2026-01-13 08:47:33
2026-01-13 09:30:40
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rear
rear - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of rear 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: rear adj 1: located in or toward the back or rear; "the chair's rear legs"; "the rear door of the plane"; "on the rearward side" [syn: {rear(a)}, {rearward(a)}] n 1: the back of a military formation or procession; "infantrymen were in the rear" [ant: {head}] 2: the side of an object that is opposite its front; "his room was toward the rear of the hotel" [syn: {rear}, {backside}, {back end}] [ant: {forepart}, {front}, {front end}] 3: the part of something that is furthest from the normal viewer; "he stood at the back of the stage"; "it was hidden in the rear of the store" [syn: {back}, {rear}] [ant: {front}] 4: the fleshy part of the human body that you sit on; "he deserves a good kick in the butt"; "are you going to sit on your fanny and do nothing?" [syn: {buttocks}, {nates}, {arse}, {butt}, {backside}, {bum}, {buns}, {can}, {fundament}, {hindquarters}, {hind end}, {keister}, {posterior}, {prat}, {rear}, {rear end}, {rump}, {stern}, {seat}, {tail}, {tail end}, {tooshie}, {tush}, {bottom}, {behind}, {derriere}, {fanny}, {ass}] 5: the side that goes last or is not normally seen; "he wrote the date on the back of the photograph" [syn: {rear}, {back}] [ant: {front}] v 1: stand up on the hind legs, of quadrupeds; "The horse reared in terror" [syn: {rear}, {rise up}] 2: bring up; "raise a family"; "bring up children" [syn: {rear}, {raise}, {bring up}, {nurture}, {parent}] 3: rise up; "The building rose before them" [syn: {rise}, {lift}, {rear}] 4: cause to rise up [syn: {rear}, {erect}] 5: construct, build, or erect; "Raise a barn" [syn: {raise}, {erect}, {rear}, {set up}, {put up}] [ant: {dismantle}, {level}, {pull down}, {rase}, {raze}, {take down}, {tear down}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reck
reck - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of reck No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reef
reef - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of reef 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: reef n 1: a submerged ridge of rock or coral near the surface of the water 2: a rocky region in the southern Transvaal in northeastern South Africa; contains rich gold deposits and coal and manganese [syn: {Witwatersrand}, {Rand}, {Reef}] 3: one of several strips across a sail that can be taken in or rolled up to lessen the area of the sail that is exposed to the wind v 1: lower and bring partially inboard; "reef the sailboat's mast" 2: roll up (a portion of a sail) in order to reduce its area 3: reduce (a sail) by taking in a reef WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/regs
regs - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of regs No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/recs
recs - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of recs No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#translation-tools
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reds
reds - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of reds No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/refs
refs - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of refs No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#getting-started
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#see-also-section
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/refi
refi - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of refi No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rack
rack - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of rack 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: rack n 1: framework for holding objects 2: rib section of a forequarter of veal or pork or especially lamb or mutton 3: the destruction or collapse of something; "wrack and ruin" [syn: {wrack}, {rack}] 4: an instrument of torture that stretches or disjoints or mutilates victims [syn: {rack}, {wheel}] 5: a support for displaying various articles; "the newspapers were arranged on a rack" [syn: {rack}, {stand}] 6: a form of torture in which pain is inflicted by stretching the body 7: a rapid gait of a horse in which each foot strikes the ground separately [syn: {rack}, {single-foot}] v 1: go at a rack; "the horses single-footed" [syn: {single- foot}, {rack}] 2: stretch to the limits; "rack one's brains" 3: put on a rack and pinion; "rack a camera" 4: obtain by coercion or intimidation; "They extorted money from the executive by threatening to reveal his past to the company boss"; "They squeezed money from the owner of the business by threatening him" [syn: {extort}, {squeeze}, {rack}, {gouge}, {wring}] 5: run before a gale [syn: {scud}, {rack}] 6: fly in high wind 7: draw off from the lees; "rack wine" 8: torment emotionally or mentally [syn: {torment}, {torture}, {excruciate}, {rack}] 9: work on a rack; "rack leather" 10: seize together, as of parallel ropes of a tackle in order to prevent running through the block 11: torture on the rack WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rach
rach - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of rach No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/read
read - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of read 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: read n 1: something that is read; "the article was a very good read" v 1: interpret something that is written or printed; "read the advertisement"; "Have you read Salman Rushdie?" 2: have or contain a certain wording or form; "The passage reads as follows"; "What does the law say?" [syn: {read}, {say}] 3: look at, interpret, and say out loud something that is written or printed; "The King will read the proclamation at noon" 4: obtain data from magnetic tapes; "This dictionary can be read by the computer" [syn: {read}, {scan}] 5: interpret the significance of, as of palms, tea leaves, intestines, the sky; also of human behavior; "She read the sky and predicted rain"; "I can't read his strange behavior"; "The fortune teller read his fate in the crystal ball" 6: interpret something in a certain way; convey a particular meaning or impression; "I read this address as a satire"; "How should I take this message?"; "You can't take credit for this!" [syn: {take}, {read}] 7: be a student of a certain subject; "She is reading for the bar exam" [syn: {learn}, {study}, {read}, {take}] 8: indicate a certain reading; of gauges and instruments; "The thermometer showed thirteen degrees below zero"; "The gauge read `empty'" [syn: {read}, {register}, {show}, {record}] 9: audition for a stage role by reading parts of a role; "He is auditioning for `Julius Caesar' at Stratford this year" 10: to hear and understand; "I read you loud and clear!" 11: make sense of a language; "She understands French"; "Can you read Greek?" [syn: {understand}, {read}, {interpret}, {translate}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/razz
razz - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of razz 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: razz n 1: a cry or noise made to express displeasure or contempt [syn: {boo}, {hoot}, {Bronx cheer}, {hiss}, {raspberry}, {razzing}, {razz}, {snort}, {bird}] v 1: harass with persistent criticism or carping; "The children teased the new teacher"; "Don't ride me so hard over my failure"; "His fellow workers razzed him when he wore a jacket and tie" [syn: {tease}, {razz}, {rag}, {cod}, {tantalize}, {tantalise}, {bait}, {taunt}, {twit}, {rally}, {ride}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reen
reen - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of reen No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/race
race - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of race 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: race n 1: any competition; "the race for the presidency" 2: a contest of speed; "the race is to the swift" 3: people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important genetic differences between races of human beings" 4: (biology) a taxonomic group that is a division of a species; usually arises as a consequence of geographical isolation within a species [syn: {subspecies}, {race}] 5: the flow of air that is driven backwards by an aircraft propeller [syn: {slipstream}, {airstream}, {race}, {backwash}, {wash}] 6: a canal for a current of water [syn: {raceway}, {race}] v 1: move fast; "He rushed down the hall to receive his guests"; "The cars raced down the street" [syn: {rush}, {hotfoot}, {hasten}, {hie}, {speed}, {race}, {pelt along}, {rush along}, {cannonball along}, {bucket along}, {belt along}, {step on it}] [ant: {dawdle}, {linger}] 2: compete in a race; "he is running the Marathon this year"; "let's race and see who gets there first" [syn: {race}, {run}] 3: to work as fast as possible towards a goal, sometimes in competition with others; "We are racing to find a cure for AIDS" 4: cause to move fast or to rush or race; "The psychologist raced the rats through a long maze" [syn: {race}, {rush}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rabi
rabi - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of rabi No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rego
rego - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of rego No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/redd
redd - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of redd No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reed
reed - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of reed 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: reed n 1: tall woody perennial grasses with hollow slender stems especially of the genera Arundo and Phragmites 2: United States journalist who reported on the October Revolution from Petrograd in 1917; founded the Communist Labor Party in America in 1919; is buried in the Kremlin in Moscow (1887-1920) [syn: {Reed}, {John Reed}] 3: United States physician who proved that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes (1851-1902) [syn: {Reed}, {Walter Reed}] 4: a vibrator consisting of a thin strip of stiff material that vibrates to produce a tone when air streams over it; "the clarinetist fitted a new reed onto his mouthpiece" [syn: {reed}, {vibrating reed}] 5: a musical instrument that sounds by means of a vibrating reed [syn: {beating-reed instrument}, {reed instrument}, {reed}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/raca
raca - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) Meaning of raca No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.telerik.com/teststudio-apis
API Testing – Verify the Integrity of Your Web Services skip navigation Telerik Test Studio Product Bundles DevCraft All Telerik .NET tools and Kendo UI JavaScript components in one package. Now enhanced with: MCP Servers Embedded Reporting Document Processing Libraries SSO Account Sign-in Web Kendo UI UI for Angular UI for Vue UI for jQuery KendoReact UI for Blazor UI for ASP.NET Core UI for ASP.NET MVC UI for ASP.NET AJAX Mobile UI for .NET MAUI Document Management Telerik Document Processing Desktop UI for .NET MAUI UI for WinUI UI for WinForms UI for WPF Reporting Telerik Reporting Telerik Report Server Testing & Mocking Test Studio Telerik JustMock CMS Sitefinity AI Productivity Tools MCP Servers UI/UX Tools ThemeBuilder Design System Kit Templates and Building Blocks Debugging Fiddler Fiddler Everywhere Fiddler Classic Fiddler Everywhere Reporter FiddlerCore Free Tools KendoReact Free VB.NET to C# Converter Testing Framework View all products Overview Solutions Functional UI Testing RESTful API Testing Load Testing Remote Test Execution Agile Teams Web Test Automation Desktop Test Automation Responsive UI Testing Continuous Testing Training Resources Docs and Support Documentation Virtual Classroom Videos Blogs Webinars Whitepapers Case Studies Feedback Portal Technical Support What’s New Roadmap Release Notes Trust Center FAQs Pricing Shopping cart Your Account Account Overview Your Licenses Downloads Support Center Forum Profile Payment Methods Edit Profile Log out Login Contact Us Request a demo Try now close mobile menu Verify the Integrity of Your Web Services with API Testing API testing with Test Studio helps you enhance your end-to-end testing strategy to cover test scenarios that require API calls. Test your RESTful APIs with an automated low-code approach Improve your automated functional UI tests with API calls Use API tests as steps in other web, desktop or responsive tests Explore All Features What is API Testing? API Testing Definition API testing is a type of functional software testing that verifies and validates the functionality, mechanics, reliability, performance and security of Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). Successfully testing your APIs implies that: Your web services perform as expected upon submitting an input Your web services perform as expected every time you run an API test Your code passes off the right data resulting in a correct output API Testing with Test Studio Regardless of testing seniority or experience, Test Studio helps teams expand their functional testing efforts with easy-to-create and maintain API tests. Testing web services with Test Studio enables you to: Automate API testing across web and desktop without code Verify your web services' integrity and reliability without extra effort Integrate your RESTful API tests into any deployment environment API Testing Features Codeless API Testing Create verifications against all common API requests with point-and-click ease. Test Studio enables even non-technical users to easily introduce and adopt API testing. Read more API Tests as Steps Run API calls while crafting your functional web or desktop tests to enhance their capabilities. Test Studio allows you to use API calls within functional UI tests through the API Test as Step feature. Read more Dynamic API Tests Use variables to extract values that can be easily added as a step later in the test. Set variables for dynamic values to test a wider range of conditions and simulate real life scenarios. Read more Coded Steps in API Tests Expand your API tests with powerful coded steps to cover more complex API test scenarios. Enhance any API test with custom tailored functions through the Test Studio code editor using C# or VB.NET. Read more API Testing Integrations Make the most out of API testing by integrating your API tests into your software development ecosystem. Verify your APIs as often as you need to, with scheduled remote tests or as part of CI/CD. Read more API Testing Features Codeless Testing of RESTful Services API testing with Test Studio allows you to easily build effective API tests and prove the reliability and integrity of your APIs. With its intuitive user interface and visual test recorder, Test Studio enables even less experienced QAs to create API tests, without writing a single line of code. Build steps into your API tests directly from recorded HTTP traffic. Test the integrity of your web services by executing HTTP requests and perform a wide range of verifications over the received responses. You can extract the received responses partially or entirely and store them in variables for reuse in further test steps. Control your tests’ flow with steps such as GoTo and Wait. Use conditions to craft flexible verifications and build stable, non-brittle API tests. Have a Question? API Test as Step in Functional Tests Shifting some of the UI interactions into API testing speeds up your test cycles and helps you focus on testing the right things with the right actions. Typical scenarios that can benefit from API calls are: Manage the system's initial state and clean the environment after test execution Simulate concurrent user actions to test how the UI handles conflicts Generate events through the web service and validate API responses Get easy access to API testing directly from your web, desktop or responsive test projects. Simply create and add a new API test as a step in your test or reuse existing API tests as steps. Greatly reduce test execution time by using the RESTful API instead of the UI layer to perform CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations. Have a Question? Dynamic API Tests API testing with Test Studio allows you to create smart tests for your APIs by setting variables for dynamic values on test and project level. The variables are named values that can be stored in the project files or dynamically created during executing the test steps. Variables in API tests can be used to chain requests, generate random values or compare response values, as well as for data-driving and to cover any scenario that requires working with dynamic data. Have a Question? Coded Steps in API Tests The embedded Test Studio code editor can be used in API testing to add coded steps and enhance them with various conditions whenever the test scenario requires it. Coded steps go beyond the capabilities which the available action and verification steps in Test Studio provide. To take advantage of coded steps, Test Studio allows you to: Add standalone code files that support custom methods and functions or other useful content Utilize third-party libraries in you API tests for greater extensibility and flexibility Have a Question? API Testing Integrations Leverage the built-in API test runner to hook your API tests into your build process. Schedule your API tests to run on multiple remote machines, around the clock, or as part of your CI/CD environment. Take advantage of even greater API test execution flexibility and speed up your entire end-to-end test cycle by running your tests in Docker Containers . Verify API calls in a production-like environment without slow-downs caused by long and breaking tests. Test Studio also allows you to create API tests from Fiddler Everywhere logs. Export your Fiddler Everywhere recorded traffic and easily upload it in Test Studio. Create a new Test Studio API test from your Fiddler traffic logs or plug them into an existing API test. Have a Question? Previous: Next: The One Automation Testing Tool to Cover All Your Bases and Beyond Test Studio gives you all the testing tools and techniques that you need to prove your application fully meets user expectations or business requirements. Have a Question? Request a Demo What QAs Say Telerik Test Studio enables our quality assurance team to quickly identify potential bugs pre-release within the DevOps pipeline. We have been able to scale and accelerate delivery of new features while reducing our manual testing on existing functionality. The features are deep, yet easy to use. The consistent addition of new and improved features helps improve the efficiency of our testing efforts. Mike Goodwin Director of Technical Support and Quality Assurance, Kiddie Academy® Headless execution allows us to greatly reduce the overall time needed to complete a test cycle. This method also allows us to integrate Test Studio into our CI pipeline so we can run any portion of the test plan at the time of merge and/or deployment. Zachary Hansen Chief Technology Officer, Angus Energy Test Studio is a fantastic platform for anyone who's new to automated testing because it's got a very intuitive UI, but also for somebody who's highly skilled as they can immediately pick up on what Test Studio can do and make very effective use of the tool. Pete O'Grady QA Manager, RevSpring The best thing about Test Studio is easy ramp up which enables anybody to start creating tests within a few days. The centralized element repository is very comfortable, bringing down test maintenance costs. Himanshu Saraowgi QA Engineer, Pegasystems Test Studio integrated seamlessly into our automated software testing needs. Its ease-of-use is unbelievable. It does all the heavy lifting allowing the developer to focus on more in-depth testing. Gregory Hargrove Software Developer, Correct Care Solutions After using the trial for a week we increased our automated testing from 5% to 30%. Test Studio was so easy to incorporate into our existing testing environment! Tests are stable and easy to run and understand. Mark Judson Software Developer, EBSCO Industries Inc. Testing Solutions Modern applications are infinitely complex. With Test Studio you can go deeper in your testing to cover all your bases—test the behavior, responsiveness and performance of your web and WPF applications. Functional UI Testing Maximize test coverage and reduce maintenance while continually improving quality. Test Studio automatically adjusts to app changes, eliminating debt and ensuring new levels of test stability. Load testing Create complex load scenarios to inform critical decisions. Test Studio's load testing suite enables you to verify that your web app meets business needs for speed, performance, and user satisfaction. Continuous Testing Bring UI test automation into your build process, enabling critical feedback earlier in the release cycle. Test Studio integrates with all popular CI/CD tools: Azure DevOps, Jenkins, Jira, Bamboo and more. Responsive Testing Test Studio's features for responsive web testing offer an easy way to validate your UI against different form factors without repetitive testing, switching browser modes or devices. Support and Learning Case Study RevSpring Delivers Higher Quality Releases in a 1/4 of the Time with Test Studio Whitepaper From Manual to Automated Testing Blogs 5 Development Best Practices That Will Help You Craft Better Tests Start here Getting Started Training Professional Services What's New Case Studies Support Resources Documentation Blogs Release History Community Forums Feedback Portal Industry-Leading Support Expert and Timely Support Get answers to your questions directly from the developers who build this UI suite, even during your trial period. Contact support Need Evaluation Help? If you are not a developer or don't have time to evaluate our product, send us your project requirements. We will evaluate your required features and let you know how our products fit your needs. Send us your project requirements Ready to See Test Studio in Action ? Contact Us Overview Definition Features Testing Solutions Resources Support Try now Complete .NET Toolbox Telerik DevCraft Complete JavaScript Toolbox Kendo UI Get Products Free Trials Pricing Resources DX Hub Demos Documentation Release History Forums Blogs Webinars Videos Professional Services Partners Virtual Classroom Events FAQs Recognition Success Stories Testimonials Get in touch Contact Us USA: +1 888 679 0442 UK: +44 13 4483 8186 India: +91 406 9019447 Bulgaria: +359 2 8099850 Australia: +61 3 7068 8610 165k+ 50k+ 17k+ 4k+ 14k+ Contact Us 165k+ 50k+ 17k+ 4k+ 14k+ Telerik and Kendo UI are part of Progress product portfolio. Progress is the leading provider of application development and digital experience technologies. Company Technology Awards Press Releases Media Coverage Careers Offices Company Technology Awards Press Releases Media Coverage Careers Offices Copyright © 2026 Progress Software Corporation and/or its subsidiaries or affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Progress and certain product names used herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of Progress Software Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries or affiliates in the U.S. and/or other countries. See Trademarks for appropriate markings. All rights in any other trademarks contained herein are reserved by their respective owners and their inclusion does not imply an endorsement, affiliation, or sponsorship as between Progress and the respective owners. Terms of Use Site Feedback Privacy Center Trust Center Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information Powered by Progress Sitefinity
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#package-sign-and-publish-an-extension
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/ja/web-clipper
Notion (ノーション) Webクリッパー:Chrome、Safari、Firefox & モバイル Notion Notionの機能 Notion AI 構築、文書作成、自動化をAIで エージェント 手動タスクを処理 エンタープライズサーチ 答えがすぐに見つかる AIミーティングノート AIによる完璧な文章 ドキュメント シンプルでパワフルなツール ナレッジベース すべてのナレッジが一か所に プロジェクト いろんなプロジェクトを上手に管理 サイト どんなコンテンツもすばやく公開 今すぐ試してみる AIのユースケースを見る Notion AIの機能を確認 マーケットプレイス 多様なニーズに対応したテンプレートがたくさん インテグレーション 使いたいアプリをNotionにすばやく接続 Webクリッパー ウェブからダウンロードしてNotionに保存 作業を素早くこなせるNotionデスクトップアプリをお試しください アプリをダウンロード メール カレンダー AI エンタープライズ 料金 もっと知る チーム エンジニアリング・プロダクト デザイン マーケティング IT チームの規模 スタートアップ SMB(中小企業) エンタープライズ 学生・教育関係者 学ぶ ヘルプセンター Notionアカデミー ユーザー事例 ブログ コミュニティ パートナープログラム 構築する API テンプレート セキュリティ コンサルタント 営業に問い合わせる ログイン Notionを無料で始める Notion Webクリッパー WebページをNotionに保存してください。私たちが行動に移すお手伝いをします。 Apple App Store Chrome版 Safari版 Firefox版 デスクトップ ワンクリックで保存すれば、オンラインでもオフラインでもNotionで表示できます。 ワンクリックで保存 Notionのロゴをクリックするだけで、表示されているページを保存できます。 保存先を選ぶ ドロップダウンを使用して、Notion上での保存場所を指定します。 行動につなげる メモを追加したり、共有したり、タスクの作成ができます。すべてのアイテムはタグを付けたり、割り当てたりできます。 整理整頓 後で参考にしたり、プロジェクトに使えるように、Webクリップをデータベース化しておきます。 iOS & Android モバイルアプリには、Webクリッパーが組み込まれています。 2回のタップで何でも保存。 モバイルブラウザの共有オプションにNotionへの保存メニューが追加されます。 操作の流れの一部にする。 保存したものにタグを付けておけば、後で簡単に見つけて使用できます。 Web全体をNotionに保存 NotionのWebクリッパーは、インターネット上の主要なウェブサイトに対応しています。 Wikipedia The New York Times Twitter Instagram Pinterest など… Notionは初めてですか? 簡単に始めることができます。 Apple App Store サインアップ Chrome版 Safari版 Firefox版 日本語 Cookieの設定 © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 会社名 Notionについて 採用情報 セキュリティ ステータス 利用規約とプライバシー プライバシー権 ダウンロード iOS & Android Mac & Windows カレンダー Webクリッパー リソース ヘルプセンター 料金 ブログ コミュニティ インテグレーション テンプレート パートナープログラム Notion (ノーション) - エンタープライズ 小規模ビジネス パーソナル 詳しく見る →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/templates/student-starter-pack
Student Starter Pack Template by Notion | Notion Marketplace Notion Features Notion AI Build, write, automate Agents Handles manual tasks Enterprise Search Find answers instantly AI Meeting Notes Perfectly written by AI Docs Simple & powerful Knowledge Base Centralize your knowledge Projects Manage any project Sites Publish anything, fast Get started Explore AI use cases See what Notion AI can do Browse marketplace Templates for everything View integrations Connect your apps with Notion Download web clipper Save from the web into Notion Try the Notion desktop app for a faster experience Download app Mail Calendar AI Enterprise Pricing Explore Teams Eng & Product Design Marketing IT Team size Startups SMBs Enterprise Education Learn Help center Notion Academy Customer stories Blog Community Partner programs Build API Templates Security Consultants Request a demo Log in Get Notion free Marketplace Work School Life Clear Search template gallery Templates -3 more templates No results for Notion 515 templates View template About this template About this creator Email the creator notion.so Twitter TikTok LinkedIn Share this template Last updated 56 years ago Terms and Conditions View Ratings & Reviews 4.8 5 Based on 100+ ratings 86% 11% 2% 1% 1% REVIEW NICE TEMPLATE BTW BRO, SRSLY I STARTED TO GAIN OLD SKILLS COZ OF YOU !!! J J Barath Guna · Dec 4, 2025 Absolutely love it This student start pack is packed with useful templates that are essential for every student currently studying. A Asad Moosvi · Oct 10, 2025 Amazing Template! Very useful, easy to navigate. A little overwhelming at time, but easy to edit. C Cristina Hossack · Sep 6, 2025 totally loved it This template is awesome broh, also remove that 50 character limit :sobs:, keep it short ;)) M Misbah Ansari · Jun 5, 2025 Incroyable c'est un modèle très complet pour faire ses cours. R Raphael PASCAUD · Mar 26, 2025 Load more More by Notion Browse 515 templates Free Free Free More like this Havan Free Satabdi Patra Free Tinyblocks Free Related content Visit Help Center Setting up Notion for school Heading back to school? Notion's here to help. We'll show you how to upgrade your workspace for free, how to set up your workspace for keeping track of notes, thesis planning, job hunting and more, as well as how to collaborate with other students. 6 min video Inspiration The best student and teacher templates to prep for day one of school Get the most out of school with these Notion templates for students and teachers — organize all your assignments, roommate to-do's, and club projects in one place. Andrea Lim Marketing Featured in Become a creator Submit your template to the Notion template gallery, get featured, and even get paid – all in just a few clicks. Get started → English (US) Cookie settings © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. Company About us Careers Security Status Terms & privacy Your privacy rights Download iOS & Android Mac & Windows Calendar Web Clipper Resources Help center Pricing Blog Community Integrations Templates Partner programs Notion for Enterprise Small business Personal Explore more →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#keep-it-focused
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#firefox-version-and-their-web-extension-development-capabilities
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/rees
rees - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of rees No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/reft
reft - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of reft No definition found! Look up here instead. Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/?utm_content=footer-link&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=addons.mozilla.org#port-to-firefox
Firefox Extension Workshop | Get help creating & publishing Firefox extensions. Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Extend the Web Get help creating and publishing Firefox add-ons that make browsing smarter, safer, and faster. You’ll find the resources you need, whether you’re getting started with extension development, preparing to launch your innovation, or developing a custom enterprise solution. Search Why Create Extensions on Firefox? Get your great idea into the hands of millions of Firefox users. Join an international community of developers. Be supported every step of the way. And, when you build for Firefox first, it’s easy to port your extension to other browsers, saving you valuable development time. Learn more about extensions Cool Things Add-ons Can Do Tinker with Tabs Your extension can control browser tabs. Use the API to open, close, move, hide, and perform other tab management actions. Learn more about tabs Integrate Web Search Use Firefox's powerful built-in search capabilities to open up the web for users from within your own extension. Learn about enhancing content Add Innovative Features Think the browser is missing a feature, such as a built-in calculator, music streaming, or language translation? Add a toolbar button to expose your extension's new capabilities. Visit example View more extension code examples Explore live extensions Anatomy of an Extension An extension is a simple collection of files that modify the browser’s appearance and behavior. It can add user interface elements, alter content, or perform background tasks that enhance browsing. Learn more about extension anatomy Manifest.json User Interface Content Scripts Background Scripts Manifest.json User Interface Add toolbar buttons, menu choices, and—only in Firefox—sidebars to display additional content. Manage tab behavior and create pop-up windows that respond to user events. Learn more Content Scripts Change webpage content. Remove ads, highlight key words, and reformat elements for readability. Learn more Background Scripts Manage long-term configuration beyond the current tab, and respond to user events such as button clicks and menu selections. Learn more Build extensions It's easy to create your cross-browser extension for Firefox. Where your development journey begins depends on your skill and experience. Brand new to extensions development? MDN web docs will onboard you to the basics. With tutorials from simple user interface changes to complex event handling, MDN covers the structure and API behind extensions. Once you know the fundamentals, come back here to learn how Firefox takes extension development to the next level. Learn the fundamentals on MDN Ready to build an extension for Firefox? If you know the basics of extension development, you’re ready to create an extension for Firefox. We’ve got all the resources you need right here. Learn about cross-browser development. Get tips on testing. Make user updates smooth and painless. Learn Develop Test & Debug Publish Manage Build secure extensions Mozilla takes the safety and privacy of its users very seriously. Be sure to review and follow these practices and policies so you can make your great idea a reality. Learn about security best practices Learn about our policies Build across browsers Firefox is at the forefront of cross-browser compatibility. Firefox add-ons are built using the WebExtensions API, so your creation will be accessible to users no matter what browser they use. Learn about browser differences Port a Google Chrome Extension Your extension might already be compatible! See if your extension works in Firefox. Simply upload your .crx file to the Developer Hub . Need some extra help along the way? When you build on Firefox, you build with a community of add-on developers. And they’re eager to share their expertise and answer your questions. Community Forums Ask questions in the forum Connect with other extension developers Email the community Learn more about the community Learn about enhancing the API Latest Developer News Visit add-ons blog Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/th/careers
ร่วมงานกับ Notion | เรากำลังเปิดรับสมัคร! Notion ฟีเจอร์ Notion AI สร้าง เขียน ทำให้เป็นอัตโนมัติ เอเจนต์ จัดการงานที่ต้องทำเอง Enterprise Search ค้นหาคำตอบทันที AI Meeting Notes ให้ AI ช่วยเขียนได้อย่างเพอร์เฟ็กต์ เอกสาร เรียบง่ายและทรงพลัง ฐานความรู้ แหล่งรวมความรู้ของคุณ โปรเจ็กต์ จัดการโปรเจ็กต์ ไซต์ เผยแพร่ทุกอย่างได้ทันใจ เริ่มต้นใช้งาน สำรวจกรณีการใช้งาน AI ดูว่า Notion AI ทำอะไรได้บ้าง เลือกดูมาร์เก็ตเพลส เทมเพลตสำหรับทุกอย่าง ดูการรวมระบบ เชื่อมต่อแอพของคุณกับ Notion ดาวน์โหลด Web Clipper บันทึกจากเว็บมายัง Notion ลองใช้แอพ Notion บนเดสก์ท็อปเลย จะได้สัมผัสประสบการณ์ที่เร็วกว่าเดิม ดาวน์โหลดแอพ อีเมล ปฏิทิน AI Enterprise ราคา สำรวจ ทีม วิศวกรรมและผลิตภัณฑ์ การออกแบบ การตลาด IT ขนาดทีม สตาร์ทอัพ SMBs Enterprise การศึกษา เรียนรู้ ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ Notion Academy เรื่องราวของลูกค้า บล็อก ชุมชน โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ สร้าง API เทมเพลต การรักษาความปลอดภัย ที่ปรึกษา ขอรับการสาธิต เข้าสู่ระบบ ใช้ Notion ฟรี Careers at Notion If every person and business can tailor software to their problems, the world will be better at solving its problems. Our mission is to make that a ubiquitous reality. Browse full-time openings เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น Our story Early computing pioneers envisioned a future where machines on our desks could amplify our imagination, extend our intellect, and help us model information in ways never before seen. This is the type of tool we want to build together at Notion — one that gives you the software you can mold and shape like clay to solve your problems your way. We’ve heard Notion described many ways. It can be as simple as a blank piece of paper, making writing feel light and delightful. It can be as complex as a relational database that stores huge amounts of data. We sometimes compare it to a set of Legos (if Legos were designed by The New York Times). But at its core, Notion is a toolbox of software building blocks that let you manage your life and work however you find most useful. To make this possible, we’ve brought together a diverse team of individuals passionate about computing, history, art, alternative programming languages, music, skateboarding, and craft. Today, we’re growing faster than ever across offices in San Francisco, New York, Dublin, Hyderabad, Tokyo, Seoul and Sydney 🇺🇸 🇮🇪 🇮🇳 🇯🇵 🇰🇷 🇦🇺 Browse open positions ↓ Open Positions Filter by Location All locations Brazil (Remote) Denver, Colorado Dublin, Ireland Hyderabad, India London, United Kingdom Munich, Germany New York, New York Paris, France Remote San Francisco, California Seoul, South Korea Singapore Spain Sydney, Australia Tokyo, Japan Department All departments Business Development Business Technology Customer Experience Customer Success Data Science Engineering Engineering - Early Career Finance General Leadership Legal Marketing People Product Design Product Management Revenue Operations & Strategy Sales Security Storytelling University User Research and Product Operations Reset filters Business Development Business Development Representative, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Business Technology Business Systems Analyst, Finance Systems San Francisco, California; New York, New York Business Systems Architect San Francisco, California; 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New York, New York Revenue Accountant San Francisco, California Senior Procurement Operations Manager San Francisco, California Strategic Finance, Revenue San Francisco, California Legal Commercial Counsel San Francisco, California; New York, New York Employment Counsel, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Marketing Creative Studio Operations Manager New York, New York Enterprise Product Marketing, GTM San Francisco, California; New York, New York Event Marketing, EMEA (Contract) Dublin, Ireland Lifecycle Marketing Manager San Francisco, California Product Marketing Manager, IT Solutions New York, New York People Business Recruiter - Foundation (G&A) San Francisco, California Early Career People Projects San Francisco, California Global Head of GTM Recruiting San Francisco, California; New York, New York GTM People Partner Lead San Francisco, California; New York, New York GTM Recruiter, AMER San Francisco, California; New York, New York Head of Notino Experience San Francisco, California Head of People Analytics and Operations San Francisco, California; New York, New York Program Specialist, Talent Management San Francisco, California Recruiting Coordinator, Tokyo Tokyo, Japan Talent Sourcer, APAC Tokyo, Japan Workplace Coordinator San Francisco, California Workplace Lead San Francisco, California Revenue Operations & Strategy Customer Experience Strategy & Operations Manager (NY) New York, New York; San Francisco, California Customer Experience Strategy & Operations Manager (SF) San Francisco, California; New York, New York Deal Desk Workflows Manager San Francisco, California Revenue Enablement Program Manager, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Sales Compensation Analyst New York, New York; San Francisco, California Sales Strategy & Operations Manager, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Sales Account Executive, Commercial New York, New York Account Executive, Commercial San Francisco, California Account Executive, Commercial, Benelux Dublin, Ireland Account Executive, Commercial, DACH Dublin, Ireland Account Executive, Commercial, France Dublin, Ireland Account Executive - Commercial, Japan Tokyo, Japan Account Executive - Commercial, Sydney Sydney, Australia Account Executive, Commerical, Nordics Dublin, Ireland Account Executive, Enterprise, DACH Munich, Germany Account Executive, Enterprise, France Paris, France Account Executive - Enterprise, Japan Tokyo, Japan Account Executive, Enterprise, Singapore Singapore Account Executive, Enterprise, UK London, United Kingdom Account Executive, Korea Seoul, South Korea Account Executive, Mid-Market San Francisco, California Account Executive, Mid-Market New York, New York Account Executive, Mid-Market, DACH Dublin, Ireland Account Executive - Mid Market, Japan Tokyo, Japan Account Executive, Mid-Market, Nordics Dublin, Ireland AI Solutions Specialist Dublin, Ireland Commercial Sales Manager, Japan Tokyo, Japan Enterprise Account Executive, New York New York, New York Enterprise Account Executive, San Francisco San Francisco, California Manager, Commercial Sales San Francisco, California; New York, New York Manager, Enterprise Sales New York, New York Manager, Mid-Market Sales New York, New York Manager, Mid-Market Sales San Francisco, California Outbound Business Development Representative - AMER New York, New York Outbound Business Development Representative - AMER San Francisco, California Relationship Manager New York, New York Relationship Manager, APACx Sydney, Australia Sales Development Representative (AMER) San Francisco, California Sales Development Representative, Japan Tokyo, Japan Sales Manager, Asia Singapore Sales Manager, Commercial, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Solutions Engineer, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Solutions Engineer, EMEA Dublin, Ireland Solutions Engineer - Enterprise - AMER San Francisco, California Solutions Engineering Manager, Japan Tokyo, Japan Solutions Engineering Manager - Mid-Market San Francisco, California; New York, New York Solutions Engineer - Mid-Market - AMER San Francisco, California Solutions Engineer, Tokyo Tokyo, Japan Technical Architect San Francisco, California; New York, New York Security Corporate Infrastructure Engineer San Francisco, California Security Engineer, Infrastructure Security San Francisco, California; New York, New York Security Operations Engineer, Detection and Response Team Hyderabad, India Storytelling Head of Internal Communications San Francisco, California University Software Engineer Intern (Summer 2026) San Francisco, California; New York, New York UX Research Intern (Summer 2026) San Francisco, California User Research and Product Operations Research Ops Coordinator (Contractor) Remote; New York, New York; San Francisco, California We believe the best companies bring together diversity in race, age, physical and mental ability, sexuality, gender identity, ethnicity, perspectives and ideas. And people do their best work when they feel like they belong — included, valued, and equal. This is the Notion we want to build, where everyone brings their full selves to work knowing that they’ll be heard, championed, and supported to succeed. We hope you’ll join us. ☕ Office culture Notion is an in-person company, and currently requires its employees to come to the office for two Anchor Days (Mondays & Thursdays) and requests that employees spend the majority of the week in the office (including a third day). Being an in-office-focused company enables us to capitalize on the energy that comes from us being in the same place. This is a great opportunity to build relationships, work with your teammates, and collaborate on projects. Teams have started adding a third in-office day for team-based work for things such as group maker time, brainstorm sessions, team bonding, and more! This way, Notinos spend the majority of the week in the office. Life at Notion When it comes to our culture, we’d rather show than tell. Here are some videos to give you a sense of the day-to-day on every team. เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น How Notion Works Dive into the 3 organizations that make up our team at Notion - EPD (Engineering, Product, Design), Go-to-Market, and Foundation (G&A) and how we work together. เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น Life in Dublin Peek inside our EMEA headquarters and how this office plays a crucial part in our Go-To-Market strategy. เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น Life In Hyderabad Take a closer look into our Engineering hub in the booming HITEC City district. Our values We are drivers of our mission. We’re driven by our commitment to empower every person on the planet to use software exactly the way they want. Be a pace setter. We move with urgency so we can set the cadence for our market, cover more ground, and ship more great products and programs for our users, faster. Be a truth seeker. We pursue the best data, ideas, and solutions with rigor and open-mindedness, always guided by our users’ most pressing needs. Be kind and direct. We deliver feedback in the spirit of helping our colleagues improve, balancing sensitivity with caring honesty. We’re in this together. Perks & benefits Notion is committed to providing highly competitive, innovative, and inclusive benefits offering that attracts the best talent from diverse backgrounds. We aim for all our programs to promote overall employee health.* Medical, dental & vision We offer competitive medical, dental, vision insurance for employees and dependents. This includes medical, dental, and vision premiums. Time off We want you to take time off to rest and rejuvenate. Notion offers flexible paid vacation as well as 10+ observed holidays by country. Mental health & wellbeing You and your dependents will have access to providers that create personalized treatment plans, including therapy, coaching, medication management, and EAP services. Parental leave We offer biological, adoptive, and foster parents paid time off to spend quality time with family. Fertility coverage Our fertility benefit gives you employer-sponsored funds you can use to pay for fertility treatments and family-forming services. Retirement matching Notion makes it easy to save money for retirement. There’s also employer matching! Commuter benefits We offer a generous monthly subsidy for your commute. Monthly stipend We offer everyone a monthly stipend to use toward services that fit their personal needs. This gives you the opportunity to choose your own adventure and use the funds for whatever matters most to you. Our values in action Affinity groups Notion is home to a number of employee-led groups that foster a diverse and inclusive workplace. So far, these include: Accessibility at Notion, All Asians and Pacific Islanders at Notion, Black Thought at Notion, Gente (LatinX) at Notion, Immigrants at Notion, Queers & Allies at Notion, Parents at Notion, Women at Notion. Notion for Nonprofits It's vital that we also support our beliefs with the Notion product itself. That's why we give 501(c)3 organizations working to solve the world's toughest problems 50% off our team plan. Social impact We run several programs and partnerships dedicated to inclusion, diversity, equity, and antiracism. Here are just a few of the organizations we support: Volunteering at 826 Valencia We help students from under-resourced backgrounds find their voices as writers and artists. BreakLine We reach more veterans, women, and people of color looking to pivot into careers in the tech industry. Urban Tech Connect We support tech events focused on networking and development opportunities for communities of color. Fast Forward We donate paid Notion plans to entrepreneurs accelerating social missions that support refugees, undocumented students, and veterans, among others. Civic Alliance We support safe, accessible, and trusted elections, and inspire our employees and customers to support civic engagement. Pledge LA We support Black and Latinx entrepreneurs from South LA in partnership with the Annenberg Foundation, the Weingart Foundation, and others. Tech for Black Founders We provide Notion workspaces and other support to early-stage startups led by Black founders. In the news $10 Billion Productivity Startup Notion Wants To Build Your AI Everything App forbes.com The most innovative workplace companies of 2024 fastcompany.com Okta's 8th 'Businesses at Work' cloud usage report techcrunch.com Global community We're also lucky to have a vibrant community of enthusiasts talking about Notion, making content, and sharing inspiration across many channels: Check out our blog where we share company news, inspirations, stories from our community, and more about our technical approach. เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น โปรดดูใน YouTube Andy Hertzfeld on building the Macintosh A core member of the Apple Macintosh development team in the 1980s, Andy designed and architected the original Macintosh software system. เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น โปรดดูใน YouTube May-Li Khoe on pulling inspiration from the physical world in digital design Former Apple and Khan Academy designer-artist-technologist, May-Li Khoe pioneers new ways for humans to interact with machines. “We shape our tools, thereafter our tools shape us.” Marshall McLuhan ภาษาไทย การตั้งค่าคุกกี้ © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. บริษัท เกี่ยวกับเรา ร่วมงานกับเรา ความปลอดภัย สถานะ เงื่อนไขและความเป็นส่วนตัว สิทธิความเป็นส่วนตัวของคุณ ดาวน์โหลด iOS และ Android Mac และ Windows ปฏิทิน Web Clipper แหล่งข้อมูล ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ ราคา บล็อก ชุมชน การรวมระบบ เทมเพลต โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ Notion สำหรับ Enterprise ธุรกิจขนาดเล็ก ส่วนตัว สำรวจเพิ่ม →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/5-letter-words-starting-with/r
5 Letter Words Starting with 'R' - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Five Letter Words Starting with 'R' Helps you find high scoring words for Scrabble and Words with Friends! Learn the five letter Scrabble words starting with R , as they are very useful when playing word games such as Scrabble or Words with friends , Wordfeud and so. If you play Wordle , then you would find this even more useful. You should not miss two letter words or three letter words either as they help you score faster and they're less in number, you can probably easily learn and memorize them. Also check out - 4 letter words starting with R 6 letter words starting with R 7 letter words starting with R 5 Letter Words rabat rabbi rabic rabid rabis raced racer races rache racks racon radar radge radii radio radix radon raffs rafts ragas ragde raged ragee rager rages ragga raggs raggy ragis ragus rahed rahui raias raids raiks raile rails raine rains rainy raird raise raita raits rajah rajas rajes raked rakee raker rakes rakia rakis rakus rales rally ralph ramal ramee ramen ramet ramie ramin ramis rammy ramps ramus ranas rance ranch rands randy ranee ranga range rangi rangs rangy ranid ranis ranke ranks rants raped raper rapes raphe rapid rappe rared raree rarer rares rarks rased raser rases rasps raspy rasse rasta ratal ratan ratas ratch rated ratel rater rates ratha rathe raths ratio ratoo ratos ratty ratus rauns raupo raved ravel raven raver raves ravey ravin rawer rawin rawly rawns raxed raxes rayah rayas rayed rayle rayne rayon razed razee razer razes razoo razor reach react readd reads ready reais reaks realm realo reals reame reams reamy reans reaps rearm rears reast reata reate reave rebar rebbe rebec rebel rebid rebit rebop rebus rebut rebuy recal recap recce recco reccy recit recks recon recta recti recto recur recut redan redds reddy reded redes redia redid redip redly redon redos redox redry redub redux redye reech reede reeds reedy reefs reefy reeks reeky reels reens reest reeve refed refel refer reffo refis refit refix refly refry regal regar reges reggo regie regma regna regos regur rehab rehem reifs reify reign reiki reiks reink reins reird reist reive rejig rejon reked rekes rekey relax relay relet relic relie relit rello reman remap remen remet remex remit remix renal renay rends renew reney renga renig renin renne renos rente rents reoil reorg repay repeg repel repin repla reply repos repot repps repro reran rerig rerun resat resaw resay resee reses reset resew resid resin resit resod resow resto rests resty resus retag retax retch retem retia retie retox retro retry reuse revel revet revie revue rewan rewax rewed rewet rewin rewon rewth rexes rezes rheas rheme rheum rhies rhime rhine rhino rhody rhomb rhone rhumb rhyme rhyne rhyta riads rials riant riata ribas ribby ribes riced ricer rices ricey richt ricin ricks rider rides ridge ridgy ridic riels riems rieve rifer riffs rifle rifte rifts rifty riggs right rigid rigol rigor riled riles riley rille rills rimae rimed rimer rimes rimus rinds rindy rines rings rinks rinse rioja riots riped ripen riper ripes ripps risen riser rises rishi risks risky risps risus rites ritts ritzy rival rivas rived rivel riven river rives rivet riyal rizas roach roads roams roans roars roary roast roate robed robes robin roble robot rocks rocky roded rodeo rodes roger rogue roguy rohes roids roils roily roins roist rojak rojis roked roker rokes rolag roles rolfs rolls romal roman romeo romps ronde rondo roneo rones ronin ronne ronte ronts roods roofs roofy rooks rooky rooms roomy roons roops roopy roosa roose roost roots rooty roped roper ropes ropey roque roral rores roric rorid rorie rorts rorty rosed roses roset roshi rosin rosit rosti rosts rotal rotan rotas rotch roted rotes rotis rotls roton rotor rotos rotte rouen roues rouge rough roule rouls roums round roups roupy rouse roust route routh routs roved roven rover roves rowan rowdy rowed rowel rowen rower rowie rowme rownd rowth rowts royal royne royst rozet rozit ruana rubai rubby rubel rubes rubin ruble rubli rubus ruche rucks rudas rudds ruddy ruder rudes rudie rudis rueda ruers ruffe ruffs rugae rugal rugby ruggy ruing ruins rukhs ruled ruler rules rumal rumba rumbo rumen rumes rumly rummy rumor rumpo rumps rumpy runch runds runed runes rungs runic runny runts runty rupee rupia rural rurps rurus rusas ruses rushy rusks rusma russe rusts rusty ruths rutin rutty ryals rybat ryked rykes rymme rynds ryots ryper — — ADVERTISEMENT — — 5 Letter Words starting with 5 letter words starting with a 5 letter words starting with b 5 letter words starting with c 5 letter words starting with d 5 letter words starting with e 5 letter words starting with f 5 letter words starting with g 5 letter words starting with h 5 letter words starting with i 5 letter words starting with j 5 letter words starting with k 5 letter words starting with l 5 letter words starting with m 5 letter words starting with n 5 letter words starting with o 5 letter words starting with p 5 letter words starting with q 5 letter words starting with r 5 letter words starting with s 5 letter words starting with t 5 letter words starting with u 5 letter words starting with v 5 letter words starting with w 5 letter words starting with x 5 letter words starting with y 5 letter words starting with z 5 Letter Words ending with 5 letter words ending in a 5 letter words ending in b 5 letter words ending in c 5 letter words ending in d 5 letter words ending in e 5 letter words ending in f 5 letter words ending in g 5 letter words ending in h 5 letter words ending in i 5 letter words ending in j 5 letter words ending in k 5 letter words ending in l 5 letter words ending in m 5 letter words ending in n 5 letter words ending in o 5 letter words ending in p 5 letter words ending in q 5 letter words ending in r 5 letter words ending in s 5 letter words ending in t 5 letter words ending in u 5 letter words ending in v 5 letter words ending in w 5 letter words ending in x 5 letter words ending in y 5 letter words ending in z You may also find this curated "lists of words" page useful (which is based on most frequent searches by the users) : Word List Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#asynchronous
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#firefox-editions
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/ja/product/ai
Notion AIが新しくなりました | Notion Notion Notionの機能 Notion AI 構築、文書作成、自動化をAIで エージェント 手動タスクを処理 エンタープライズサーチ 答えがすぐに見つかる AIミーティングノート AIによる完璧な文章 ドキュメント シンプルでパワフルなツール ナレッジベース すべてのナレッジが一か所に プロジェクト いろんなプロジェクトを上手に管理 サイト どんなコンテンツもすばやく公開 今すぐ試してみる AIのユースケースを見る Notion AIの機能を確認 マーケットプレイス 多様なニーズに対応したテンプレートがたくさん インテグレーション 使いたいアプリをNotionにすばやく接続 Webクリッパー ウェブからダウンロードしてNotionに保存 作業を素早くこなせるNotionデスクトップアプリをお試しください アプリをダウンロード メール カレンダー AI エンタープライズ 料金 もっと知る チーム エンジニアリング・プロダクト デザイン マーケティング IT チームの規模 スタートアップ SMB(中小企業) エンタープライズ 学生・教育関係者 学ぶ ヘルプセンター Notionアカデミー ユーザー事例 ブログ コミュニティ パートナープログラム 構築する API テンプレート セキュリティ コンサルタント 営業に問い合わせる ログイン Notionを無料で始める 多くの企業から信頼を得ています。 再生 どうやら、広告ブロッカーが動画の再生をブロックしているようです。 AIのすべてを備えたアプリです 2024年春 オールインワンの多機能AI 今から始める → AIツールが多すぎますか?ここで節約できる額を計算できます。 AI検索 US$35/ユーザー AIチャットボット US$20/ユーザー AIミーティングノート US$18/ユーザー AI文書作成アシスタント US$20/ユーザー AIメールアプリ US$30/ユーザー AIリサーチ US$40/ユーザー カレンダースケジューリング US$15/ユーザー チームWiki US$10/ユーザー プロジェクトマネジメントツール US$24/ユーザー ベーシックCRM US$20/ユーザー サイトビルダー US$20/ユーザー フォーム US$15/ユーザー チームの規模 月間節減額 $0 年間節減額 $0 構築、編集、実行してくれるあなただけのNotionエージェント ほとんどのAIはアイデア止まりですが、Notion AIは仕事を最後までやり遂げます。 カスタム権限を順守 思い通りに パーソナライズ MCP経由でツールに 接続 特定のワークフローを自動化するカスタムエージェントの作成(間もなくリリース予定) 詳しくはこちらでサインアップ → Notion AIの機能をご覧ください すべてのユースケースを見る → ブレインストーミングからロードマップ作成までを行う 詳しく見る → 会議の内容をSNS 投稿に変換 詳しく見る → ランディングページの 修正 詳しく見る → もう返信を待つ必要なし、Notion AIに聞くだけで解決 エンタープライズサーチで、瞬時に答えが見つかります。 詳しく見る → アプリを連携する Notionドキュメント から回答を取得 (PDFも検索) GPT-4.1、Claude 4などを使ってチャット リサーチモードで詳細なドキュメントを作成 すべての業務を一元管理できるプラットフォームは、大きな力を秘めています。Notionこそがそんな唯一の場所です GTM担当 Nick Erdenberger氏 ドキュメント編集、翻訳、メモ取りをすべてこなすAIツール 完璧な記憶力を実現するAI ミーティングノート 詳しく見る → 独自のスタイルでドキュメントを作成・編集 ドキュメントを希望の言語に翻訳 フローチャートや図を作成 要約やインサイトをデータベースに 自動入力 今までに使用した中で、一番スマートで実用的なテキスト生成AIです 副編集長 Alex Heath氏 多くの企業に信頼されるデータ保護対策 Notion AIのセキュリティ対策について詳しく見る → ユーザーのデータは 学習に使用されません NotionはAIサブプロセッサーと契約を締結し、ユーザーのデータをモデルの学習に使用することを禁止しています。 安全な暗号化 Notion AIの使用中、あなたのデータはTLS 1.2以上のプロトコルで通信中に暗号化されます。 高度な権限管理 誰が何を実行、作成できるのかを詳細に設定できます。 GDPRとCCPA Notionのプライバシープログラムは、GDPRやその他の世界的なプライバシー規制に準拠するよう整備されています。 SOC 2 (Type 2) Notionは、弊社のセキュリティポリシーおよび統制管理が、最高の業界標準を継続的に満たしていることを証明するレポートを取得しています。 ISO 27001 Notionは、最高水準の情報セキュリティ要件への取り組みを示す、ISO 27001の認証を取得しています。 LLMの最適化 Notionはさまざまなプロバイダーのモデルを継続的に評価しているため、常に最適なツールをご利用いただけます。 セキュリティと 管理ツール セキュリティ、コンプライアンス、アナリティクス、監査用のツールにより、ワークスペースを安全に保ちます。 ゼロデータ保持 ポリシー LLMプロバイダーによりデータが保存されることは一切ありません。エンタープライズプラン以外のデータ保持期間は30日間です。 よくあるご質問 Notion AIの利用料金を教えてください。 Notion AIは、ビジネスプランとエンタープライズプランの料金に含まれています。これらのプランをご利用でない場合でも、ワークスペースではNotion AIの機能を一定回数お試しいただけます。 Notion AIはデータをどのように使用しますか? Notionは標準的な データ保護対策 に従い、ユーザーのデータを暗号化し、プライバシーの保護に努めています。Notion AIは、ユーザーがデータ共有に同意しない限り、モデルのトレーニングにデータを使用することはありません。 Notion AIを活用するために使用される情報は、Notion AI機能を提供することのみを目的として、AIサブプロセッサーと共有されます。Notionは、AIサブプロセッサーと契約を締結し、ユーザーデータをモデルの学習に使用することを禁止しています。 Notion AIのセキュリティとプライバシー対策の詳細については、こちらをご覧ください。 Notion AIはどんな用途に使用できますか? Notion AIは、普段お使いのツール内で、仕事をよりスムーズに進める手助けをします。 たとえば、 ワークスペースと連携アプリ全体の横断検索 ミーティングのメモ作成や文字起こしの自動化 深いリサーチに基づいた、詳細なドキュメントやレポートの作成 コンテンツの生成と編集 数百行にわたるデータベースの内容を一括自動入力 コンテンツをご希望の言語に翻訳 データベースの構成をゼロから作成 メール受信トレイの並べ替えとフィルター(NotionメールAI) すべてのNotion AIユーザーに対して、最適なパフォーマンスと公平な使用頻度を確保するために、ユーザーの使用状況に応じてAI機能へのアクセスが一時的に制限されることがあります。 Notion AIについてさらに詳しく知りたいです。 Notionアカデミーやヘルプセンターをご覧ください。Notion AIを日々の業務に取り入れるためのヒントを多数ご紹介しています。 日本語 Cookieの設定 © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 会社名 Notionについて 採用情報 セキュリティ ステータス 利用規約とプライバシー プライバシー権 ダウンロード iOS & Android Mac & Windows カレンダー Webクリッパー リソース ヘルプセンター 料金 ブログ コミュニティ インテグレーション テンプレート パートナープログラム Notion (ノーション) - エンタープライズ 小規模ビジネス パーソナル 詳しく見る →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#advanced-topics
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/blob/c660b39447f0d5b8790c0826092638d321cd6821/packages/nuxt/src/core/runtime/nitro/no-ssr.ts#L8-L9
nuxt/packages/nuxt/src/core/runtime/nitro/no-ssr.ts at c660b39447f0d5b8790c0826092638d321cd6821 · nuxt/nuxt · GitHub Skip to content Navigation Menu Toggle navigation Sign in Appearance settings Platform AI CODE CREATION GitHub Copilot Write better code with AI GitHub Spark Build and deploy intelligent apps GitHub Models Manage and compare prompts MCP Registry New Integrate external tools DEVELOPER WORKFLOWS Actions Automate any workflow Codespaces Instant dev environments Issues Plan and track work Code Review Manage code changes APPLICATION SECURITY GitHub Advanced Security Find and fix vulnerabilities Code security Secure your code as you build Secret protection Stop leaks before they start EXPLORE Why GitHub Documentation Blog Changelog Marketplace View all features Solutions BY COMPANY SIZE Enterprises Small and medium teams Startups Nonprofits BY USE CASE App Modernization DevSecOps DevOps CI/CD View all use cases BY INDUSTRY Healthcare Financial services Manufacturing Government View all industries View all solutions Resources EXPLORE BY TOPIC AI Software Development DevOps Security View all topics EXPLORE BY TYPE Customer stories Events & webinars Ebooks & reports Business insights GitHub Skills SUPPORT & SERVICES Documentation Customer support Community forum Trust center Partners Open Source COMMUNITY GitHub Sponsors Fund open source developers PROGRAMS Security Lab Maintainer Community Accelerator Archive Program REPOSITORIES Topics Trending Collections Enterprise ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS Enterprise platform AI-powered developer platform AVAILABLE ADD-ONS GitHub Advanced Security Enterprise-grade security features Copilot for Business Enterprise-grade AI features Premium Support Enterprise-grade 24/7 support Pricing Search or jump to... Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests... --> Search Clear Search syntax tips Provide feedback --> We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously. Include my email address so I can be contacted Cancel Submit feedback Saved searches Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly --> Name Query To see all available qualifiers, see our documentation . Cancel Create saved search Sign in Sign up Appearance settings Resetting focus You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. Dismiss alert {{ message }} nuxt / nuxt Public Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings Fork 5.5k Star 59.3k Code Issues 816 Pull requests 114 Discussions Actions Projects 1 Security Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Insights Additional navigation options Code Issues Pull requests Discussions Actions Projects Security Insights Footer © 2026 GitHub, Inc. Footer navigation Terms Privacy Security Status Community Docs Contact Manage cookies Do not share my personal information You can’t perform that action at this time.
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.mozilla.org/el/products/
Προϊόντα της Mozilla - Mozilla — Mozilla Βοηθήστε μας να βελτιώσουμε την εμπειρία σας με τη Mozilla Πέρα από τα απαραίτητα cookie για τη λειτουργία αυτού του ιστοτόπου, θα θέλαμε την άδειά σας για να αποθηκεύσουμε μερικά ακόμη cookie για να κατανοήσουμε καλύτερα τις ανάγκες περιήγησής σας και να βελτιώσουμε την εμπειρία σας. Μείνετε ήσυχοι: εκτιμούμε το απόρρητό σας. Αποδοχή όλων των επιπρόσθετων cookie Απόρριψη όλων των επιπρόσθετων cookie Ρυθμίσεις cookie Μενού Προγράμματα περιήγησης Firefox Προϊόντα Κλείσιμο του μενού «Προϊόντα» Mozilla VPN Mozilla Monitor Firefox Relay MDN Plus Thunderbird Όλα τα προϊόντα Σχετικά με εμάς Κλείσιμο του μενού «Σχετικά με εμάς» Η αποστολή μας Σχετικά με τη Mozilla Η Διακήρυξη της Mozilla Συμμετοχή Ιστολόγιο Το έργο μας Mozilla Foundation Mozilla.ai Mozilla Ventures Mozilla Advertising Mozilla Builders Νέα προϊόντα της Mozilla Προϊόντα Το Firefox είναι μόνο η αρχή. Όλα τα προϊόντα της οικογένειας της Mozilla έχουν σχεδιαστεί για να σας προστατεύουν και να σας βοηθούν στο διαδίκτυο. Firefox Αποκτήστε το πρόγραμμα περιήγησης που αποκλείει αυτόματα 2.000+ ιχνηλάτες δεδομένων. Η Ενισχυμένη προστασία από καταγραφή παρέχεται σε κάθε πρόγραμμα περιήγησης Firefox. Λήψη του Firefox Το Firefox δεν υποστηρίζεται πλέον στο λειτουργικό σύστημα Windows 8.1 και παλαιότερα. Κάντε λήψη του Firefox ESR (έκδοση εκτεταμένης υποστήριξης) για να χρησιμοποιήσετε το Firefox. Λήψη του Firefox ESR 64-bit Λήψη του Firefox ESR 32-bit Λήψη διαφορετικής έκδοσης Το Firefox δεν υποστηρίζεται πλέον στο λειτουργικό σύστημα macOS 10.14 και παλαιότερα. Κάντε λήψη του Firefox ESR (έκδοση εκτεταμένης υποστήριξης) για να χρησιμοποιήσετε το Firefox. Λήψη του Firefox ESR Σημείωση απορρήτου Firefox Firefox Focus Το ιδιωτικό σας πρόγραμμα περιήγησης με αυτόματη προστασία από καταγραφή και φραγή διαφημίσεων. Firefox Relay Προστατέψτε την πραγματική σας διεύθυνση email και ελέγξτε τα εισερχόμενά σας. Λήψη του Firefox Relay Mozilla Monitor Δείτε αν οι προσωπικές σας πληροφορίες έχουν παραβιαστεί λόγω διαρροής εταιρικών δεδομένων και εγγραφείτε για ειδοποιήσεις. Έλεγχος για παραβιάσεις Mozilla VPN Περιηγηθείτε, δείτε βίντεο και εργαστείτε σε διακομιστές περισσότερων από 30 χωρών για ασφαλή σύνδεση στο διαδίκτυο, με μια νέα προοπτική. Λήψη του Mozilla VPN MDN Plus Πηγές για προγραμματιστές, από προγραμματιστές. Υποστηρίξτε το MDN και κάντε το δικό σας με συλλογές, ειδοποιήσεις και χώρους πειραματισμού. Υποστήριξη MDN Thunderbird Πρόσβαση σε όλα τα email, τα ημερολόγια και τις επαφές σας σε μια γρήγορη εφαρμογή. Φιλτράρετε και οργανώστε τα όπως σας αρέσει. Λήψη του Thunderbird Μία σύνδεση. Όλες οι υπηρεσίες Mozilla. Firefox Mozilla VPN Relay Monitor Εισαγάγετε το email σας για να δημιουργήσετε έναν λογαριασμό Mozilla. Διεύθυνση email Συνέχεια Συνεχίζοντας, συμφωνείτε με τους Όρους υπηρεσίας και τη Σημείωση απορρήτου . Έχετε ήδη λογαριασμό; Συνδεθείτε ή μάθετε περισσότερα σχετικά με την εγγραφή στη Mozilla. Προσεγγίστε περισσότερους ανθρώπους και κερδίστε την εμπιστοσύνη τους. Μάθετε περισσότερα σχετικά με Διαφημίσεις Mozilla Εταιρεία Ηγεσία Κέντρο τύπου Καριέρες Επικοινωνία Υποστήριξη Βοήθεια προϊόντος Αναφορά σφάλματος Μετάφραση στη Mozilla Ασφάλεια Προγραμματιστές Developer Edition Enterprise Εργαλεία MDN Σημειώσεις έκδοσης του Firefox Ακολουθήστε τη @Mozilla Bluesky (@mozilla.org) Instagram (@mozilla) LinkedIn (@mozilla) TikTok (@mozilla) Spotify (@mozilla) Ακολουθήστε το @Firefox Bluesky (@firefox.com) Instagram (@firefox) YouTube (@firefoxchannel) TikTok (@firefox) Δωρεά Όλες οι γλώσσες Γλώσσα عربي Беларуская Bosanski Català Maya Kaqchikel Čeština Cymraeg Dansk Deutsch Dolnoserbšćina Ελληνικά English (Canadian) English (British) English Español (de Argentina) Español (de Chile) Español (de España) Español (de México) suomi Français Frysk Galego Avañe'ẽ हिन्दी (भारत) Hrvatski Hornjoserbsce magyar Հայերեն Interlingua Bahasa Indonesia Italiano 日本語 ქართული Taqbaylit Қазақ 한국어 ພາສາລາວ Melayu Norsk bokmål Nederlands Norsk nynorsk ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (ਭਾਰਤ) Polski Português (do Brasil) Português (Europeu) rumantsch Română Русский Scots සිංහල slovenčina سرائیکی Slovenščina Shqip Српски Svenska Тоҷикӣ ไทย Türkçe Українська اُردو Tiếng Việt 中文 (简体) 正體中文 (繁體) Επισκεφθείτε τον μη κερδοσκοπικό γονικό οργανισμό της Mozilla Corporation , το Mozilla Foundation . Τμήματα αυτού του περιεχομένου αποτελούν πνευματική ιδιοκτησία μεμονωμένων εθελοντών του mozilla.org (©1998–2026). Το περιεχόμενο διατίθεται στα πλαίσια της άδειας Creative Commons . Σημείωση απορρήτου ιστοτόπου Cookie Νομικά Κανόνες συμμετοχής κοινότητας Σχετικά με τον ιστότοπο
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/mqgem-software-limited-mqscx?similarProducts=true&trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_sign_in
MQSCX | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn MQGem Software Limited in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in MQSCX Message Queue Software by MQGem Software Limited See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About Extended MQSC (MQSCX) is a program which performs a similar function to the RUNMQSC program but improves on its usability, particularly when used in interactive mode. Many of the frustrating elements of RUNMQSC have been removed and entering MQSC commands is made faster, easier and less error prone. It also provides a powerful command language, including functions, making writing dynamic scripts and reports simplicity itself. Media Products media viewer No more previous content MQSCX Introduction Introducing the MQSCX Product, an IBM MQ Configuration and Scripting tool. This video will take the user through the basics of using the product. MQSCX Filtering This video demonstrates the various ways that MQSCX extends the standard filtering capabilities of the MQSC language making it far easier to display only those items you are interested in. MQSCX Control Language Introduction A brief introduction to the MQSCX Control Language. This video will introduce the concept of variables and show simple FOREACH loops. No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Texts Texts Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less MQGem Software Limited products MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software MQEdit MQEdit Message Queue Software MQEV MQEV Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/thrive-themes-thrive-comments/?trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_similar_products_section_product_link_result-card_image-click#main-content
Thrive Comments | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Thrive Themes in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Thrive Comments Commenting Systems by Thrive Themes See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About - Make Commenting Fun and Engaging - Thrive Comments brings the addictive triggers of social media and a conversion focus to your WordPress comments, through several innovative features like upvoting and downvoting, gamified comment incentives and an impressive number of after-comment-actions. Media Products media viewer No more previous content No more next content Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Hyvor Talk Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Thrive Themes products Thrive Optimize Thrive Optimize A/B Testing Software LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
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LinkedIn Login, Sign in | LinkedIn Sign in Sign in with Apple Sign in with a passkey By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . or Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Keep me logged in Sign in We’ve emailed a one-time link to your primary email address Click on the link to sign in instantly to your LinkedIn account. If you don’t see the email in your inbox, check your spam folder. Resend email Back New to LinkedIn? Join now Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . LinkedIn © 2026 User Agreement Privacy Policy Community Guidelines Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Send Feedback Language العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional))
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#web-ext-dump-config
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
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Chúng tôi có thể nhanh chóng lên chương trình họp cho nhóm đông người mà vẫn giữ được tính tương tác và sự thú vị. Scott Stephens Quản lý vận hành thiết kế, Kin + Carta Dành cho đội ngũ quản lý sản phẩm, thiết kế, kỹ sư và tất cả những ai liên quan Quản lý sản phẩm Gắn lộ trình với mục tiêu và giúp cả nhóm luôn thống nhất về nội dung và thời gian triển khai. Xem cách các nhà quản lý sản phẩm sử dụng Notion -> Nhà thiết kế Đẩy nhanh các vòng đánh giá, sắp xếp yêu cầu theo mức độ ưu tiên và hoàn thành đúng hạn mọi đầu việc sáng tạo. Xem cách các nhà thiết kế sử dụng Notion -> Kỹ sư Triển khai tính năng nhanh hơn bằng cách tập trung sprint, quy chuẩn mã, sửa lỗi v.v. ở cùng một nơi. Xem cách các kỹ sư sử dụng Notion -> Bao gồm cả Wiki và Dự án, với mức giá không đổi Wiki Thật khó để làm việc nhanh trong một không gian làm việc lộn xộn & thiếu ngăn nắp. Thay vào đó, hãy tập trung toàn bộ kho tri thức của bạn vào Notion. Dự án Quản lý mọi loại dự án – cho mọi nhóm, ở mọi quy mô. 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Công ty Giới thiệu về chúng tôi Cơ hội nghề nghiệp Bảo mật Trạng thái Điều khoản và quyền riêng tư Quyền riêng tư của bạn Tải xuống iOS & Android Mac & Windows Lịch Web Clipper Tài nguyên Trung tâm trợ giúp Bảng giá Blog Cộng đồng Tích hợp Mẫu Chương trình đối tác Notion cho Enterprise Doanh nghiệp nhỏ Cá nhân Khám phá thêm → {"props":{"pageProps":{"noIndex":false,"root":[[2,[[1,2],[3,4],[9,2598]]],[0,"type"],[0,"root"],[0,"children"],[1,[5,23,464,909,1076,1321,1554,1717,2270,2497]],[2,[[1,6],[7,8],[9,10]]],[0,"yaml"],[0,"value"],[0,"\ntitle: Docs | Notion\ndescription: The next gen of notes \u0026 docs. Simple. Powerful. 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hơn."],[2,[[11,594],[18,597]]],[2,[[13,595],[15,14],[16,596]]],[0,105],[0,1856],[2,[[13,595],[15,598],[16,599]]],[0,50],[0,1905],[2,[[11,601],[18,602]]],[2,[[13,595],[15,14],[16,596]]],[2,[[13,595],[15,598],[16,599]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,604],[9,613]]],[1,[605]],[2,[[1,139],[89,90],[91,606],[141,142],[9,607]]],[0,"contentful:4Oki5RWkio4ERen9OKzx3H"],[2,[[11,608],[18,611]]],[2,[[13,609],[15,14],[16,610]]],[0,107],[0,1907],[2,[[13,609],[15,148],[16,612]]],[0,1969],[2,[[11,614],[18,615]]],[2,[[13,609],[15,14],[16,610]]],[2,[[13,609],[15,148],[16,612]]],[2,[[11,617],[18,620]]],[2,[[13,618],[15,14],[16,619]]],[0,99],[0,1758],[2,[[13,621],[15,21],[16,622]]],[0,109],[0,1974],[2,[[1,24],[25,490],[27,624],[3,629],[9,684]]],[2,[[29,492],[625,626],[627,628]]],[0,"image-shadow"],[0,"none"],[0,"image-placement"],[0,"stretch"],[1,[630,645,658,671]],[2,[[1,38],[3,631],[9,642]]],[1,[632]],[2,[[1,497],[25,498],[27,633],[3,635],[9,636]]],[2,[[29,500],[25,634]]],[0,"PhotoLandscape"],[1,[]],[2,[[11,637],[18,640]]],[2,[[13,638],[15,14],[16,639]]],[0,113],[0,2049],[2,[[13,638],[15,305],[16,641]]],[0,2099],[2,[[11,643],[18,644]]],[2,[[13,638],[15,14],[16,639]]],[2,[[13,638],[15,305],[16,641]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,646],[9,655]]],[1,[647]],[2,[[1,41],[7,648],[9,649]]],[0,"Hình 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lên."],[2,[[11,663],[18,666]]],[2,[[13,664],[15,14],[16,665]]],[0,117],[0,2119],[2,[[13,664],[15,333],[16,667]]],[0,2170],[2,[[11,669],[18,670]]],[2,[[13,664],[15,14],[16,665]]],[2,[[13,664],[15,333],[16,667]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,672],[9,681]]],[1,[673]],[2,[[1,139],[89,90],[91,674],[141,142],[9,675]]],[0,"contentful:7soEygyXG1S25G6K2Aobmo"],[2,[[11,676],[18,679]]],[2,[[13,677],[15,14],[16,678]]],[0,119],[0,2172],[2,[[13,677],[15,148],[16,680]]],[0,2234],[2,[[11,682],[18,683]]],[2,[[13,677],[15,14],[16,678]]],[2,[[13,677],[15,148],[16,680]]],[2,[[11,685],[18,688]]],[2,[[13,686],[15,14],[16,687]]],[0,111],[0,1976],[2,[[13,689],[15,21],[16,690]]],[0,121],[0,2239],[2,[[11,692],[18,695]]],[2,[[13,693],[15,14],[16,694]]],[0,85],[0,1527],[2,[[13,696],[15,455],[16,697]]],[0,123],[0,2245],[2,[[1,24],[25,485],[27,699],[3,700],[9,895]]],[2,[[29,487]]],[1,[701,765,831]],[2,[[1,24],[25,490],[27,702],[3,703],[9,758]]],[2,[[29,492]]],[1,[704,719,732,745]],[2,[[1,38],[3,705],[9,716]]],[1,[706]],[2,[[1,497],[25,498],[27,707],[3,709],[9,710]]],[2,[[29,500],[25,708]]],[0,"ListIndent"],[1,[]],[2,[[11,711],[18,714]]],[2,[[13,712],[15,14],[16,713]]],[0,129],[0,2298],[2,[[13,712],[15,275],[16,715]]],[0,2344],[2,[[11,717],[18,718]]],[2,[[13,712],[15,14],[16,713]]],[2,[[13,712],[15,275],[16,715]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,720],[9,729]]],[1,[721]],[2,[[1,41],[7,722],[9,723]]],[0,"Mục lục"],[2,[[11,724],[18,727]]],[2,[[13,725],[15,14],[16,726]]],[0,131],[0,2346],[2,[[13,725],[15,521],[16,728]]],[0,2353],[2,[[11,730],[18,731]]],[2,[[13,725],[15,14],[16,726]]],[2,[[13,725],[15,521],[16,728]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,733],[9,742]]],[1,[734]],[2,[[1,41],[7,735],[9,736]]],[0,"Nhấp để nhảy đến mục tương ứng. Tự động cập nhật."],[2,[[11,737],[18,740]]],[2,[[13,738],[15,14],[16,739]]],[0,133],[0,2355],[2,[[13,738],[15,598],[16,741]]],[0,2404],[2,[[11,743],[18,744]]],[2,[[13,738],[15,14],[16,739]]],[2,[[13,738],[15,598],[16,741]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,746],[9,755]]],[1,[747]],[2,[[1,139],[89,90],[91,748],[141,142],[9,749]]],[0,"contentful:4qWPmBifXLbokpAAlXInJ0"],[2,[[11,750],[18,753]]],[2,[[13,751],[15,14],[16,752]]],[0,135],[0,2406],[2,[[13,751],[15,148],[16,754]]],[0,2468],[2,[[11,756],[18,757]]],[2,[[13,751],[15,14],[16,752]]],[2,[[13,751],[15,148],[16,754]]],[2,[[11,759],[18,762]]],[2,[[13,760],[15,14],[16,761]]],[0,127],[0,2271],[2,[[13,763],[15,21],[16,764]]],[0,137],[0,2473],[2,[[1,24],[25,490],[27,766],[3,767],[9,824]]],[2,[[29,492]]],[1,[768,784,797,810]],[2,[[1,38],[3,769],[9,781]]],[1,[770]],[2,[[1,497],[25,498],[27,771],[3,773],[9,774]]],[2,[[29,500],[25,772]]],[0,"Chart"],[1,[]],[2,[[11,775],[18,778]]],[2,[[13,776],[15,14],[16,777]]],[0,141],[0,2502],[2,[[13,776],[15,779],[16,780]]],[0,42],[0,2543],[2,[[11,782],[18,783]]],[2,[[13,776],[15,14],[16,777]]],[2,[[13,776],[15,779],[16,780]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,785],[9,794]]],[1,[786]],[2,[[1,41],[7,787],[9,788]]],[0,"Biểu đồ"],[2,[[11,789],[18,792]]],[2,[[13,790],[15,14],[16,791]]],[0,143],[0,2545],[2,[[13,790],[15,521],[16,793]]],[0,2552],[2,[[11,795],[18,796]]],[2,[[13,790],[15,14],[16,791]]],[2,[[13,790],[15,521],[16,793]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,798],[9,807]]],[1,[799]],[2,[[1,41],[7,800],[9,801]]],[0,"Thêm biểu đồ trực tiếp vào mọi tài liệu."],[2,[[11,802],[18,805]]],[2,[[13,803],[15,14],[16,804]]],[0,145],[0,2554],[2,[[13,803],[15,302],[16,806]]],[0,2594],[2,[[11,808],[18,809]]],[2,[[13,803],[15,14],[16,804]]],[2,[[13,803],[15,302],[16,806]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,811],[9,821]]],[1,[812]],[2,[[1,139],[89,90],[91,813],[141,142],[9,814]]],[0,"contentful:64bwBP0S2Pp6xEDr2LaXM"],[2,[[11,815],[18,818]]],[2,[[13,816],[15,14],[16,817]]],[0,147],[0,2596],[2,[[13,816],[15,819],[16,820]]],[0,62],[0,2657],[2,[[11,822],[18,823]]],[2,[[13,816],[15,14],[16,817]]],[2,[[13,816],[15,819],[16,820]]],[2,[[11,825],[18,828]]],[2,[[13,826],[15,14],[16,827]]],[0,139],[0,2475],[2,[[13,829],[15,21],[16,830]]],[0,149],[0,2662],[2,[[1,24],[25,490],[27,832],[3,833],[9,888]]],[2,[[29,492]]],[1,[834,849,862,875]],[2,[[1,38],[3,835],[9,846]]],[1,[836]],[2,[[1,497],[25,498],[27,837],[3,839],[9,840]]],[2,[[29,500],[25,838]]],[0,"More"],[1,[]],[2,[[11,841],[18,844]]],[2,[[13,842],[15,14],[16,843]]],[0,153],[0,2691],[2,[[13,842],[15,302],[16,845]]],[0,2731],[2,[[11,847],[18,848]]],[2,[[13,842],[15,14],[16,843]]],[2,[[13,842],[15,302],[16,845]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,850],[9,859]]],[1,[851]],[2,[[1,41],[7,852],[9,853]]],[0,"Và hơn 50 loại nội dung khác"],[2,[[11,854],[18,857]]],[2,[[13,855],[15,14],[16,856]]],[0,155],[0,2733],[2,[[13,855],[15,234],[16,858]]],[0,2761],[2,[[11,860],[18,861]]],[2,[[13,855],[15,14],[16,856]]],[2,[[13,855],[15,234],[16,858]]],[2,[[1,38],[3,863],[9,872]]],[1,[864]],[2,[[1,41],[7,865],[9,866]]],[0,"Như một chiếc hộp không đáy chứa các khối nội dung."],[2,[[11,867],[18,870]]],[2,[[13,868],[15,14],[16,869]]],[0,157],[0,2763],[2,[[13,868],[15,333],[16,871]]],[0,2
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/automattic-texts/?trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_similar_products_section_product_link_result-card_image-click#main-content
Texts | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Automattic in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Texts Message Queue Software by Automattic See who's skilled in this Add as skill Download now Report this product About All of your messages in one inbox! Media Products media viewer No more previous content Texts All your messages in one in-box! No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less Automattic products Day One Journal Day One Journal IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems Jetpack Jetpack Server Backup Software Newspack Newspack Web Content Management (WCM) Systems Pocket Casts Pocket Casts Podcast Hosting Platforms Tumblr Tumblr Social Networking Software Woo Woo E-Commerce Platforms WordPress VIP WordPress VIP Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Software WordPress.com WordPress.com Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/mqgem-software-limited-mqedit/?trk=products_details_guest_other_products_by_org_section_product_link_result-card_full-click#main-content
MQEdit | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn MQGem Software Limited in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in MQEdit Message Queue Software by MQGem Software Limited See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About MQEdit is a graphical live parsing editor for IBM MQ Messages. Use MQEdit to correct messages; create new messages for use when developing new applications, or testing them out; move or copy messages easily with a simple drag and drop with your mouse. Media Products media viewer No more previous content MQEdit Introduction Introducing the MQEdit Product, an IBM MQ message editing and manipulation tool. This video will take the user through the basics of using the product. MQEdit: Basic Editing Learn how easy it is to make changes to an IBM MQ message and display it in different ways using MQEdit. This video will cover how to display a message in different ways, how to use the Update, Add, Empty and New tools, how to use selection lists and how to perform undo and redo operations. MQEdit: Message Correctness Learn how MQEdit keeps your IBM MQ messages consistent as you change values. This video will highlight how MQEdit helps you to keep a message correct. As you edit a message, any necessary fields and tags are updated to ensure the structure of the message remains consistent and valid. MQEdit: Creating User Formats Learn how MQEdit allows you to describe the shape of your IBM MQ messages in a User Format file. When using these User Formats, MQEdit can display your messages in a more readable formatted display. No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Texts Texts Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less MQGem Software Limited products MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software MQEV MQEV Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software MQSCX MQSCX Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/standards-digital-sd-enquiry/
SD Enquiry | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Standards Digital in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in SD Enquiry Commenting Systems by Standards Digital See who's skilled in this Add as skill Contact us Report this product About SD Enquiry is a cloud based public enquiry platform that supports PDF and NISO XML document types. Experience efficient collaboration with user friendly commenting interface and granular comment collection. Better your way of work with the ability to search and monitor upcoming enquiries and simple processing of comments. Media Products media viewer No more previous content Single Source Publishing - Centralised control - Ensure stakeholders always access the correct version - Document integrity maintained - No content accidentally left in or missed out - Reduced repetition – Easier to keep versions aligned and integrate comments - Better consistency - All output formats have the same content (PDF, HTML, DB etc.) - Lower risk of human error – No manual conversion and/or XML tagging required at the editorial stage No more next content Featured customers of SD Enquiry Statens vegvesen Government Administration 56,565 followers Standard Norge Information Services 7,353 followers Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Thrive Comments Thrive Comments Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Standards Digital products SD Store SD Store E-Commerce Platforms SD Authoring SD Authoring Source-Code Editors SD Import SD Import Big Data Processing & Distribution Software SD Viewer SD Viewer Document Management Software LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.mozilla.org/ca/products/
Mozilla’s products - Mozilla — Mozilla Help us improve your Mozilla experience In addition to Cookies necessary for this site to function, we’d like your permission to set some additional Cookies to better understand your browsing needs and improve your experience. Rest assured — we value your privacy. Accept All Additional Cookies Reject All Additional Cookies Cookie settings Menú Baixa el Firefox Firefox is no longer supported on Windows 8.1 and below. Please download Firefox ESR (Extended Support Release) to use Firefox. Download Firefox ESR 64-bit Download Firefox ESR 32-bit Download a different build Firefox is no longer supported on macOS 10.14 and below. Please download Firefox ESR (Extended Support Release) to use Firefox. Download Firefox ESR Avís de privadesa del Firefox Get Mozilla VPN Navegadors Firefox Productes Tanca el menú Productes Mozilla Monitor Consulteu si la vostra adreça electrònica ha aparegut en alguna filtració de dades d'alguna empresa. Facebook Container Impediu que el Facebook recopili les vostres dades fora del seu lloc web. Mozilla VPN Obteniu una protecció més enllà del navegador, en tots els vostres dispositius. Firefox Relay Registreu comptes nous sense facilitar la vostra adreça electrònica. MDN Plus New features and tools for a customized MDN experience Vegeu tots els productes Qui som Tanca el menú Qui som Manifest de Mozilla Coneixeu els valors i els principis que guien la nostra missió. Mozilla Foundation Coneixeu l’organització sense ànim de lucre que hi ha darrere del Firefox i que lluita per millorar el web. Lideratge Conegueu l’equip que crea tecnologia per millorar Internet. Col·laboreu-hi Uniu-vos a la lluita per mantenir la bona salut d'Internet. Oportunitats laborals Treballeu per a una organització guiada per una missió que crea productes que posen les persones al davant. Blog de Mozilla Més informació sobre Mozilla i les qüestions que ens importen. Més informació sobre Mozilla Innovació Tanca el menú Innovació Firefox Developer Edition Baixeu el navegador Firefox redissenyat especialment per als desenvolupadors. MDN Web Docs Vegeu la pàgina d'inici de recursos per a desenvolupadors web. Mozilla Innovation Projects Discover ways to bring bright ideas to life. Common Voice Doneu la vostra veu perquè el futur del web pugui entendre tothom. Products Firefox is just the beginning. Mozilla’s family of products are all designed to keep you safer and smarter online. Firefox Get the browser that blocks 2000+ data trackers automatically. Enhanced Tracking Protection comes standard in every Firefox browser. Baixa el Firefox Firefox is no longer supported on Windows 8.1 and below. Please download Firefox ESR (Extended Support Release) to use Firefox. Download Firefox ESR 64-bit Download Firefox ESR 32-bit Download a different build Firefox is no longer supported on macOS 10.14 and below. Please download Firefox ESR (Extended Support Release) to use Firefox. Download Firefox ESR Avís de privadesa del Firefox Firefox Focus Your dedicated privacy browser with automatic tracking protection and ad blocking. Firefox Relay Protect your real email address to help control your inbox. Get Firefox Relay Mozilla Monitor Comproveu si hi ha alguna filtració de dades d'empreses que hagi afectat la vostra informació personal i subscriviu-vos a alertes futures. Comproveu les filtracions de dades Mozilla VPN Navegueu, feu retransmissions i treballeu en servidors distribuïts per més de 30 països que ofereixen una connexió a Internet segura amb una nova perspectiva. Baixa el Mozilla VPN MDN Plus Resources for developers, by developers. Support MDN and make it your own with collections, notifications, and playgrounds. Support MDN Thunderbird Access all your email, calendars, and contacts in one fast app. Filter and organize them the way you like. Download Thunderbird One login. Everything Mozilla. Firefox Mozilla VPN Relay Monitor Enter your email to create a Mozilla account. Adreça electrònica Continua En continuar, accepteu les condicions d'ús del servei i l' avís de privadesa . Already have an account? Sign in or learn more about joining Mozilla. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#manifest-keys
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://scrabblewordfinder.org/dictionary/raze
raze - Dictionary Checker - Scrabble Word Finder --> Dictionary Two Letter Words Word List Words with Friends Finder Scrabble Dictionary Check words in Scrabble Dictionary and make sure it's an official scrabble word. Enter the word you want to check Check Dictionary Yes Valid in these dictionaries TWL/NWL (Scrabble US / Canada / Thailand) SOWPODS/CSW (Scrabble UK / International) ENABLE (Words with Friends) Meaning of raze 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: raze v 1: tear down so as to make flat with the ground; "The building was levelled" [syn: {level}, {raze}, {rase}, {dismantle}, {tear down}, {take down}, {pull down}] [ant: {erect}, {put up}, {raise}, {rear}, {set up}] WordNet ® Princeton University. http://wordnet.princeton.edu Use this Scrabble® dictionary checker tool to find out whether a word is acceptable in your scrabble dictionary. When you enter a word and click on Check Dictionary button, it simply tells you whether it's valid or not, and list out the dictionaries in case of valid word. Additionally, you can also read the meaning if you want to know more about a particular word. Share on Twitter Facebook Back to Scrabble Word Finder Enter up to 15 letters, use ? as wildcards --> ✘ Clear Find Words Advanced Options Select Dictionary TWL06 (US, Canada and Thailand) SOWPODS (UK and Others) Enable (Words with Friends) Starts with Ends with Must include --> Recent Articles Single Player Indoor Games 5 Tips to Help You in Wordscapes Board Games Quiz Scrabble Quiz Scrabble vs. Scrabble Deluxe Tips to Win at Uno Wordscapes Rules and Tips and Tricks Top 10 Puzzle Games for Android Tips & Tricks for Spelling Bee Bananagrams vs. Scrabble Most Popular Word Games of 2022 Scrabble vs Crossword Scrabble vs Scrabble Junior Four Letter Scrabble Words Board Games to Play with Family and Friends Scrabble vs. Lexulous Word Games for Kids Benefits of Playing Scrabble from Childhood Guide To Win Boggle With Friends Words With Friends - Rules & Tips Scrabble vs Words With Friends Tips & Tricks to Win at Scrabble Word Lists Two Letter Words Three Letter Words Vowel Only Words Words Without Vowels Words with Q but no U Words with Q but no E Words with Z and X Words with Z and Q Words with Z and V Words with Z and J Words with Q and X Words with Q and j Words ending in W Words ending in Z Words ending in Q Words ending in J Words ending in V Words ending in C words that end with QUE words that end with ER words that end with TY words that end with UN words that end with XE words that end with XI words that end with AY words that end with NET words that end with WARE words that end with ZIG 3 letter words with X 3 letter words with Z 3 letter words with E 3 letter words with U 3 letter words with Q 3 letter words with V 3 letter words with J 4 letter words starting with A 4 letter words starting with E 4 letter words starting with O 4 letter words starting with R 5 letter words starting with C 5 letter words starting with S 5 letter words starting with A 5 letter words ending with X 5 letter words ending with C See Full List Disclaimer SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. Words with Friends is a trademark of Zynga with Friends. ScrabbleWordFinder.org is not affiliated with SCRABBLE®, Mattel Inc, Hasbro Inc, Zynga with Friends or Zynga Inc in any way. This site is for entertainment purposes only. © 2013-2025 ScrabbleWordFinder.org | Privacy Policy About Feedback Advertise Contact
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/documentation/develop/web-ext-command-reference/
web-ext command reference | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug web-ext command reference This page lists all the commands and options available under version 8 of the web-ext command line tool. See the version 7 command reference for documentation of the previous version of the tool. Contents What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also What's changed in Version 8 Released in May 2024, the main change in version 8 of web-ext is that web-ext sign now creates a listing for an extension not previously listed on addons.mozilla.org (AMO) by default. This feature was previewed in version 7 with the --use-submission-api option, which is now removed. This feature is achieved using the submission features of addons.mozilla.org add-on API v5 . Removed These version 7 web-ext lint options are removed: --firefox-preview These version 7 web-ext run options are removed: --firefox-preview These version 7 web-ext sign options are removed: --use-submission-api --api-url-prefix --id --disable-progress-bar (undocumented feature) Updates These web-ext sign options have changed: --amo-base-url no longer requires the (removed) --use-submission-api option to be set. --channel is now required. To submit updates, an extension's manifest.json must include an extension ID . Additions These features are added: web-ext dump-config , this new command prints a copy of the configuration data to the terminal. web-ext sign --approval-timeout enables this number of milliseconds to wait for approval before giving up to be set. web-ext sign --upload-source-code enables a file containing human-readable source code to be uploaded. Commands web-ext has these commands; a command's options are included as subsections. web-ext build Packages an extension into a .zip file, ignoring files commonly unwanted in packages, such as .git and other artifacts. The name of the .zip file is taken from the name field in the extension manifest . --as-needed When you edit and save a source file, rebuild the extension. This enables you to continuously create a package with the most up-to-date source code. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_AS_NEEDED=true --overwrite-dest , -o Overwrite the destination package file if it exists. Without this option, web-ext exits with an error if the destination file exists. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_OVERWRITE_DEST=true --filename , -n Name of the created extension package file. In this option, the values defined in manifest.json can be used by enclosing them with { } . The default value is {name}-{version}.zip . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_FILENAME web-ext docs Opens the web-ext documentation in the user's default browser. web-ext dump-config Outputs the tool's configuration settings in JSON format. web-ext lint Reports errors in the extension manifest or other source code files. When strict_min_version is set in your extension’s manifest file, lint reports on the permissions, manifest keys, and web extension APIs used that are not available in that version. See the addons-linter project for more information about the rules used to validate the extension source. --output , -o The type of output to generate when reporting on errors. Choices: json or text . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_OUTPUT --metadata Output only metadata about the extension in JSON. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_METADATA=true --pretty Format the JSON output so that it's easier to read. This only applies when --output is set to json . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_PRETTY=true --self-hosted Declares that your extension will be self-hosted. This disables messages related to hosting on addons.mozilla.org . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_SELF_HOSTED=true --boring Disables colorful shell characters so that the output only contains plain text. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_BORING=true --warnings-as-errors , -w Treat warnings as errors by exiting non-zero for warnings. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_WARNINGS_AS_ERRORS=true web-ext run Builds and then temporarily installs an extension on the target application so it can be tested. By default, it watches extension source files and reloads the extension in each target as files change. --adb-bin The path to the ADB (Android Device Bridge) executable on the machine you are running web-ext from. By default, the adb executable is located on your PATH . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ADB_BIN --adb-device , --android-device The ID of your target Android device. If you do not specify this option, web-ext will list the IDs of each device connected. If you don't see a list of connected devices, ensure yours is set up for development . Example: web-ext run --target = firefox-android --android-device FA4AX0201736 Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ADB_DEVICE --adb-host The host name to use when connecting to an Android device with ADB (Android Device Bridge) . By default, this is discovered automatically. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ADB_HOST --adb-port Network port to use when connecting to an Android device with ADB (Android Device Bridge) . This will be discovered automatically by default. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ADB_PORT --adb-remove-old-artifacts Forces web-ext to remove any old artifacts discovered at startup. Otherwise, web-ext run provides a warning if it finds old artifacts on the adb device. Normally, when web-ext exits, it removes all the temporary files written to the target adb device. However, this may not happen, for example, when the device is disconnected before web-ext exits. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ADB_REMOVE_OLD_ARTIFACTS --browser-console , -bc Open a browser console on startup so you can see log messages for your extension. Example: web-ext run --browser-console Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_BROWSER_CONSOLE=true Note: The browser console may not show all debugging output from content scripts. Use the web console when debugging content scripts. --devtools Open the Developer Tools for the installed extension on startup. See this documentation for more information. Example: web-ext run --devtools Note: The opened Developer Tools may not show all debugging output from content scripts. Use the web console when debugging content scripts. This option requires Firefox 106 or later. --firefox , -f A version of Firefox Desktop to run the extension in. The value is an absolute path to the Firefox executable or an alias string. If not specified, the extension runs in the system's default installation of Firefox. Here is an example specifying a full path to a Firefox executable on Windows: --firefox = "C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox \f irefox.exe" Here is an example specifying an executable path on Mac OS: --firefox = /Applications/FirefoxNightly.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox-bin You can also use aliases like this: --firefox = beta Here are all available aliases and the executables they map to: Alias Firefox executable firefox The release build of Firefox beta The beta build of Firefox nightly The nightly build of Firefox deved or firefoxdeveloperedition The developer build of Firefox Flatpak users can use this option with the value flatpak:org.mozilla.firefox (where org.mozilla.firefox is the Flatpak application ID for Firefox on Flathub ): web-ext run --firefox = flatpak:org.mozilla.firefox Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_FIREFOX --firefox-apk The APK name for Firefox on your Android device. If more than one Firefox APK is installed, web-ext shows a list of values to choose from. Otherwise, web-ext uses the available APK. Example: web-ext run --target = firefox-android --firefox-apk = org.mozilla.firefox Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_FIREFOX_APK --firefox-profile , -p The base Firefox profile to run the extension in as a string containing your profile name or an absolute path to its directory. The profile you specify is copied into a new temporary profile, and the settings required for web-ext to function are added. If a profile is not specified, it runs the extension using a new temporary profile. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_FIREFOX_PROFILE --profile-create-if-missing Create the profile directory (specified by the --firefox-profile or --chromium-profile options) if it does not exist. The --firefox-profile option is treated as a directory path when this option is specified. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_PROFILE_CREATE_IF_MISSING --keep-profile-changes Save any changes made to the profile directory (specified by --firefox-profile ). Without this option, profile changes are not saved. This option makes the profile specified by --firefox-profile insecure for daily use. It turns off auto-updates and allows silent remote connections, among other things. Specifically, it makes destructive changes to the profile required for web-ext to operate. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_KEEP_PROFILE_CHANGES=true --no-reload Do not automatically reload the extension in the browser as you edit and save source files. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_NO_RELOAD=true --pre-install Install the extension into the profile before starting the browser. This is a way to support Firefox versions 49 or earlier, as they don't support remote installation. Specifying this option implies --no-reload . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_PRE_INSTALL=true --pref Customize any Firefox preference without creating or modifying the profile. Use the equal sign to set values, for example: --pref general.useragent.locale = fr-FR Specify this option multiple times to set more than one preference. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_PREF --target , -t Specify the application to run your extension in. Specify this option multiple times to run the extension in each application concurrently. Here are the supported targets: Target Application firefox-desktop The extension runs in Firefox Desktop . firefox-android The extension runs in Firefox for Android . You must also specify --android-device . chromium The extension runs in a Chromium-based browser. You can specify a binary with --chromium-binary . If no target is specified, the extension runs in firefox-desktop . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_TARGET --args , --arg Additional CLI options passed to the browser binary. Examples: web-ext run --arg = "--search=mozilla" --arg = "--new-tab=https://duckduckgo.com" web-ext run --arg = "--remote-debugging-port=9229" --target chromium --chromium-binary Path or alias to a Chromium executable such as google-chrome, google-chrome.exe, or opera.exe. If not specified, the default Google Chrome is used. --chromium-profile Path to a custom Chromium profile. --start-url Open a tab at the specified URL when the browser starts. Example: web-ext run --start-url www.mozilla.com To open several tabs, declare this option multiple times. Example: web-ext run --start-url www.mozilla.com --start-url developer.mozilla.org Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_START_URL --watch-file , --watch-files A list of files that should be watched for changes. This is useful if you want web-ext to watch for changes to specific files without watching the extension directory tree, e.g., the build output from a module bundler. web-ext run --watch-file dist/background.js dist/content-script.js --watch-ignored A list of paths and globs patterns that should not be watched for changes. Use this to prevent web-ext from watching part of the extension directory tree, e.g., the node_modules folder. web-ext run --watch-ignored dir1/to/file.js dir2/*.js dir3/** This option is useful to prevent issues when the number of watched files is higher than the underlying OS feature allows. For example, on Linux Error: ENOSPC: System limit for number of file watchers reached exception is raised if too many files are being watched (See web-ext#2022 ). web-ext sign This command: creates a listing for your extension on AMO if --channel is set to listed and the extension isn't listed. adds a version to a listed extension if the --channel is set to listed and your extension is listed. downloads a signed copy of the extension if the --channel is set to unlisted . You must create API access credentials to run this command. Obtain your personal access credentials here . --api-key Your API key ( JWT issuer ) for accessing the addons.mozilla.org API . This should always be a string. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_API_KEY --api-secret Your API secret ( JWT secret ) from addons.mozilla.org API . This should always be a string. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_API_SECRET --approval-timeout Number of milliseconds to wait for approval before giving up. Set to 0 to disable the wait for approval. Defaults to timeout if not set. Defaults to 15 minutes (900000 ms). Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_APPROVAL_TIMEOUT --amo-base-url A string containing the add-on submission API base URL. If not specified, defaults to the production API: https://addons.mozilla.org/api/v5/ . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_AMO_BASE_URL --api-proxy A proxy host to use for all API connections. Example: https://yourproxy:6000 . Read more about how proxy requests work . There is a separate section about signing in a restricted environment if the proxy approach doesn't work for you. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_API_PROXY --channel The channel the extension is signed in. This option is required. The allowed values for channel are: Channel Result listed The extension gets submitted for public listing on addons.mozilla.org . unlisted The extension gets submitted for signing for self-distribution on your website. An example of using the --channel option is to create a beta version for an extension listed on addons.mozilla.org. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_CHANNEL --timeout Number of milliseconds to wait before giving up on a response from Mozilla's web service. This should always be a number. Defaults to 5 minutes (300000 ms) Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_TIMEOUT --amo-metadata The path to a JSON file containing an object with metadata for the extension's addons.mozilla.org (AMO) listing. Metadata is required for the first version of an extension listed on AMO. This metadata can include any of the properties of the addons.mozilla.org add-on API Create request JSON object . However: "categories" , "summary" and the version's "license" properties must be provided. Translated fields must include at least one locale. A minimal JSON file looks like this: { "summary" : { "en-US" : "A short sentence that explains what the extension does." } , "categories" : [ "other" ] , "version" : { "license" : "MPL-2.0" } } The "license" field accepts one of these SPDX identifiers : MPL-1.1 , MPL-2.0 , GPL-2.0-or-later , GPL-3.0-or-later , LGPL-2.1-or-later , LGPL-3.0-or-later , MIT , BSD-2-Clause , cc-all-rights-reserved , CC-BY-3.0 , CC-BY-NC-3.0 , CC-BY-NC-ND-3.0 , CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0 , CC-BY-ND-3.0 , CC-BY-SA-3.0 , and all-rights-reserved . When publishing an extension update metadata isn't required. If metadata isn't provided, the license specified for the first version is reused. However, any of the properties of the addons.mozilla.org add-on API Version Create request JSON object can be provided. For example, if you want to specify "approval_notes" , the JSON file looks like this: { "version" : { "approval_notes" : "Information that helps Mozilla reviewers if they review the add-on. Only visible to Mozilla." } } Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_AMO_METADATA --upload-source-code The path to an archive file containing human-readable source code for this submission. See Source code submission for details. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_UPLOAD_SOURCE_CODE Global options web-ext has these global options. --artifacts-dir , -a The path of a directory to save artifacts in, e.g., the .zip file, when you build an extension. This can be specified as a relative or absolute path and should always be a string. If this is not specified, the default is the relative path ./web-ext-artifacts . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_ARTIFACTS_DIR --config , -c Load a config file to set option value defaults. See Setting option defaults in a configuration file for more details. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_CONFIG --config-discovery=false , --no-config-discovery Disable automatic config file discovery . Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_CONFIG_DISCOVERY=false or $WEB_EXT_NO_CONFIG_DISCOVERY --ignore-files , -i A list of glob patterns to define which files should be ignored by build , run , lint , and other commands. If you specify relative paths, they are relative to your --source-dir . Here is an example that ignores any file within your --source-dir (or its subdirectories) that ends in the suffix .api-key : web-ext build --ignore-files "\*_/_.api-key" You can specify multiple patterns by separating them with spaces: web-ext build --ignore-files path/to/first.js path/to/second.js By default, without the use of --ignore-files , these rules are applied: Any file ending in .xpi or .zip is ignored Any hidden file (one that starts with a dot) is ignored Any directory named node_modules is ignored When you specify custom patterns using --ignore-files , they are applied in addition to the default patterns. Order is important. You must specify the web-ext command before specifying the --ignore-files option. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_IGNORE_FILES --help , -h Lists all the commands and options for the web-ext tool. When you request help, you can list the options for a command by including the command name. For example, web-ext --help run . --no-input Disable all features that require standard input. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_NO_INPUT=true --source-dir , -s The directory of the extension's source code, e.g., when building or running an extension. This can be specified as a relative or absolute path and should always be a string. If this is not specified, the default is the active directory in your terminal. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_SOURCE_DIR --verbose , -v Shows verbose output when commands are run. Environment variable: $WEB_EXT_VERBOSE=true --version Shows the version number of the installed web-ext tool. Setting option environment variables Environment variables can be set for any option. You: Take the option name. Remove the two dashes at the start. Convert the remaining dashes to underscores. Capitalize the letters. Prefix the result with $WEB_EXT_ . So, for example, instead of specifying this source option every time you wish to run the extension: web-ext run --source-dir = /path/to/my/extension You could set the source directory as an environment variable like this: WEB_EXT_SOURCE_DIR = /path/to/my/extension Then you can specify the run command without options: web-ext run A command line option always overrides the environment variable. For example, this ignores the environment variable: web-ext run --source-dir = /another/path/to/source To define a true / false flag option (which does not have a value on the command line), set it to a literal string value of either true or false . Example: WEB_EXT_VERBOSE = true See also web-ext repo Getting started with web-ext Tags:   commands   options   reference   tools   web-ext   webextensions   Contributors:   akhilpanchal   andrewtruongmoz   aniketkudale   ankushduacodes   ankushduacodes   chrisdavidmills   Dietrich   eviljeff   groovecoder   hamatti   kumar303   lfilho   LowerDimensions   niharikak101   noraj   rebloor   Rob--W   saintsebastian   sharang   smile4ever   tofumatt   wbamberg   willdurand   djbrown   Robot-Inventor   Last update:   rebloor   May 30, 2024 Up Next Develop web-ext v7 command reference Develop Extensions and the add-on ID Develop Build a secure extension Documentation Topics Develop Publish Manage Enterprise Themes Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#whats-new
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/evernote/
Evernote | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Evernote in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Evernote Note-Taking Software by Evernote See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About Take notes anywhere. Find information faster. Share ideas with anyone. Meeting notes, web pages, projects, to-do lists—with Evernote as your note taking app, nothing falls through the cracks. Media Products media viewer No more previous content No more next content Similar products Granola Granola Note-Taking Software Standard Notes Standard Notes Note-Taking Software Simplenote Simplenote Note-Taking Software Goodnotes 6 Goodnotes 6 Note-Taking Software AI Meeting Assistant AI Meeting Assistant Note-Taking Software Noteshelf 3 Noteshelf 3 Note-Taking Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/hyvor-talk/
Hyvor Talk | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn HYVOR in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems by HYVOR See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About Hyvor Talk is a privacy-focused, fully-featured commenting platform. This product is intended for Web Developer Blogger Media Products media viewer No more previous content No more next content Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Thrive Comments Thrive Comments Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less HYVOR products Hyvor Blogs Hyvor Blogs Website Builder Software LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#web-ext-run
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
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30 Evernote jobs in Worldwide Skip to main content LinkedIn Evernote in Worldwide Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Sign in Join for free Evernote Clear text Evernote (30) Enara Health (16) Domino's (4) StratifyIQ (1) Critical Mass (1) Done Any time Any time (30) Past month (30) Past week (30) Done Job type Full-time (30) Done Experience level Entry level (30) Done Remote Hybrid (26) Remote (4) Done Reset Get notified when a new job is posted. Set alert Sign in to set job alerts for “Evernote” roles. Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Sign in or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . New to LinkedIn? Join now or New to LinkedIn? Join now By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . Evernote jobs 30 Evernote Jobs in Worldwide Graduate software engineer Graduate software engineer Evernote Poland 2 days ago Graduate software engineer Graduate software engineer Evernote Cracow, Małopolskie, Poland Be an early applicant 2 days ago Graduate software engineer Graduate software engineer Evernote Spain 2 days ago ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******, ********* ** ******, ***** 2 days ago ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******, ***********, ****** Be an early applicant 2 days ago ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ****ł**, *****ś*ą****, ****** Be an early applicant 2 days ago ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** ******** *á****, *********, ***** Be an early applicant 2 days ago Sign in to view all job postings Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Sign in or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . New to LinkedIn? Join now or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional)) Language Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . Sign in to view more jobs Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Sign in or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . New to LinkedIn? Join now or New to LinkedIn? Join now By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy .
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/de/integrations
Einbindungen – Notion Notion Funktionen Notion-KI Erschaffen, schreiben, automatisieren Agenten Übernehmen manuelle Aufgaben Enterprise Suche Finde Antworten in Sekundenschnelle Smart Notes Perfekt geschrieben von der KI Dokumente Einfach und leistungsstark Wissensdatenbank Bündle dein Wissen Projekte Verwalte jede Art von Projekt Websites Veröffentliche alles Mögliche im Handumdrehen Loslegen KI-Anwendungsfälle entdecken Schau dir an, wozu die Notion-KI in der Lage ist Marktplatz durchstöbern Vorlagen für alles Mögliche Einbindungen anzeigen Verbinde deine Apps mit Notion Web Clipper herunterladen Speichere Inhalte aus dem Web in Notion Teste die Desktop-App von Notion für mehr Geschwindigkeit App herunterladen Mail Calendar KI Enterprise Tarife Erkunden Teams Entwicklung und Produkt Design Marketing IT Teamgröße Start-ups KMUs Konzerne Bildungswesen Lernen Hilfe-Center Notion Academy Erfahrungsberichte von Kund/-innen Blog Community Partnerprogramme Entwickeln API Vorlagen Sicherheit Beratung Fordere eine Demo an Anmelden Nutze Notion kostenlos Einbindungen Verknüpfe deine Lieblingstools mit Notion Ab jetzt musst du in deinen Workflows nicht mehr zwischen verschiedenen Anwendungen hin und her wechseln. Organisiere sämtliche Informationen über Notion und vermeide unnötigen Verwaltungsaufwand mit unseren Einbindungen. Einbindungen durchsuchen → Sicherheit und Compliance So werden deine Notion-Daten einsehbar und umsetzbar Binde Sicherheits- und Compliance-Plattformen ein, damit dein Team Notion auch im großen Rahmen sorgenfrei verwenden kann. Erste Schritte mit Panther Splunk Datadog Nightfall AI Link-Vorschauen Finde den gesamten Kontext, den du brauchst, in nur einem Tool Zeige den Inhalt und Status von Jira-Aufgaben, Slack-Threads, GitHub-Issues und mehr an – ohne Notion zu verlassen. Erste Schritte mit Jira Slack GitHub Asana App Rebranding Teilen App Rebranding Aufgaben und Probleme iOS-Farbpalette aktualisieren In Bearbeitung AD-1 • Zugewiesen an Mala Fontes • Vor 44 Minuten aktualisiert Typdefinitionen zu colors.ts hinzufügen Offen #1 • jessilace • vor 8 Minuten geöffnet Kontext Roisin Joyce Hallo Sam, hier sind die Hex-Werte, die du benötigst: #E16259 #F99C95 #333333 notion.slack.com Synchronisierte Datenbanken Beta Daten aus anderen Tools synchron halten Du möchtest einen Live-Datenstream für deine externen Tools? Verwende synchronisierte Datenbanken, um den Status deiner Jira-Projekte, GitHub-Pull-Requests oder Asana-Aufgaben direkt in deiner Notion-Datenbank zu überprüfen. Erste Schritte mit Jira GitHub Asana Gitlab Teilen Automatisierungen Automatisiere deine Notion-Workflows Mache Notion zum Knotenpunkt für alle deine Tools. Aktualisiere automatisch andere Apps und halte Informationen überall auf dem neuesten Stand, um effizienter zu arbeiten. Erste Schritte mit Zapier Make Tray.io Passe Notion mit Dutzenden von Einbindungen genau nach deinen Bedürfnissen an Erkunde die Galerie für Einbindungen und erstelle genau den Workflow, den du brauchst. Einbindungen durchsuchen → Asana GitHub Google Drive Make Trello Jira Slack Zapier Figma Webex IFTTT Slapdash Tray.io Typeform Unito Miro Fragen und Antworten Was ist eine Notion-Einbindung? Notion-Einbindungen verbinden Tools wie Jira, Google Drive und Slack mit Notion, um deinen Workflow zu optimieren. Die Einbindungen werden mit der Notion-API erstellt. Ich bin Entwickler/-in. Was muss ich tun, damit meine Einbindung in das Verzeichnis aufgenommen wird? In unserer Einbindungsgalerie findest du Technologiepartner, die von unserem Team anhand ihrer Einbindungsfähigkeit, Kundenüberschneidung und anderer Faktoren ausgewählt wurden. Wenn du der Meinung bist, dass deine Einbindung ebenfalls dazu passen könnte, findest du hier weitere Informationen zu Notions Technology Partner Program. Alle vorgestellten Einbindungen müssen über OAuth öffentlich verfügbar sein und können erst nach einer erfolgreichen Sicherheits- und Datenschutzprüfung aufgenommen werden. Kann ich meine eigene Einbindung erstellen? Selbstverständlich! Die Notion-API ist öffentlich zugänglich und kann von allen Interessierten ausprobiert werden. Unter  developers.notion.com findest du unsere Dokumentation und Informationen für den Einstieg. Du kannst interne Einbindungen für den privaten Gebrauch erstellen oder öffentliche Einbindungen für alle Notion-Nutzer/-innen entwickeln. Sind alle Notion-Einbindungen in dem Verzeichnis enthalten? Die im Verzeichnis aufgeführten Einbindungen sind eine Teilmenge aller für Notion-Benutzer/-innen verfügbaren Einbindungen. Das Verzeichnis enthält alle von Notion erstellten Einbindungen sowie andere Einbindungen, die von unseren Partnern oder von Dritten erstellt wurden. Wir nehmen stetig weitere Einbindungen in das Verzeichnis auf. Werden in dem Verzeichnis aufgeführte Einbindungen von Notion überprüft? Von Notion erstellte Einbindungen müssen denselben Überprüfungsprozess durchlaufen und dieselben Standards erfüllen wie Notion-eigene Produkte und Dienstleistungen. Notion unterzieht die in unserem Verzeichnis aufgeführten Einbindungen Dritter einer kurzen Überprüfung. Allerdings werden diese Einbindungen nicht von Notion gesponsert, unterstützt oder zertifiziert. Ist die Nutzung von Einbindungen kostenpflichtig? Notion berechnet keine Gebühr für die Nutzung von Einbindungen. Allerdings können unsere Partner eine Gebühr für die Nutzung ihrer Dienste berechnen. Mehr dazu erfährst du auf der Seite der jeweiligen Einbindung. Muss ich meinen Plan upgraden, um Einbindungen installieren zu können? Du kannst auf die API zugreifen und Einbindungen erstellen, unabhängig davon, welchen Notion Plan du nutzt. Deutsch Cookie-Einstellungen © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://extensionworkshop.com/extension-basics/#firefox-for-android
Extension Basics | Firefox Extension Workshop Extension Workshop Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Submit or Manage Extensions Search Submit or Manage Extensions Search Select a section Page Name Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Extension Basics Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Documentation Topics Develop Firefox Tools User Experience Firefox for Android Port to Firefox Test and debug Getting Started Unique Firefox Capabilities Firefox Workflow Overview About the WebExtensions API Manifest V3 Manifest V3 migration guide What is Manifest V3? Manifest V3 changes Migration checklist Cross-Browser Development Browser Compatibility Namespace Asynchronous API Coverage Manifest keys More information Build cross-browser extensions Firefox Tools Build an extension in 5 minutes Browser Extension Development Tools Boilerplating tools Coding tools Testing and debugging tools Translation tools Tools for Firefox for Android Choosing a Firefox version for extension development Firefox editions Firefox version and their web extension development capabilities Getting started with web-ext Installation Update Using web-ext Check your code Test and debug Package, sign, and publish Use the configuration file Advanced topics See also web-ext v8 command reference What's new Commands web-ext build web-ext docs web-ext dump-config web-ext lint web-ext run web-ext sign Global options Setting option environment variables See also web-ext v7 command reference Commands Global options Setting option environment variables See also Web-ext Webpack plug-in Browser API Polyfill Extensions and the Add-on ID Basic workflow with no add-on ID When do you need an add-on ID? User Experience Build a secure extension Request the right permissions Introduction Advised permissions Avoid unnecessary permissions Request permissions at runtime Add information about permissions to your extensions AMO page Firefox built-in consent for data collection and transmission Taxonomy Specifying data types Accessing the data collection permissions programmatically Updates Best practices for collecting user data consents Know your privacy settings Get prepared Prompt after install Determine your consent flow Your consent dialogs Build an accessible extension Onboard, upboard, offboard users Onboarding Upboarding Offboarding User experience best practices 1. Keep it focused 2. Give users what they need, where they need it 3. Keep the user informed 4. Be Firefoxy in look and feel 5. Great onboarding experience 6. Test, test, and then test again Mobile Differences between desktop and Android extensions Introduction User interface Native application interaction Permissions Storage User experience guidelines for mobile extensions Introduction The basics The extra mile The last mile Developing extensions for Firefox for Android Set up your computer and Android emulator or device Check for Firefox for Android compatibility Install and run your extension in Firefox for Android Debug your extension Manifest V3 compatibility GeckoView Extensions (Android library) Port Your Extension Porting a Google Chrome Extension Debug and Test Debugging Developer tools toolbox Debugging background scripts Debugging options pages Debugging popups Debugging content scripts Debugging sidebars Debugging storage Debugging developer tools pages and panels Debug permission requests Debugging browser restarts Temporary Installation in Firefox Reloading a temporary extension Using the command line Detecting temporary installation Limitations Testing persistent and restart features What is an add-on ID? What is a Firefox profile? Extension behavior in Firefox What do I do to ensure I can test my extension? Test permission requests Permission grant behavior during testing Observe or verify install time permission requests Retest runtime permission grants Testing localizations Known issues Content scripts don't appear in DevTools Extension source don't update in DevTools "Destroyed actor" errors when debugging Android Publish Get your extension signed Distribute your signed extension Promote your extension Policies Add-on Policies No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Development Practices User Scripts Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Monetization Security, Compliance and Blocking Add-on Policies FAQ No Surprises Content Submission Guidelines Data Collection and Transmission Disclosure and Control Security, Compliance and Blocking Firefox Add-on Distribution Agreement 1. Introduction 2. Accounts 3. Privacy Policy 4. Distribution, certificates, & review process 5. Your obligations 6. Licenses; proprietary rights 7. Content removal 8. Disclaimer of warranties 9. Limitation of liability 10. Release; indemnification 11. General legal terms Add-ons Blocking Process Security Over Choice Blocking Criteria Developer Outreach Requesting a Block Blocking Other Types of Third Party Software Third Party Library Usage When must links for third-party libraries be provided? How to determine the third-party library link Communicating third-party library links to reviewers What does review rejection mean to users? Review overview Impact of review rejection Blocklisting Sign Signing and distribution overview Signing your add-ons Distributing your add-on Post-submission review More information about AMO Package your extension Windows Mac OSX Linux / Mac OSX Terminal Distribute Distribute Manifest V2 and V3 extensions Distribute pre-release versions Submitting an add-on Listing on AMO Self-distribution Get help Version Rollback Eligibility Roll back using Developer Hub Roll back using the Add-on Submission API Source code submission Provide your extension source code Default reviewer build environment Use of obfuscated code Source code checklist Firefox version compatibility Version compatibility The `browser_specific_settings` key AMO compatibility setting Recommendations Add-on ownership Transfer ownership Code disputes Developer accounts Setting a display name Blocked accounts Issues receiving emails from AMO Self-distribution Self-distribution options Installing self-distributed extensions Preparing your add-on Install from file on a computer Install from file on Android For desktop apps Promote Create an appealing listing Your add-on’s name Create a captivating icon Create a meaningful set of keywords Make sure your summary is just long enough Focus on key features in your screenshots The add-on description can be longer, but not too long Make it local Make it experimental Select the right platforms and versions Categorize well Be prepared to provide support Set up a developer profile Use plain language in any privacy policy or license agreement Gently ask for a review Make use of Markdown Some other points What’s great content and design? Promoting your extension Promote your add-on from your website Friends, family, and colleagues Events and meetups Current users Social media Engage with your users Create a forum, user group, or similar Engage with bloggers and news media Advertising Make money from browser extensions Will I ever be able to sell through AMO? What can't you do What can you do Unsolicited offers How can I maximize my income? Recommended extensions Overview Criteria for Recommended extensions Developer partnership Selection process Manage Stay informed when Firefox changes Publish extension updates Manage authors of your extension Promote your extension Removing your extension from distribution Resources Updating your extension Enabling updates to your extension Manifest structure Testing automatic updating Best practices for updating your extension Monitoring extension usage statistics Accessing the statistics dashboard Tracking external sources Add-on listing example Resources for publishers Retiring your extension Reasons for withdrawing your extension Steps to retiring an extension Suggested retirement timetable Enterprise Developing your enterprise extension Distributing your enterprise extension Enterprise support Manage add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Install system add-ons for Firefox for Enterprise Enterprise resources Enterprise development Data collection disclosure and consent for enterprise extensions How to add policy support Distributing your policy Enterprise policies that impact extensions Relevant policies Other relevant policies Enterprise distribution Signed vs. unsigned extensions Using an ExtensionSettings policy Bundling add-ons with a custom Firefox Themes Creating themes Using the AMO theme generator Getting started Submitting your theme Updating your theme Static themes Introduction Create a simple static theme Updating static themes Single image themes Multiple image themes Static animated themes Dynamic themes Introduction Creating dynamic themes Publishing dynamic themes Cross-browser compatibility Community Who is part of the community? Connect with the community Get involved in the community Get in touch Community Forum Add-ons Blog Office Hours Stack Overflow Communication Calendar Dev Mailing List Contribute Contribution opportunities Onboard to the WebExtensions codebase Hacking guide for WebExtensions code contributions WebExtensions Experiments Find or create a bug Bring your extension to life Get how-tos, resources, and information to successfully build and ship your extension for Firefox. Contents Getting started Mozilla Developer Network Getting started The Firefox Extension Workshop can help you develop extensions for Firefox and give your users simple, yet powerful ways to customize their browsing experience. You’ll find: Overview of the Firefox extension features Tools and processes for developing and testing How to publish your extension on addons.mozilla.org or distribute it yourself How to manage your published extension An enterprise guide for developing and using extensions How to develop themes for Firefox Firefox developer communities Mozilla Developer Network Documentation for the WebExtensions API can be found on the Mozilla Developer Network (MDN). On MDN, you’ll find: Tutorials to help you start Explanations of key extension development concepts A guide to extension UI components How to use the extension Javascript APIs. A reference guide for the extension Javascript APIs, including compatibility tables for other popular browsers. A reference guide for the manifest.json file and its keys. Contributors:   caitmuenster   rbrishabh   Last update:   rbrishabh   Sep 25, 2019 Up Next Create extensions for Firefox and Firefox for Android Develop Unique Firefox Capabilities Develop Firefox workflow overview Connect With Us Twitter For developers: @mozamo For end users: @rockyourfirefox More Matrix Community forum Extensions Developer Newsletter Stay up-to-date on news and events for Firefox extension developers. Email Address I’m okay with Mozilla handling my info as explained in this Privacy Notice . Sign up Thanks! Please check your inbox to confirm your subscription. If you haven’t previously confirmed a subscription to a Mozilla-related newsletter you may have to do so. Please check your inbox or your spam filter for an email from us. Mozilla Add-ons About Blog Developer Hub Developer Policies Forum Firefox Download Firefox Desktop Mobile Features Beta, Nightly, Developer Edition Twitter (@firefox) YouTube (firefoxchannel) Github (mozilla) Website Privacy Notice Cookies Legal Edit this page on GitHub Portions of this content are ©1998–2025 by individual mozilla.org contributors. Content available under a Creative Commons license .
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/uas/login?session_redirect=%2Fproducts%2Fsnippyly-superflow%3FviewConnections%3Dtrue&trk=products_details_guest_face-pile-cta
LinkedIn Login, Sign in | LinkedIn Sign in Sign in with Apple Sign in with a passkey By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . or Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Keep me logged in Sign in We’ve emailed a one-time link to your primary email address Click on the link to sign in instantly to your LinkedIn account. If you don’t see the email in your inbox, check your spam folder. Resend email Back New to LinkedIn? Join now Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . LinkedIn © 2026 User Agreement Privacy Policy Community Guidelines Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Send Feedback Language العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional))
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/mqgem-software-limited-mqedit/#main-content
MQEdit | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn MQGem Software Limited in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in MQEdit Message Queue Software by MQGem Software Limited See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About MQEdit is a graphical live parsing editor for IBM MQ Messages. Use MQEdit to correct messages; create new messages for use when developing new applications, or testing them out; move or copy messages easily with a simple drag and drop with your mouse. Media Products media viewer No more previous content MQEdit Introduction Introducing the MQEdit Product, an IBM MQ message editing and manipulation tool. This video will take the user through the basics of using the product. MQEdit: Basic Editing Learn how easy it is to make changes to an IBM MQ message and display it in different ways using MQEdit. This video will cover how to display a message in different ways, how to use the Update, Add, Empty and New tools, how to use selection lists and how to perform undo and redo operations. MQEdit: Message Correctness Learn how MQEdit keeps your IBM MQ messages consistent as you change values. This video will highlight how MQEdit helps you to keep a message correct. As you edit a message, any necessary fields and tags are updated to ensure the structure of the message remains consistent and valid. MQEdit: Creating User Formats Learn how MQEdit allows you to describe the shape of your IBM MQ messages in a User Format file. When using these User Formats, MQEdit can display your messages in a more readable formatted display. No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Texts Texts Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less MQGem Software Limited products MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software MQEV MQEV Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software MQSCX MQSCX Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.typescriptlang.org/tsconfig/#preserve
TypeScript: TSConfig Reference - Docs on every TSConfig option Skip to main content TypeScript Download Docs Handbook Community Playground Tools in En Intro to the TSConfig Reference A TSConfig file in a directory indicates that the directory is the root of a TypeScript or JavaScript project... Compiler Options Top Level files , extends , include , exclude and references " compilerOptions " Type Checking allowUnreachableCode , allowUnusedLabels , alwaysStrict , exactOptionalPropertyTypes , noFallthroughCasesInSwitch , noImplicitAny , noImplicitOverride , noImplicitReturns , noImplicitThis , noPropertyAccessFromIndexSignature , noUncheckedIndexedAccess , noUnusedLocals , noUnusedParameters , strict , strictBindCallApply , strictBuiltinIteratorReturn , strictFunctionTypes , strictNullChecks , strictPropertyInitialization and useUnknownInCatchVariables Modules allowArbitraryExtensions , allowImportingTsExtensions , allowUmdGlobalAccess , baseUrl , customConditions , module , moduleResolution , moduleSuffixes , noResolve , noUncheckedSideEffectImports , paths , resolveJsonModule , resolvePackageJsonExports , resolvePackageJsonImports , rewriteRelativeImportExtensions , rootDir , rootDirs , typeRoots and types Emit declaration , declarationDir , declarationMap , downlevelIteration , emitBOM , emitDeclarationOnly , importHelpers , inlineSourceMap , inlineSources , mapRoot , newLine , noEmit , noEmitHelpers , noEmitOnError , outDir , outFile , preserveConstEnums , removeComments , sourceMap , sourceRoot and stripInternal JavaScript Support allowJs , checkJs and maxNodeModuleJsDepth Editor Support disableSizeLimit and plugins Interop Constraints allowSyntheticDefaultImports , erasableSyntaxOnly , esModuleInterop , forceConsistentCasingInFileNames , isolatedDeclarations , isolatedModules , preserveSymlinks and verbatimModuleSyntax Backwards Compatibility charset , importsNotUsedAsValues , keyofStringsOnly , noImplicitUseStrict , noStrictGenericChecks , out , preserveValueImports , suppressExcessPropertyErrors and suppressImplicitAnyIndexErrors Language and Environment emitDecoratorMetadata , experimentalDecorators , jsx , jsxFactory , jsxFragmentFactory , jsxImportSource , lib , libReplacement , moduleDetection , noLib , reactNamespace , target and useDefineForClassFields Compiler Diagnostics diagnostics , explainFiles , extendedDiagnostics , generateCpuProfile , generateTrace , listEmittedFiles , listFiles , noCheck and traceResolution Projects composite , disableReferencedProjectLoad , disableSolutionSearching , disableSourceOfProjectReferenceRedirect , incremental and tsBuildInfoFile Output Formatting noErrorTruncation , preserveWatchOutput and pretty Completeness skipDefaultLibCheck and skipLibCheck Command Line Watch Options assumeChangesOnlyAffectDirectDependencies " watchOptions " watchOptions watchFile , watchDirectory , fallbackPolling , synchronousWatchDirectory , excludeDirectories and excludeFiles " typeAcquisition " typeAcquisition enable , include , exclude and disableFilenameBasedTypeAcquisition Root Fields Starting up are the root options in the TSConfig - these options relate to how your TypeScript or JavaScript project is set up. # Files - files Specifies an allowlist of files to include in the program. An error occurs if any of the files can’t be found. { " compilerOptions " : {}, " files " : [ "core.ts" , "sys.ts" , "types.ts" , "scanner.ts" , "parser.ts" , "utilities.ts" , "binder.ts" , "checker.ts" , "tsc.ts" ] } This is useful when you only have a small number of files and don’t need to use a glob to reference many files. If you need that then use include . Default: false Related: include exclude Released: 1.5 # Extends - extends The value of extends is a string which contains a path to another configuration file to inherit from. The path may use Node.js style resolution. The configuration from the base file are loaded first, then overridden by those in the inheriting config file. All relative paths found in the configuration file will be resolved relative to the configuration file they originated in. It’s worth noting that files , include , and exclude from the inheriting config file overwrite those from the base config file, and that circularity between configuration files is not allowed. Currently, the only top-level property that is excluded from inheritance is references . Example configs/base.json : { " compilerOptions " : { " noImplicitAny " : true , " strictNullChecks " : true } } tsconfig.json : { " extends " : "./configs/base" , " files " : [ "main.ts" , "supplemental.ts" ] } tsconfig.nostrictnull.json : { " extends " : "./tsconfig" , " compilerOptions " : { " strictNullChecks " : false } } Properties with relative paths found in the configuration file, which aren’t excluded from inheritance, will be resolved relative to the configuration file they originated in. Default: false Released: 2.1 # Include - include Specifies an array of filenames or patterns to include in the program. These filenames are resolved relative to the directory containing the tsconfig.json file. json { "include" : [ "src/**/*" , "tests/**/*" ] } Which would include: . ├── scripts ⨯ │ ├── lint.ts ⨯ │ ├── update_deps.ts ⨯ │ └── utils.ts ⨯ ├── src ✓ │ ├── client ✓ │ │ ├── index.ts ✓ │ │ └── utils.ts ✓ │ ├── server ✓ │ │ └── index.ts ✓ ├── tests ✓ │ ├── app.test.ts ✓ │ ├── utils.ts ✓ │ └── tests.d.ts ✓ ├── package.json ├── tsconfig.json └── yarn.lock include and exclude support wildcard characters to make glob patterns: * matches zero or more characters (excluding directory separators) ? matches any one character (excluding directory separators) **/ matches any directory nested to any level If the last path segment in a pattern does not contain a file extension or wildcard character, then it is treated as a directory, and files with supported extensions inside that directory are included (e.g. .ts , .tsx , and .d.ts by default, with .js and .jsx if allowJs is set to true). Default: [] if files is specified; **/* otherwise. Related: files exclude Released: 2.0 # Exclude - exclude Specifies an array of filenames or patterns that should be skipped when resolving include . Important : exclude only changes which files are included as a result of the include setting. A file specified by exclude can still become part of your codebase due to an import statement in your code, a types inclusion, a /// <reference directive, or being specified in the files list. It is not a mechanism that prevents a file from being included in the codebase - it simply changes what the include setting finds. Default: node_modules bower_components jspm_packages outDir Related: include files Released: 2.0 # References - references Project references are a way to structure your TypeScript programs into smaller pieces. Using Project References can greatly improve build and editor interaction times, enforce logical separation between components, and organize your code in new and improved ways. You can read more about how references works in the Project References section of the handbook Default: false Released: 3.0 Compiler Options These options make up the bulk of TypeScript’s configuration and it covers how the language should work. Type Checking Modules Emit JavaScript Support Editor Support Interop Constraints Backwards Compatibility Language and Environment Compiler Diagnostics Projects Output Formatting Completeness Command Line Watch Options # Type Checking # Allow Unreachable Code - allowUnreachableCode When: undefined (default) provide suggestions as warnings to editors true unreachable code is ignored false raises compiler errors about unreachable code These warnings are only about code which is provably unreachable due to the use of JavaScript syntax, for example: ts function fn ( n : number ) { if ( n > 5 ) { return true ; } else { return false ; } return true ; } With "allowUnreachableCode": false : ts function fn ( n : number ) { if ( n > 5 ) { return true ; } else { return false ; } return true ; Unreachable code detected. 7027 Unreachable code detected. } Try This does not affect errors on the basis of code which appears to be unreachable due to type analysis. Released: 1.8 # Allow Unused Labels - allowUnusedLabels When: undefined (default) provide suggestions as warnings to editors true unused labels are ignored false raises compiler errors about unused labels Labels are very rare in JavaScript and typically indicate an attempt to write an object literal: ts function verifyAge ( age : number ) { // Forgot 'return' statement if ( age > 18 ) { verified : true ; Unused label. 7028 Unused label. } } Try Released: 1.8 # Always Strict - alwaysStrict Ensures that your files are parsed in the ECMAScript strict mode, and emit “use strict” for each source file. ECMAScript strict mode was introduced in ES5 and provides behavior tweaks to the runtime of the JavaScript engine to improve performance, and makes a set of errors throw instead of silently ignoring them. Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 2.1 # Exact Optional Property Types - exactOptionalPropertyTypes With exactOptionalPropertyTypes enabled, TypeScript applies stricter rules around how it handles properties on type or interfaces which have a ? prefix. For example, this interface declares that there is a property which can be one of two strings: ‘dark’ or ‘light’ or it should not be in the object. ts interface UserDefaults { // The absence of a value represents 'system' colorThemeOverride ?: "dark" | "light" ; } Without this flag enabled, there are three values which you can set colorThemeOverride to be: “dark”, “light” and undefined . Setting the value to undefined will allow most JavaScript runtime checks for the existence to fail, which is effectively falsy. However, this isn’t quite accurate; colorThemeOverride: undefined is not the same as colorThemeOverride not being defined. For example, "colorThemeOverride" in settings would have different behavior with undefined as the key compared to not being defined. exactOptionalPropertyTypes makes TypeScript truly enforce the definition provided as an optional property: ts const settings = getUserSettings (); settings . colorThemeOverride = "dark" ; settings . colorThemeOverride = "light" ;   // But not: settings . colorThemeOverride = undefined ; Type 'undefined' is not assignable to type '"dark" | "light"' with 'exactOptionalPropertyTypes: true'. Consider adding 'undefined' to the type of the target. 2412 Type 'undefined' is not assignable to type '"dark" | "light"' with 'exactOptionalPropertyTypes: true'. Consider adding 'undefined' to the type of the target. Try Recommended Released: 4.4 # No Fallthrough Cases In Switch - noFallthroughCasesInSwitch Report errors for fallthrough cases in switch statements. Ensures that any non-empty case inside a switch statement includes either break , return , or throw . This means you won’t accidentally ship a case fallthrough bug. ts const a : number = 6 ;   switch ( a ) { case 0 : Fallthrough case in switch. 7029 Fallthrough case in switch. console . log ( "even" ); case 1 : console . log ( "odd" ); break ; } Try Released: 1.8 # No Implicit Any - noImplicitAny In some cases where no type annotations are present, TypeScript will fall back to a type of any for a variable when it cannot infer the type. This can cause some errors to be missed, for example: ts function fn ( s ) { // No error? console . log ( s . subtr ( 3 )); } fn ( 42 ); Try Turning on noImplicitAny however TypeScript will issue an error whenever it would have inferred any : ts function fn ( s ) { Parameter 's' implicitly has an 'any' type. 7006 Parameter 's' implicitly has an 'any' type. console . log ( s . subtr ( 3 )); } Try Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 1.0 # No Implicit Override - noImplicitOverride When working with classes which use inheritance, it’s possible for a sub-class to get “out of sync” with the functions it overloads when they are renamed in the base class. For example, imagine you are modeling a music album syncing system: ts class Album { download () { // Default behavior } }   class SharedAlbum extends Album { download () { // Override to get info from many sources } } Try Then when you add support for machine-learning generated playlists, you refactor the Album class to have a ‘setup’ function instead: ts class Album { setup () { // Default behavior } }   class MLAlbum extends Album { setup () { // Override to get info from algorithm } }   class SharedAlbum extends Album { download () { // Override to get info from many sources } } Try In this case, TypeScript has provided no warning that download on SharedAlbum expected to override a function in the base class. Using noImplicitOverride you can ensure that the sub-classes never go out of sync, by ensuring that functions which override include the keyword override . The following example has noImplicitOverride enabled, and you can see the error received when override is missing: ts class Album { setup () {} }   class MLAlbum extends Album { override setup () {} }   class SharedAlbum extends Album { setup () {} This member must have an 'override' modifier because it overrides a member in the base class 'Album'. 4114 This member must have an 'override' modifier because it overrides a member in the base class 'Album'. } Try Released: 4.3 # No Implicit Returns - noImplicitReturns When enabled, TypeScript will check all code paths in a function to ensure they return a value. ts function lookupHeadphonesManufacturer ( color : "blue" | "black" ): string { Function lacks ending return statement and return type does not include 'undefined'. 2366 Function lacks ending return statement and return type does not include 'undefined'. if ( color === "blue" ) { return "beats" ; } else { ( "bose" ); } } Try Released: 1.8 # No Implicit This - noImplicitThis Raise error on ‘this’ expressions with an implied ‘any’ type. For example, the class below returns a function which tries to access this.width and this.height – but the context for this inside the function inside getAreaFunction is not the instance of the Rectangle. ts class Rectangle { width : number ; height : number ;   constructor ( width : number , height : number ) { this . width = width ; this . height = height ; }   number' >getAreaFunction () { return function () { return this . width * this . height ; 'this' implicitly has type 'any' because it does not have a type annotation. 'this' implicitly has type 'any' because it does not have a type annotation. 2683 2683 'this' implicitly has type 'any' because it does not have a type annotation. 'this' implicitly has type 'any' because it does not have a type annotation. }; } } Try Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 2.0 # No Property Access From Index Signature - noPropertyAccessFromIndexSignature This setting ensures consistency between accessing a field via the “dot” ( obj.key ) syntax, and “indexed” ( obj["key"] ) and the way which the property is declared in the type. Without this flag, TypeScript will allow you to use the dot syntax to access fields which are not defined: ts interface GameSettings { // Known up-front properties speed : "fast" | "medium" | "slow" ; quality : "high" | "low" ;   // Assume anything unknown to the interface // is a string. [ key : string ]: string ; }   const settings = getSettings (); settings . speed ; (property) GameSettings.speed: "fast" | "medium" | "slow" settings . quality ; (property) GameSettings.quality: "high" | "low"   // Unknown key accessors are allowed on // this object, and are `string` settings . username ; (index) GameSettings[string]: string Try Turning the flag on will raise an error because the unknown field uses dot syntax instead of indexed syntax. ts const settings = getSettings (); settings . speed ; settings . quality ;   // This would need to be settings["username"]; settings . username ; Property 'username' comes from an index signature, so it must be accessed with ['username']. 4111 Property 'username' comes from an index signature, so it must be accessed with ['username']. (index) GameSettings[string]: string Try The goal of this flag is to signal intent in your calling syntax about how certain you are this property exists. Released: 4.2 # No Unchecked Indexed Access - noUncheckedIndexedAccess TypeScript has a way to describe objects which have unknown keys but known values on an object, via index signatures. ts interface EnvironmentVars { NAME : string ; OS : string ;   // Unknown properties are covered by this index signature. [ propName : string ]: string ; }   declare const env : EnvironmentVars ;   // Declared as existing const sysName = env . NAME ; const os = env . OS ; const os: string   // Not declared, but because of the index // signature, then it is considered a string const nodeEnv = env . NODE_ENV ; const nodeEnv: string Try Turning on noUncheckedIndexedAccess will add undefined to any un-declared field in the type. ts declare const env : EnvironmentVars ;   // Declared as existing const sysName = env . NAME ; const os = env . OS ; const os: string   // Not declared, but because of the index // signature, then it is considered a string const nodeEnv = env . NODE_ENV ; const nodeEnv: string | undefined Try Released: 4.1 # No Unused Locals - noUnusedLocals Report errors on unused local variables. ts const {
 type: string;
 modelID: number;
}' >createKeyboard = ( modelID : number ) => { const defaultModelID = 23 ; 'defaultModelID' is declared but its value is never read. 6133 'defaultModelID' is declared but its value is never read. return { type : "keyboard" , modelID }; }; Try Released: 2.0 # No Unused Parameters - noUnusedParameters Report errors on unused parameters in functions. ts const {
 type: string;
 modelID: number;
}' >createDefaultKeyboard = ( modelID : number ) => { 'modelID' is declared but its value is never read. 6133 'modelID' is declared but its value is never read. const defaultModelID = 23 ; return { type : "keyboard" , modelID : defaultModelID }; }; Try Parameters declaration with names starting with an underscore ( _ ) are exempt from the unused parameter checking. e.g.: ts const {
 type: string;
}' >createDefaultKeyboard = ( _modelID : number ) => { return { type : "keyboard" }; }; Try Released: 2.0 # Strict - strict The strict flag enables a wide range of type checking behavior that results in stronger guarantees of program correctness. Turning this on is equivalent to enabling all of the strict mode family options, which are outlined below. You can then turn off individual strict mode family checks as needed. Future versions of TypeScript may introduce additional stricter checking under this flag, so upgrades of TypeScript might result in new type errors in your program. When appropriate and possible, a corresponding flag will be added to disable that behavior. Recommended Related: alwaysStrict strictNullChecks strictBindCallApply strictBuiltinIteratorReturn strictFunctionTypes strictPropertyInitialization noImplicitAny noImplicitThis useUnknownInCatchVariables Released: 2.3 # Strict Bind Call Apply - strictBindCallApply When set, TypeScript will check that the built-in methods of functions call , bind , and apply are invoked with correct argument for the underlying function: ts // With strictBindCallApply on function fn ( x : string ) { return parseInt ( x ); }   const n1 = fn . (this: (this: undefined, args_0: string) => number, thisArg: undefined, args_0: string): number' >call ( undefined , "10" );   const n2 = fn . (this: (this: undefined, x: string) => number, thisArg: undefined, x: string): number' >call ( undefined , false ); Argument of type 'boolean' is not assignable to parameter of type 'string'. 2345 Argument of type 'boolean' is not assignable to parameter of type 'string'. Try Otherwise, these functions accept any arguments and will return any : ts // With strictBindCallApply off function fn ( x : string ) { return parseInt ( x ); }   // Note: No error; return type is 'any' const n = fn . call ( undefined , false ); Try Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 3.2 # strictBuiltinIteratorReturn - strictBuiltinIteratorReturn Built-in iterators are instantiated with a `TReturn` type of undefined instead of `any`. Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 5.6 # Strict Function Types - strictFunctionTypes When enabled, this flag causes functions parameters to be checked more correctly. Here’s a basic example with strictFunctionTypes off: ts function fn ( x : string ) { console . log ( "Hello, " + x . toLowerCase ()); }   type void' >StringOrNumberFunc = ( ns : string | number ) => void ;   // Unsafe assignment let func : void' >StringOrNumberFunc = fn ; // Unsafe call - will crash void' >func ( 10 ); Try With strictFunctionTypes on , the error is correctly detected: ts function fn ( x : string ) { console . log ( "Hello, " + x . toLowerCase ()); }   type void' >StringOrNumberFunc = ( ns : string | number ) => void ;   // Unsafe assignment is prevented let func : void' >StringOrNumberFunc = fn ; Type '(x: string) => void' is not assignable to type 'StringOrNumberFunc'. Types of parameters 'x' and 'ns' are incompatible. Type 'string | number' is not assignable to type 'string'. Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string'. 2322 Type '(x: string) => void' is not assignable to type 'StringOrNumberFunc'. Types of parameters 'x' and 'ns' are incompatible. Type 'string | number' is not assignable to type 'string'. Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string'. Try During development of this feature, we discovered a large number of inherently unsafe class hierarchies, including some in the DOM. Because of this, the setting only applies to functions written in function syntax, not to those in method syntax: ts type Methodish = { func ( x : string | number ): void ; };   function fn ( x : string ) { console . log ( "Hello, " + x . toLowerCase ()); }   // Ultimately an unsafe assignment, but not detected const m : Methodish = { func : fn , }; m . func ( 10 ); Try Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 2.6 # Strict Null Checks - strictNullChecks When strictNullChecks is false , null and undefined are effectively ignored by the language. This can lead to unexpected errors at runtime. When strictNullChecks is true , null and undefined have their own distinct types and you’ll get a type error if you try to use them where a concrete value is expected. For example with this TypeScript code, users.find has no guarantee that it will actually find a user, but you can write code as though it will: ts declare const loggedInUsername : string ;   const users = [ { name : "Oby" , age : 12 }, { name : "Heera" , age : 32 }, ];   const loggedInUser = users . .find(predicate: (value: {
 name: string;
 age: number;
}, index: number, obj: {
 name: string;
 age: number;
}[]) => unknown, thisArg?: any): {
 name: string;
 age: number;
} (+1 overload)' >find (( u ) => u . name === loggedInUsername ); console . log ( loggedInUser . age ); Try Setting strictNullChecks to true will raise an error that you have not made a guarantee that the loggedInUser exists before trying to use it. ts declare const loggedInUsername : string ;   const users = [ { name : "Oby" , age : 12 }, { name : "Heera" , age : 32 }, ];   const loggedInUser = users . .find(predicate: (value: {
 name: string;
 age: number;
}, index: number, obj: {
 name: string;
 age: number;
}[]) => unknown, thisArg?: any): {
 name: string;
 age: number;
} | undefined (+1 overload)' >find (( u ) => u . name === loggedInUsername ); console . log ( loggedInUser . age ); 'loggedInUser' is possibly 'undefined'. 18048 'loggedInUser' is possibly 'undefined'. Try The second example failed because the array’s find function looks a bit like this simplification: ts // When strictNullChecks: true type Array = { find ( predicate : ( value : any , index : number ) => boolean ): S | undefined ; }; // When strictNullChecks: false the undefined is removed from the type system, // allowing you to write code which assumes it always found a result type Array = { find ( predicate : ( value : any , index : number ) => boolean ): S ; }; Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 2.0 # Strict Property Initialization - strictPropertyInitialization When set to true, TypeScript will raise an error when a class property was declared but not set in the constructor. ts class UserAccount { name : string ; accountType = "user" ;   email : string ; Property 'email' has no initializer and is not definitely assigned in the constructor. 2564 Property 'email' has no initializer and is not definitely assigned in the constructor. address : string | undefined ;   constructor ( name : string ) { this . name = name ; // Note that this.email is not set } } Try In the above case: this.name is set specifically. this.accountType is set by default. this.email is not set and raises an error. this.address is declared as potentially undefined which means it does not have to be set. Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 2.7 # Use Unknown In Catch Variables - useUnknownInCatchVariables In TypeScript 4.0, support was added to allow changing the type of the variable in a catch clause from any to unknown . Allowing for code like: ts try { // ... } catch ( err : unknown ) { // We have to verify err is an // error before using it as one. if ( err instanceof Error ) { console . log ( err . message ); } } Try This pattern ensures that error handling code becomes more comprehensive because you cannot guarantee that the object being thrown is a Error subclass ahead of time. With the flag useUnknownInCatchVariables enabled, then you do not need the additional syntax ( : unknown ) nor a linter rule to try enforce this behavior. Recommended Default: true if strict ; false otherwise. Related: strict Released: 4.4 # Modules # Allow Arbitrary Extensions - allowArbitraryExtensions In TypeScript 5.0, when an import path ends in an extension that isn’t a known JavaScript or TypeScript file extension, the compiler will look for a declaration file for that path in the form of {file basename}.d.{extension}.ts . For example, if you are using a CSS loader in a bundler project, you might want to write (or generate) declaration files for those stylesheets: css /* app.css */ .cookie-banner { display : none ; } ts // app.d.css.ts declare const css : { cookieBanner : string ; }; export default css ; ts // App.tsx import styles from "./app.css" ; styles . cookieBanner ; // string By default, this import will raise an error to let you know that TypeScript doesn’t understand this file type and your runtime might not support importing it. But if you’ve configured your runtime or bundler to handle it, you can suppress the error with the new --allowArbitraryExtensions compiler option. Note that historically, a similar effect has often been achievable by adding a declaration file named app.css.d.ts instead of app.d.css.ts - however, this just worked through Node’s require resolution rules for CommonJS. Strictly speaking, the former is interpreted as a declaration file for a JavaScript file named app.css.js . Because relative files imports need to include extensions in Node’s ESM support, TypeScript would error on our example in an ESM file under --moduleResolution node16 or nodenext . For more information, read up the proposal for this feature and its corresponding pull request . Released: 5.0 # Allow Importing TS Extensions - allowImportingTsExtensions --allowImportingTsExtensions allows TypeScript files to import each other with a TypeScript-specific extension like .ts , .mts , or .tsx . This flag is only allowed when --noEmit or --emitDeclarationOnly is enabled, since these import paths would not be resolvable at runtime in JavaScript output files. The expectation here is that your resolver (e.g. your bundler, a runtime, or some other tool) is going to make these imports between .ts files work. Default: true if rewriteRelativeImportExtensions ; false otherwise. Released: 5.0 # Allow Umd Global Access - allowUmdGlobalAccess When set to true, allowUmdGlobalAccess lets you access UMD exports as globals from inside module files. A module file is a file that has imports and/or exports. Without this flag, using an export from a UMD module requires an import declaration. An example use case for this flag would be a web project where you know the particular library (like jQuery or Lodash) will always be available at runtime, but you can’t access it with an import. Released: 3.5 # Base URL - baseUrl Sets a base directory from which to resolve bare specifier module names. For example, in the directory structure: project ├── ex.ts ├── hello │ └── world.ts └── tsconfig.json With "baseUrl": "./" , TypeScript will look for files starting at the same folder as the tsconfig.json : ts import { helloWorld } from "hello/world" ; console . log ( helloWorld ); This resolution has higher priority than lookups from node_modules . This feature was designed for use in conjunction with AMD module loaders in the browser, and is not recommended in any other context. As of TypeScript 4.1, baseUrl is no longer required to be set when using paths . Released: 2.0 # Custom Conditions - customConditions --customConditions takes a list of additional conditions that should succeed when TypeScript resolves from an exports or imports field of a package.json . These conditions are added to whatever existing conditions a resolver will use by default. For example, when this field is set in a tsconfig.json as so: jsonc { "compilerOptions" : { "target" : "es2022" , "moduleResolution" : "bundler" , "customConditions" : [ "my-condition" ] } } Any time an exports or imports field is referenced in package.json , TypeScript will consider conditions called my-condition . So when importing from a package with the following package.json jsonc { // ... "exports" : { "." : { "my-condition" : "./foo.mjs" , "node" : "./bar.mjs" , "import" : "./baz.mjs" , "require" : "./biz.mjs" } } } TypeScript will try to look for files corresponding to foo.mjs . This field is only valid under the node16 , nodenext , and bundler options for --moduleResolution . Related: moduleResolution resolvePackageJsonExports resolvePackageJsonImports Released: 5.0 # Module - module Sets the module system for the program. See the theory behind TypeScript’s module option and its reference page for more information. You very likely want "nodenext" for modern Node.js projects and preserve or esnext for code that will be bundled. Changing module affects moduleResolution which also has a reference page . Here’s some example output for this file: ts // @filename: index.ts import { valueOfPi } from "./constants" ;   export const twoPi = valueOfPi * 2 ; Try CommonJS ts "use strict" ; Object . defineProperty ( exports , "__esModule" , { value: true }); exports . twoPi = void 0 ; const constants_1 = require ( "./constants" ); exports . twoPi = constants_1 . valueOfPi * 2 ;   Try UMD ts ( function ( factory ) { if ( typeof module === "object" && typeof module . exports === "object" ) { var v = factory ( require , exports ); if ( v !== undefined ) module . exports = v ; } else if ( typeof define === "function" && define . amd ) { define ([ "require" , "exports" , "./constants" ], factory ); } })( function ( require , exports ) { "use strict" ; Object . defineProperty ( exports , "__esModule" , { value: true }); exports . twoPi = void 0 ; const constants_1 = require ( "./constants" ); exports . twoPi = constants_1 . valueOfPi * 2 ; });   Try AMD ts define ([ "require" , "exports" , "./constants" ], function ( require , exports , constants_1 ) { "use strict" ; Object . defineProperty ( exports , "__esModule" , { value: true }); exports . twoPi = void 0 ; exports . twoPi = constants_1 . valueOfPi * 2 ; });   Try System ts System . register ([ "./constants" ], function ( exports_1 , context_1 ) { "use strict" ; var constants_1 , twoPi ; var __moduleName = context_1 && context_1 . id ; return { setters: [ function ( constants_1_1 ) { constants_1 = constants_1_1 ; } ], execute : function () { exports_1 ( "twoPi" , twoPi = constants_1 . valueOfPi * 2 ); } }; });   Try ESNext ts import { valueOfPi } from "./constants" ; export const twoPi = valueOfPi * 2 ;   Try ES2015 / ES6 / ES2020 / ES2022 ts import { valueOfPi } from "./constants" ; export const twoPi = valueOfPi * 2 ;   Try In addition to the base functionality of ES2015 / ES6 , ES2020 adds support for dynamic import s , and import.meta while ES2022 further adds support for top level await . node16 / node18 / node20 / nodenext The node16 , node18 , node20 , and nodenext modes integrate with Node’s native ECMAScript Module support . The emitted JavaScript uses either CommonJS or ES2020 output depending on the file extension and the value of the type setting in the nearest package.json . Module resolution also works differently. You can learn more in the handbook and Modules Reference . node16 is available from TypeScript 4.7 node18 is available from TypeScript 5.8 as a replacement for node16 , with added support for import attributes. node20 adds support for require(ESM). nodenext is available from TypeScript 4.7, but its behavior changes with the latest stable versions of Node.js. --module nodenext implies the floating --target esnext . preserve In --module preserve ( added in TypeScript 5.4), ECMAScript imports and exports written in input files are preserved in the output, and CommonJS-style import x = require("...") and export = ... statements are emitted as CommonJS require and module.exports . In other words, the format of each individual import or export statement is preserved, rather than being coerced into a single format for the whole compilation (or even a whole file). ts import { valueOfPi } from "./constants" ; const constants = require ( "./constants" ); export const piSquared = valueOfPi * constants . valueOfPi ;   Try While it’s rare to need to mix imports and require calls in the same file, this module mode best reflects the capabilities of most modern bundlers, as well as the Bun runtime. Why care about TypeScript’s module emit with a bundler or with Bun, where you’re likely also setting noEmit ? TypeScript’s type checking and module resolution behavior are affected by the module format that it would emit. Setting module gives TypeScript information about how your bundler or runtime will process imports and exports, which ensures that the types you see on imported values accurately reflect what will happen at runtime or after bundling. None ts "use strict" ; Object . defineProperty ( exports , "__esModule" , { value: true }); exports . twoPi = void 0 ; const constants_1 = require ( "./constants" ); exports . twoPi = constants_1 . valueOfPi * 2 ;   Try Default: CommonJS if target is ES5 ; ES6 / ES2015 otherwise. Allowed: none commonjs amd umd system es6 / es2015 es2020 es2022 esnext node16 node18 node20 nodenext preserve Related: moduleResolution esModuleInterop allowImportingTsExtensions allowArbitraryExtensions resolveJsonModule Released: 1.0 # Module Resolution - moduleResolution Specify the module resolution strategy: 'node16' or 'nodenext' for modern versions of Node.js. Node.js v12 and later supports both ECMAScript imports and CommonJS require , which resolve using different algorithms. These moduleResolution values, when combined with the corresponding module values, picks the right algorithm for each resolution based on whether Node.js will see an import or require in the output JavaScript code. 'node10' (previously called 'node' ) for Node.js versions older than v10, which only support CommonJS require . You probably won’t need to use node10 in modern code. 'bundler' for use with bundlers. Like node16 and nodenext , this mode supports package.json "imports" and "exports" , but unlike the Node.js resolution modes, bundler never requires file extensions on relative paths in imports. 'classic' was used in TypeScript before the release of 1.6. classic should not be used. There are reference pages explaining the theory behind TypeScript’s module resolution and the details of each option . Default: Node10 if module is CommonJS ; Node16 if module is Node16 , Node18 , or Node20 ; NodeNext if module is NodeNext ; Bundler if module is Preserve ; Classic otherwise. Allowed: classic node10 / node node16 nodenext bundler Related: module paths baseUrl rootDirs moduleSuffixes customConditions resolvePackageJsonExports resolvePackageJsonImports Released: 1.6 # Module Suffixes - moduleSuffixes Provides a way to override the default list of file name suffixes to search when resolving a module. { " compilerOptions " : { " moduleSuffixes " : [ ".ios" , ".native" , "" ] } } Given the above configuration, an import like the following: ts import * as foo from "./foo" ; TypeScript will look for the relative files ./foo.ios.ts , ./foo.native.ts , and finally ./foo.ts . Note the empty string "" in moduleSuffixes which is necessary for TypeScript to also look-up ./foo.ts . This feature can be useful for React Native projects where each target platform can use a separate tsconfig.json with differing moduleSuffixes . Released: 4.7 # No Resolve - noResolve By default, TypeScript will examine the initial set of files for import and <reference directives and add these resolved files to your program. If noResolve is set, this process doesn’t happen. However, import statements are still checked to see if they resolve to a valid module, so you’ll need to make sure this is satisfied by some other means. Released: 1.0 # noUncheckedSideEffectImports - noUncheckedSideEffectImports In JavaScript it’s possible to import a module without actually importing any values from it. ts import "some-module" ; These imports are often called side effect imports because the only useful behavior they can provide is by executing some side effect (like registering a global variable, or adding a polyfill to a prototype). By default, TypeScript will not check these imports for validity. If the import resolves to a valid source file, TypeScript will load and check the file. If no source file is found, TypeScript will silently ignore the import. This is surprising behavior, but it partially stems from modeling patterns in the JavaScript ecosystem. For example, this syntax has also been used with special loaders in bundlers to load CSS or other assets. Your bundler might be configured in such a way where you can include specific .css files by writing something like the following: tsx import "./button-component.css" ; export function Button () { // ... } Still, this masks potential typos on side effect imports. When --noUncheckedSideEffectImports is enabled, TypeScript will error if it can’t find a source file for a side effect import. ts import "oops-this-module-does-not-exist" ; // ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ // error: Cannot find module 'oops-this-module-does-not-exist' or its corresponding // type declarations. When enabling this option, some working code may now receive an error, like in the CSS example above. To work around this, users who want to just write side effect import s for assets might be better served by writing what’s called an ambient module declaration with a wildcard specifier. It would go in a global file and look something like the following: ts // ./src/globals.d.ts // Recognize all CSS files as module imports. declare module "*.css" {} In fact, you might already have a file like this in your project! For example, running something like vite init might create a similar vite-env.d.ts . Released: 5.6 # Paths - paths A series of entries which re-map imports to lookup locations relative to the baseUrl if set, or to the tsconfig file itself otherwise. There is a larger coverage of paths in the moduleResolution reference page . paths lets you declare how TypeScript should resolve an import in your require / import s. { " compilerOptions " : { " paths " : { "jquery" : [ "./vendor/jquery/dist/jquery" ] } } } This would allow you to be able to write import "jquery" , and get all of the correct typing locally. { " compilerOptions " : { " paths " : { "app/*" : [ "./src/app/*" ], "config/*" : [ "./src/app/_config/*" ], "environment/*" : [ "./src/environments/*" ], "shared/*" : [ "./src/app/_shared/*" ], "helpers/*" : [ "./src/helpers/*" ], "tests/*" : [ "./src/tests/*" ] } } } In this case, you can tell the TypeScript file resolver to support a number of custom prefixes to find code. Note that this feature does not change how import paths are emitted by tsc , so paths should only be used to inform TypeScript that another tool has this mapping and will use it at runtime or when bundling. Released: 2.0 # Resolve JSON Module - resolveJsonModule Allows importing modules with a .json extension, which is a common practice in node projects. This includes generating a type for the import based on the static JSON shape. TypeScript does not support resolving JSON files by default: ts // @filename: settings.json { "repo" : "TypeScript" , "dry" : false , "debug" : false } // @filename: index.ts import settings from "./settings.json" ; Cannot find module './settings.json'. Consider using '--resolveJsonModule' to import module with '.json' extension. 2732 Cannot find module './settings.json'. Consider using '--resolveJsonModule' to import module with '.json' extension.   settings . debug === true ; settings . dry === 2 ; Try Enabling the option allows importing JSON, and validating the types in that JSON file. ts // @filename: settings.json { "repo" : "TypeScript" , "dry" : false , "debug" : false } // @filename: index.ts import settings from "./settings.json" ;   settings . debug === true ; settings . dry === 2 ; This comparison appears to be unintentional because the types 'boolean' and 'number' have no overlap. 2367 This comparison appears to be unintentional because the types 'boolean' and 'number' have no overlap. Try Released: 2.9 # Resolve package.json Exports - resolvePackageJsonExports --resolvePackageJsonExports forces TypeScript to consult the exports field of package.json files if it ever reads from a package in node_modules . This option defaults to true under the node16 , nodenext , and bundler options for --moduleResolution . Default: true when moduleResolution is node16 , nodenext , or bundler ; otherwise false Related: moduleResolution customConditions resolvePackageJsonImports Released: 5.0 # Resolve package.json Imports - resolvePackageJsonImports --resolvePackageJsonImports forces TypeScript to consult the imports field of package.json files when performing a lookup that starts with # from a file whose ancestor directory contains a package.json . This option defaults to true under the node16 , nodenext , and bundler options for --moduleResolution . Default: true when moduleResolution is node16 , nodenext , or bundler ; otherwise false Related: moduleResolution customConditions resolvePackageJsonExports Released: 5.0 # rewriteRelativeImportExtensions - rewriteRelativeImportExtensions Rewrite .ts , .tsx , .mts , and .cts file extensions in relative import paths to their JavaScript equivalent in output files. For more information, see the TypeScript 5.7 release notes . Released: 5.7 # Root Dir - rootDir Default : The longest common path of all non-declaration input files. If composite is set, the default is instead the directory containing the tsconfig.json file. When TypeScript compiles files, it keeps the same directory structure in the output directory as exists in the input directory. For example, let’s say you have some input files: MyProj ├── tsconfig.json ├── core │ ├── a.ts │ ├── b.ts │ ├── sub │ │ ├── c.ts ├── types.d.ts The inferred value for rootDir is the longest common path of all non-declaration input files, which in this case is core/ . If your outDir was dist , TypeScript would write this tree: MyProj ├── dist │ ├── a.js │ ├── b.js │ ├── sub │ │ ├── c.js However, you may have intended for core to be part of the output directory structure. By setting rootDir: "." in tsconfig.json , TypeScript would write this tree: MyProj ├── dist │ ├── core │ │ ├── a.js │ │ ├── b.js │ │ ├── sub │ │ │ ├── c.js Importantly, rootDir does not affect which files become part of the compilation . It has no interaction with the include , exclude , or files tsconfig.json settings. Note that TypeScript will never write an output file to a directory outside of outDir , and will never skip emitting a file. For this reason, rootDir also enforces that all files which need to be emitted are underneath the rootDir path. For example, let’s say you had this tree: MyProj ├── tsconfig.json ├── core │ ├── a.ts │ ├── b.ts ├── helpers.ts It would be an error to specify rootDir as core and include as * because it creates a file ( helpers.ts ) that would need to be emitted outside the outDir (i.e. ../helpers.js ). Default: Computed from the list of input files. Released: 1.5 # Root Dirs - rootDirs Using rootDirs , you can inform the compiler that there are many “virtual” directories acting as a single root. This allows the compiler to resolve relative module imports within these “virtual” directories, as if they were merged in to one directory. For example: src └── views └── view1.ts (can import "./template1", "./view2`) └── view2.ts (can import "./template1", "./view1`) generated └── templates └── views └── template1.ts (can import "./view1", "./view2") { " compilerOptions " : { " rootDirs " : [ "src/views" , "generated/templates/views" ] } } This does not affect how TypeScript emits JavaScript, it only emulates the assumption that they will be able to work via those relative paths at runtime. rootDirs can be used to provide a separate “type layer” to files that are not TypeScript or JavaScript by providing a home for generated .d.ts files in another folder. This technique is useful for bundled applications where you use import of files that aren’t necessarily code: sh src └── index.ts └── css └── main.css └── navigation.css generated └── css └── main.css.d.ts └── navigation.css.d.ts { " compilerOptions " : { " rootDirs " : [ "src" , "generated" ] } } This technique lets you generate types ahead of time for the non-code source files. Imports then work naturally based off the source file’s location. For example ./src/index.ts can import the file ./src/css/main.css and TypeScript will be aware of the bundler’s behavior for that filetype via the corresponding generated declaration file. ts // @filename: index.ts import { appClass } from "./main.css" ; Try Default: Computed from the list of input files. Released: 2.0 # Type Roots - typeRoots By default all visible ” @types ” packages are included in your compilation. Packages in node_modules/@types of any enclosing folder are considered visible . For example, that means packages within ./node_modules/@types/ , ../node_modules/@types/ , ../../node_modules/@types/ , and so on. If typeRoots is specified, only packages under typeRoots will be included. For example: { " compilerOptions " : { " typeRoots " : [ "./typings" , "./vendor/types" ] } } This config file will include all packages under ./typings and ./vendor/types , and no packages from ./node_modules/@types . All paths are relative to the tsconfig.json . Related: types Released: 2.0 # Types - types By default all visible ” @types ” packages are included in your compilation. Packages in node_modules/@types of any enclosing folder are considered visible . For example, that means packages within ./node_modules/@types/ , ../node_modules/@types/ , ../../node_modules/@types/ , and so on. If types is specified, only packages listed will be included in the global scope. For instance: { " compilerOptions " : { " types " : [ "node" , "jest" , "express" ] } } This tsconfig.json file will only include ./node_modules/@types/node , ./node_modules/@types/jest and ./node_modules/@types/express . Other packages under node_modules/@types/* will not be included. What does this affect? This option does not affect how @types/* are included in your application code, for example if you had the above compilerOptions example with code like: ts import * as moment from "moment" ; moment (). format ( "MMMM Do YYYY, h:mm:ss a" ); The moment import would be fully typed. When you have this option set, by not including a module in the types array it: Will not add globals to your project (e.g process in node, or expect in Jest) Will not have exports appear as auto-import recommendations This feature differs from typeRoots in that it is about specifying only the exact types you want included, whereas typeRoots supports sa
2026-01-13T09:30:04
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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/de/blog/european-businesses-turn-knowledge-into-competitive-advantage
Wie europäische Unternehmen Wissen in einen echten Wettbewerbsvorteil verwandeln Notion Funktionen Notion-KI Erschaffen, schreiben, automatisieren Agenten Übernehmen manuelle Aufgaben Enterprise Suche Finde Antworten in Sekundenschnelle Smart Notes Perfekt geschrieben von der KI Dokumente Einfach und leistungsstark Wissensdatenbank Bündle dein Wissen Projekte Verwalte jede Art von Projekt Websites Veröffentliche alles Mögliche im Handumdrehen Loslegen KI-Anwendungsfälle entdecken Schau dir an, wozu die Notion-KI in der Lage ist Marktplatz durchstöbern Vorlagen für alles Mögliche Einbindungen anzeigen Verbinde deine Apps mit Notion Web Clipper herunterladen Speichere Inhalte aus dem Web in Notion Teste die Desktop-App von Notion für mehr Geschwindigkeit App herunterladen Mail Calendar KI Enterprise Tarife Erkunden Teams Entwicklung und Produkt Design Marketing IT Teamgröße Start-ups KMUs Konzerne Bildungswesen Lernen Hilfe-Center Notion Academy Erfahrungsberichte von Kund/-innen Blog Community Partnerprogramme Entwickeln API Vorlagen Sicherheit Beratung Fordere eine Demo an Anmelden Nutze Notion kostenlos Alle Beiträge ← ← Alle Beiträge Veröffentlicht am 7. Juli 2025 in Für Teams Wie europäische Unternehmen Wissen in einen echten Wettbewerbsvorteil verwandeln Von Laura Gregg EMEA Customer Success Lead, Notion Lesezeit 2 min Diesen Beitrag teilen Europäische Führungskräfte berichten mir häufig von derselben Frustration: Ihre Teams verfügen über enormes Wissen—doch genau dann, wenn es gebraucht wird, ist es kaum auffindbar. Ein paradoxes Bild: Unternehmen investieren Millionen in Top-Talente—und trotzdem verbringen diese unzählige Stunden damit, nach längst vorhandenen Informationen zu suchen. In meiner Rolle als Customer Success Lead bei Notion arbeite ich mit Unternehmen in ganz Europa. Und egal ob in London, Paris oder Berlin—die zugrunde liegende Frustration bleibt überall dieselbe. Die erste Reaktion vieler Unternehmen: noch mehr Tools und Systeme. Doch anstatt Klarheit zu schaffen, entsteht Chaos—Informationen verteilen sich über zahllose Plattformen und werden nahezu unauffindbar. Hier setzt KI an: Sie verändert grundlegend, wie Unternehmen Wissen organisieren und nutzen. Mehr denn je wird deutlich, dass der Einsatz von KI im Wissensmanagement bis 2025 ein entscheidender Erfolgsfaktor wird. Informationen lassen sich schneller finden, Teams arbeiten effizienter zusammen, und Entscheidungen können in kürzerer Zeit getroffen werden. Um diesen Wandel besser zu verstehen, haben wir 650 Führungskräfte in 11 europäischen Ländern befragt. Das Ergebnis: Europäische Unternehmen übernehmen beim Einsatz von KI im Wissensmanagement eine Vorreiterrolle—und setzen mit innovativen Ansätzen bereits neue Standards. Einige zentrale Erkenntnisse: 97 % der Befragten sehen effektives Wissensmanagement als entscheidenden Treiber für den Wettbewerbsvorteil —doch nur 28 % erfügen über eine zentrale Strategie Zersplitterte Tool-Landschaften kosten Mitarbeitende im Schnitt fast fünf Arbeitswochen pro Jahr —im Vergleich zur Arbeit mit einem integrierten System Unternehmen, die KI im Wissensmanagement einsetzen, erzielen viermal häufiger signifikante Kosteneinsparungen 90 % sind überzeugt: Die Generation Z treibt diesen Wandel voran und fordert mehr Einfachheit und Transparenz Die Chance ist eindeutig: Mit der richtigen Strategie und KI-gestützten Systemen können Unternehmen Wissen gezielt nutzbar machen, Zusammenarbeit vereinfachen, schneller entscheiden—und sich so einen nachhaltigen Wettbewerbsvorteil verschaffen. → Den vollständigen Bericht herunterladen Diesen Beitrag teilen Jetzt testen Lege im Internet oder auf dem Desktop los Wir haben auch passende Mac- und Windows-Apps. Wir haben auch passende iOS- und Android-Apps. Web-App Teilen Registrieren Desktop-App Suchen Updates Einstellungen und Mitglieder Neue Seite Vorlagen Importieren Papierkorb Neue Seite Teilen Mac Windows Apple App-Store Google App Store Verwendest du Notion bei der Arbeit? Demo anfordern 4:19 Aus dem App-Store herunterladen Deutsch Cookie-Einstellungen © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. Unternehmen Über uns Karriere Sicherheit Status Nutzungsbedingungen und Datenschutz Deine Datenschutzrechte Download iOS und Android Mac und Windows Calendar Web Clipper Ressourcen Hilfe-Center Preise Blog Community Einbindungen Vorlagen Partnerprogramme Notion für Unternehmen Kleine Unternehmen Persönlich Mehr entdecken →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/categories/cloud-content-collaboration-software?trk=products_details_guest_product_category
Best Cloud Content Collaboration Software | Products | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Clear text Used by Used by Project Manager (17) Information Technology Manager (7) Chief Executive Officer (7) Director of Operations (7) Salesperson (6) See all products Find top products in Cloud Content Collaboration Software category Software used to store, share, and work together on cloud-based files. - Create, edit, and store multiple file types across devices - Upload files to searchable directory and share with encrypted links - Set permissions to comment, co-create, and control versions 263 results Atlas Cloud Content Collaboration Software by Atlassian Stay in sync, async by connecting the dots across teams, their apps, and work–wherever it happens. Atlas provides teams with a shared language to clarify what they're working on and why. It ensures full visibility into project ownership and highlights which teams are involved. Stakeholders can easily access detailed information and track where work is being done. With a comprehensive overview of status updates, deadlines, and contributors, Atlas helps teams stay on top of how projects progress. View product Confluence Cloud Content Collaboration Software by Atlassian Confluence is a team workspace where knowledge and collaboration meet. Dynamic pages give your team a place to create, capture, and collaborate on any project or idea. Spaces help your team structure, organize, and share work, so every team member has visibility into institutional knowledge and access to the information they need to do their best work. View product Miro Cloud Content Collaboration Software by Miro Miro is a visual workspace for innovation that enables distributed teams of any size to dream, design, and build the future together. Our mission is to empower these teams to create the next big thing. 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View product Find products trusted by professionals in your network See which products are used by connections in your network and those that share similar job titles Sign in to view full insights OpenText Content Cloud Cloud Content Collaboration Software by OpenText OpenText Content Cloud offers customers choice and flexibility in how and where they deploy, with solutions ranging from intelligent capture to records management and archiving. Seamlessly integrate with critical business applications to increase productivity and automate information governance. View product DataLab Cloud Content Collaboration Software by DataCamp DataCamp is launching DataLab, an AI-enabled data notebook to make it easier and faster than ever before to go from data to insight. The steps are simple: attach a data source, ask a question, and iterate your way to the insight you need, just like you would with a technically skilled colleague. 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2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/automattic-woo/?trk=products_details_guest_other_products_by_org_section_product_link_result-card_full-click#main-content
Woo | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Automattic in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Woo E-Commerce Platforms by Automattic See who's skilled in this Add as skill Get started Report this product About WooCommerce is the platform that grows with you. No matter what success looks like for you, you can do it with WooCommerce. Our WordPress-based ecommerce platform helps merchants and developers build successful businesses for the long term. Similar products noon.com noon.com E-Commerce Platforms Blinkit Blinkit E-Commerce Platforms Commerce Cloud Commerce Cloud E-Commerce Platforms Shopify Shopify E-Commerce Platforms Zoho Commerce Zoho Commerce E-Commerce Platforms HCL Commerce+ HCL Commerce+ E-Commerce Platforms Sign in to see more Show more Show less Automattic products Day One Journal Day One Journal IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems Jetpack Jetpack Server Backup Software Newspack Newspack Web Content Management (WCM) Systems Pocket Casts Pocket Casts Podcast Hosting Platforms Texts Texts Message Queue Software Tumblr Tumblr Social Networking Software WordPress VIP WordPress VIP Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Software WordPress.com WordPress.com Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.notion.com/th/product/ai
ขอแนะนำ Notion AI โฉมใหม่ | Notion Notion ฟีเจอร์ Notion AI สร้าง เขียน ทำให้เป็นอัตโนมัติ เอเจนต์ จัดการงานที่ต้องทำเอง Enterprise Search ค้นหาคำตอบทันที AI Meeting Notes ให้ AI ช่วยเขียนได้อย่างเพอร์เฟ็กต์ เอกสาร เรียบง่ายและทรงพลัง ฐานความรู้ แหล่งรวมความรู้ของคุณ โปรเจ็กต์ จัดการโปรเจ็กต์ ไซต์ เผยแพร่ทุกอย่างได้ทันใจ เริ่มต้นใช้งาน สำรวจกรณีการใช้งาน AI ดูว่า Notion AI ทำอะไรได้บ้าง เลือกดูมาร์เก็ตเพลส เทมเพลตสำหรับทุกอย่าง ดูการรวมระบบ เชื่อมต่อแอพของคุณกับ Notion ดาวน์โหลด Web Clipper บันทึกจากเว็บมายัง Notion ลองใช้แอพ Notion บนเดสก์ท็อปเลย จะได้สัมผัสประสบการณ์ที่เร็วกว่าเดิม ดาวน์โหลดแอพ อีเมล ปฏิทิน AI Enterprise ราคา สำรวจ ทีม วิศวกรรมและผลิตภัณฑ์ การออกแบบ การตลาด IT ขนาดทีม สตาร์ทอัพ SMBs Enterprise การศึกษา เรียนรู้ ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ Notion Academy เรื่องราวของลูกค้า บล็อก ชุมชน โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ สร้าง API เทมเพลต การรักษาความปลอดภัย ที่ปรึกษา ขอรับการสาธิต เข้าสู่ระบบ ใช้ Notion ฟรี พื้นที่ทำงาน AI ที่ตอบโจทย์คุณ AI แบบครบวงจรที่จดบันทึก ค้นหาแอพ และสร้างเวิร์คโฟลว์ได้ในที่เดียว ไม่ว่าคุณจะทำงานบนแพลตฟอร์มหรือแอพใด ใช้ Notion ฟรี ขอรับการสาธิต ไว้วางใจโดยทีมต่างๆ ที่ เล่น โอ๊ะโอ๋! ดูเหมือนว่าตัวบล็อคโฆษณาของคุณจะขวางไม่ให้วิดีโอเล่น แอพ AI ที่ช่วยคุณได้ทุกอย่าง ฤดูใบไม้ผลิ 2024 AI ครบวงจร เริ่มเลย → มีเครื่องมือ AI เยอะเกินไปใช่ไหม? คำนวณเงินที่อาจประหยัดได้ที่นี่ การค้นหา AI $35/ผู้ใช้ แชทบอท AI $20/ผู้ใช้ AI Meeting Notes $18/ผู้ใช้ ผู้ช่วยเขียน AI $20/ผู้ใช้ แอพอีเมล AI $30/ผู้ใช้ วิจัย AI $40/ผู้ใช้ ทำนัดในปฏิทิน $15/ผู้ใช้ Wiki ของทีม $10/ผู้ใช้ เครื่องมือจัดการโปรเจ็กต์ $24/ผู้ใช้ CRM พื้นฐาน $20/ผู้ใช้ เครื่องมือสร้างเว็บไซต์ $20/ผู้ใช้ แบบฟอร์ม $15/ผู้ใช้ ขนาดทีม ประหยัดรายเดือน US$0 ประหยัดรายปี US$0 Notion Agent ที่พร้อมสร้าง แก้ไข และลงมือทำ เครื่องมือ AI ส่วนใหญ่แค่ช่วยคุณคิด แต่ Notion AI จะช่วยคุณทำงานจนเสร็จ เคารพการตั้งค่าสิทธิแบบกำหนดเอง ปรับให้เป็นสไตล์ของคุณเอง เชื่อมต่อกับเครื่องมือผ่าน MCP สร้างเอเจนต์เฉพาะกิจเพื่อเปลี่ยนเวิร์คโฟลว์บางอย่างเป็นระบบอัตโนมัติ (เร็วๆ นี้) ลงทะเบียนเพื่อดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม → ดูว่า Notion AI ทำอะไรได้บ้าง สำรวจกรณีการใช้งานทั้งหมด → เปลี่ยนไอเดียของทุกคนเป็นแผนงาน สำรวจ → เปลี่ยนการประชุมเป็นโพสต์บนสื่อโซเชียล สำรวจ → ปรับแก้หน้า Landing สำรวจ → ไม่ต้องรอคำตอบนานๆ อีกต่อไป ถาม Notion AI ได้เลย ใช้ Enterprise Search เพื่อหาคำตอบในไม่กี่วินาที ดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม → เชื่อมต่อแอพของคุณ รับคำตอบจากเอกสาร Notion (และ PDF!) แชทกับ GPT-4.1, Claude 4 และอีกมากมาย สร้างเอกสารแบบละเอียดด้วยโหมดค้นคว้า แพลตฟอร์มเดียวที่จัดการทุกงานได้ ทรงพลังเกินคาด Notion รวมทุกอย่างไว้ให้คุณ Nick Erdenberger, GTM เครื่องมือแก้ไขเอกสาร แปล และจดบันทึก ให้ทีมของคุณไม่พลาดทุกประเด็นด้วย AI Meeting Notes ดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม → สร้างและแก้ไขเอกสารได้ตามสไตล์คุณ แปลเอกสารเป็นภาษาที่คุณต้องการ สร้างผังงานและแผนภาพ ป้อนฐานข้อมูลโดยอัตโนมัติโดยใช้ข้อมูลสรุปและข้อมูลเชิงลึก เป็นการปรับใช้งาน Generative AI กับเนื้อหาข้อความได้อย่างราบรื่นและสะดวกที่สุดตั้งแต่ที่เคยใช้มาเลย Alex Heath รองบรรณาธิการ จัดการข้อมูลของคุณอย่างรอบคอบ ได้รับความไว้วางใจจากองค์กร ดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติมเกี่ยวกับแนวทางการรักษาความปลอดภัยของ Notion AI → ไม่นำข้อมูลของคุณไปฝึก AI เรามีข้อตกลงตามสัญญากับผู้ประมวลผล AI ภายนอกของเรา ซึ่งห้ามใช้ข้อมูลของลูกค้าในการฝึกโมเดล การเข้ารหัสที่ปลอดภัย ข้อมูลที่รับส่งกับ Notion AI จะเข้ารหัสด้วย TLS 1.2 หรือสูงกว่า การกำหนดสิทธิขั้นสูง ลงรายละเอียดว่าใครทำและสร้างอะไรได้บ้าง GDPR & CCPA เราจัดทำโปรแกรมความเป็นส่วนตัวตาม GDPR และกฎระเบียบอื่นๆ ด้านความเป็นส่วนตัวระดับสากล SOC 2 (ประเภท 2) รายงานของเรารับรองว่านโยบายและการควบคุมความปลอดภัยของเราเป็นไปตามมาตรฐานสูงสุดในแวดวงอุตสาหกรรมอย่างต่อเนื่อง ISO 27001 Notion ได้รับการรับรองมาตรฐาน ISO 27001 แสดงให้เห็นความมุ่งมั่นต่อข้อกำหนดสูงสุดด้านความปลอดภัยของข้อมูล การเพิ่มประสิทธิภาพ LLM Notion ประเมินโมเดลจากผู้ให้บริการหลายรายอย่างต่อเนื่อง จึงมีเครื่องมือที่ดีที่สุดให้คุณใช้เสมอ เครื่องมือสำหรับการรักษาความปลอดภัยและดูแลระบบ รักษาพื้นที่ทำงานให้ปลอดภัยด้วยเครื่องมือรักษาความปลอดภัย การปฏิบัติตามข้อกำหนด การวิเคราะห์ และการตรวจสอบ ไม่มีการเก็บรักษาข้อมูล ไม่มีการจัดเก็บข้อมูลกับผู้ให้บริการ LLM แต่จะมีการเก็บข้อมูลไว้ 30 วันสำหรับผู้ใช้ที่ไม่ใช่ระดับองค์กร คำถามและคำตอบ Notion AI ราคาเท่าไร? Notion AI รวมอยู่ในแพ็คเกจ Business และ Enterprise ของ Notion หากไม่ได้ใช้แพ็คเกจเหล่านี้ พื้นที่ทำงานของคุณจะมีฟังก์ชัน Notion AI แบบทดลองใช้จำกัด Notion AI ใช้ข้อมูลของฉันอย่างไร? เราทำตาม แนวปฏิบัติในการปกป้องข้อมูล ระดับมาตรฐานของเรา เพื่อเข้ารหัสและรักษาความเป็นส่วนตัวของข้อมูล โดย Notion AI จะไม่ใช้ข้อมูลของคุณในการฝึกโมเดล เว้นแต่คุณเลือกแชร์ข้อมูลของตัวเอง ข้อมูลที่ใช้ขับเคลื่อน Notion AI จะแชร์กับผู้ประมวลผล AI ภายนอก เพื่อวัตถุประสงค์ในการให้บริการฟีเจอร์ Notion AI แต่เพียงอย่างเดียว เรามีข้อตกลงตามสัญญากับผู้ประมวลผล AI ภายนอกของเราโดยเฉพาะ ซึ่งห้ามไม่ให้ใช้ข้อมูลของลูกค้าในการฝึกโมเดล ดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติมเกี่ยวกับแนวทางการรักษาความปลอดภัยและความเป็นส่วนตัวของ Notion AI ได้ที่นี่ Notion AI ช่วยทำอะไรได้บ้าง? Notion AI จะช่วยคุณทำงานในเครื่องมือที่คุณใช้งานอยู่ โดยช่วยได้ทั้ง: ค้นหาในพื้นที่ทำงานและแอพที่เชื่อมต่อ บันทึกการประชุมและถอดเสียงแบบอัตโนมัติ ค้นคว้าเชิงลึกเพื่อสร้างเอกสารและรายงานโดยละเอียด สร้างและแก้ไขเนื้อหา ป้อนเนื้อหาในฐานข้อมูลหลายร้อยแถวได้ในครั้งเดียว แปลเนื้อหาเป็นภาษาของคุณ สร้างการตั้งค่าฐานข้อมูลตั้งแต่ต้น จัดเรียงและกรองกล่องอีเมลของคุณ (AI ใน Notion Mail) เพื่อให้มั่นใจว่าผู้ใช้ Notion AI ทุกคนจะได้ใช้งานเต็มประสิทธิภาพและเป็นธรรม เราอาจลดสิทธิเข้าถึงฟีเจอร์ AI ของคุณชั่วคราว ขึ้นอยู่กับการใช้งานของคุณ จะดูข้อมูลเพิ่มเติมเกี่ยวกับ Notion AI ได้อย่างไร? ลองดู Notion Academy หรือศูนย์ช่วยเหลือของเรา เพื่อดูไอเดียต่างๆ ว่าจะเริ่มใช้ Notion AI กับงานประจำวันของคุณอย่างไรดี ภาษาไทย การตั้งค่าคุกกี้ © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. บริษัท เกี่ยวกับเรา ร่วมงานกับเรา ความปลอดภัย สถานะ เงื่อนไขและความเป็นส่วนตัว สิทธิความเป็นส่วนตัวของคุณ ดาวน์โหลด iOS และ Android Mac และ Windows ปฏิทิน Web Clipper แหล่งข้อมูล ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ ราคา บล็อก ชุมชน การรวมระบบ เทมเพลต โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ Notion สำหรับ Enterprise ธุรกิจขนาดเล็ก ส่วนตัว สำรวจเพิ่ม →
2026-01-13T09:30:04
https://www.linkedin.com/products/mqgem-software-limited-mqev/?trk=products_details_guest_other_products_by_org_section_product_link_result-card_image-click#main-content
MQEV | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn MQGem Software Limited in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in MQEV Message Queue Software by MQGem Software Limited See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About MQEV is a program which will process the IBM MQ Event messages produced by your Queue Managers, and also the PCF based Accounting and Statistics messages produced by your distributed platform Queue Managers. It can receive these messages, store them, and allow you to search, filter, aggregate, and choose how long to retain the information within the messages. Media Products media viewer No more previous content MQEV Intro A brief introduction to the MQGem Product, MQEV. This program can help you to process, store and search IBM MQ Event messages, and Accounting and Statistics data. MQEV: MQ Event Collection | MQGem Facet Learn how to set up MQEV to collect and display IBM MQ event messages. Discover how easy it is to filter those events by various factors, such as an affected object, or a particular event reason. Narrow down the events shown to a particular time frame to allow for a more targeted search. MQEV: Configuration Change Events | MQGem Facet MQEV: Configuration Change Events | MQGem Facet MQEV: MQ Accounting & Statistics Collection | MQGem Facet Learn what IBM MQ Accounting & Statistics messages are, how to collect them using MQEV, and how you can filter the data to narrow down what you are looking at. MQEV: Graphing Data | MQGem Facet Numeric data is sometimes best looked at in graph form, to make it easier to understand what the data is trying to show you. MQEV collected Accounting and Statistics data can be graphed using MO71. See some examples in this video. No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Texts Texts Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less MQGem Software Limited products MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software MQEdit MQEdit Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software MQSCX MQSCX Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Show more Show less LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.notion.com/th/partners/solutions-partner-program
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ขั้นแรกคือสร้างโปรไฟล์พาร์ทเนอร์ของคุณ ยอมรับข้อกำหนดของพาร์ทเนอร์บริการครบวงจร และส่งใบสมัคร จากนั้นทีมของเราจะตรวจสอบใบสมัคร เมื่อผ่านการอนุมัติ คุณจะขอใบรับรองที่กำหนดสำหรับการเป็นพาร์ทเนอร์บริการครบวงจรได้ เริ่มต้นที่นี่เลย หลังจากใบสมัครผ่านการอนุมัติแล้ว ฉันต้องทำอย่างไรต่อ? หลังจากผ่านการอนุมัติ ขั้นตอนถัดไปคือการขอใบรับรองที่จำเป็นสำหรับโปรแกรมของคุณ ผู้ที่ได้ใบรับรองจะได้รับแบดจ์และข้อมูลประจำตัวซึ่งช่วยยืนยันสถานะพาร์ทเนอร์บริการครบวงจรของคุณอย่างเป็นทางการ หลังจากนั้น คุณเพียงแค่ต้องกรอกข้อมูลในโพรไฟล์ให้เรียบร้อยเพื่อให้มีชื่ออยู่ในไดเรกทอรี ต้องทำอะไรบ้างถึงจะเป็นพาร์ทเนอร์ที่ประสบความสำเร็จ? พาร์ทเนอร์ที่ประสบความสำเร็จใช้จุดแข็งของตัวเองในการสร้างแนวทางการทำงานที่ใช้ Notion เป็นหลัก รวมถึงทุ่มเทให้กับการรับรอง สร้างแพ็คเกจข้อเสนอที่ใช้ซ้ำได้ มอบผลลัพธ์ที่วัดผลได้ และลงมือทำอย่างสม่ำเสมอ ดูเรื่องราวของพาร์ทเนอร์เป็นแรงบันดาลใจได้ ที่นี่ บริษัทที่ต้องการจ้างพาร์ทเนอร์บริการครบวงจรต้องเริ่มต้นอย่างไร? เริ่มโดยเข้าไปที่ ไดเรกทอรีพาร์ทเนอร์ มองหาพาร์ทเนอร์ที่ให้บริการในภูมิภาคและภาษาของคุณ รวมถึงมีประเภทงานตรงตามที่คุณต้องการ เมื่อพบพาร์ทเนอร์ที่ใช่ ก็นัดหมายการพูดคุยเบื้องต้นทางโทรศัพท์ได้เลยเพื่อดูว่าจะทำงานเข้ากันได้ดีหรือไม่ พาร์ทเนอร์ด้านการขายและพาร์ทเนอร์ที่ปรึกษาต่างกันอย่างไร? โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์บริการครบวงจรของเรามีพาร์ทเนอร์สองประเภท ได้แก่ พาร์ทเนอร์ด้านการขายและพาร์ทเนอร์ที่ปรึกษา พาร์ทเนอร์ด้านการขายมุ่งเน้นไปที่การสร้างรายได้ผ่านกิจกรรมต่างๆ เช่น การหาลูกค้าใหม่ การสนับสนุนการขยายการใช้งาน การดูแลการต่ออายุ และการบริหารจัดการบัญชีในภาพรวม พาร์ทเนอร์ที่ปรึกษาช่วยให้ลูกค้านำ Notion ไปใช้งานจริงและขยายการใช้งานผ่านบริการต่างๆ เช่น การให้คำปรึกษา การติดตั้งใช้งาน การผสานการทำงาน การฝึกอบรม หรือระบบสนับสนุนที่ต่อเนื่อง พาร์ทเนอร์จะเลือกบทบาทเดียวหรือทั้งสองบทบาทเลยก็ได้ โดยพาร์ทเนอร์แต่ละประเภทจะมีระดับขั้นของตัวเอง พร้อมสิทธิประโยชน์และข้อกำหนดที่แตกต่างกัน ภาษาไทย การตั้งค่าคุกกี้ © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. บริษัท เกี่ยวกับเรา ร่วมงานกับเรา ความปลอดภัย สถานะ เงื่อนไขและความเป็นส่วนตัว สิทธิความเป็นส่วนตัวของคุณ ดาวน์โหลด iOS และ Android Mac และ Windows ปฏิทิน Web Clipper แหล่งข้อมูล ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ ราคา บล็อก ชุมชน การรวมระบบ เทมเพลต โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ Notion สำหรับ Enterprise ธุรกิจขนาดเล็ก ส่วนตัว สำรวจเพิ่ม →
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/pull/27097
feat(nuxt): add #fallback to server components types by huang-julien · Pull Request #27097 · nuxt/nuxt · GitHub Skip to content Navigation Menu Toggle navigation Sign in Appearance settings Platform AI CODE CREATION GitHub Copilot Write better code with AI GitHub Spark Build and deploy intelligent apps GitHub Models Manage and compare prompts MCP Registry New Integrate external tools DEVELOPER WORKFLOWS Actions Automate any workflow Codespaces Instant dev environments Issues Plan and track work Code Review Manage code changes APPLICATION SECURITY GitHub Advanced Security Find and fix vulnerabilities Code security Secure your code as you build Secret protection Stop leaks before they start EXPLORE Why GitHub Documentation Blog Changelog Marketplace View all features Solutions BY COMPANY SIZE Enterprises Small and medium teams Startups Nonprofits BY USE CASE App Modernization DevSecOps DevOps CI/CD View all use cases BY INDUSTRY Healthcare Financial services Manufacturing Government View all industries View all solutions Resources EXPLORE BY TOPIC AI Software Development DevOps Security View all topics EXPLORE BY TYPE Customer stories Events & webinars Ebooks & reports Business insights GitHub Skills SUPPORT & SERVICES Documentation Customer support Community forum Trust center Partners Open Source COMMUNITY GitHub Sponsors Fund open source developers PROGRAMS Security Lab Maintainer Community Accelerator Archive Program REPOSITORIES Topics Trending Collections Enterprise ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS Enterprise platform AI-powered developer platform AVAILABLE ADD-ONS GitHub Advanced Security Enterprise-grade security features Copilot for Business Enterprise-grade AI features Premium Support Enterprise-grade 24/7 support Pricing Search or jump to... Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests... --> Search Clear Search syntax tips Provide feedback --> We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously. Include my email address so I can be contacted Cancel Submit feedback Saved searches Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly --> Name Query To see all available qualifiers, see our documentation . Cancel Create saved search Sign in Sign up Appearance settings Resetting focus You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. Dismiss alert {{ message }} nuxt / nuxt Public Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings Fork 5.5k Star 59.3k Code Issues 816 Pull requests 114 Discussions Actions Projects 1 Security Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Insights Additional navigation options Code Issues Pull requests Discussions Actions Projects Security Insights feat(nuxt): add #fallback to server components types #27097 New issue Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community. Sign up for GitHub By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement . We’ll occasionally send you account related emails. Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account Jump to bottom Merged danielroe merged 3 commits into main from feat/servercomponent_sot May 8, 2024 Merged feat(nuxt): add #fallback to server components types #27097 danielroe merged 3 commits into main from feat/servercomponent_sot May 8, 2024 Conversation 3 Commits 3 Checks 0 Files changed Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Conversation This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters. Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters Show hidden characters Copy link Member huang-julien commented May 7, 2024 🔗 Linked issue resolve #25821 📚 Description heyyyy 👋 👋 👋 This PR brings #fallback autocompletion by forcing the fallback slot into all server components type --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . --> ❤️ 1 danielroe reacted with heart emoji 🚀 1 danielroe reacted with rocket emoji All reactions ❤️ 1 reaction 🚀 1 reaction feat(nuxt): add #fallback to server components types b1641e3 Copy link bolt-new-by-stackblitz bot commented May 7, 2024 Run & review this pull request in StackBlitz Codeflow . --> All reactions --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . huang-julien added enhancement dx server components labels May 7, 2024 chore: lint 145c001 github-actions bot added the 3.x label May 7, 2024 Merge branch 'main' into feat/servercomponent_sot a5c5f0a danielroe approved these changes May 8, 2024 View reviewed changes danielroe merged commit f687e21 into main May 8, 2024 danielroe deleted the feat/servercomponent_sot branch May 8, 2024 12:33 Copy link Member danielroe commented May 8, 2024 This is beautiful! I can think we can do something similar for client-only components, too, perhaps? --> All reactions --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . github-actions bot mentioned this pull request May 8, 2024 v3.12.0 #26703 Merged 4 tasks Copy link Member Author huang-julien commented May 8, 2024 Oh i forgot about that but sure ! i'll open a PR this evening ! --> ❤️ 1 danielroe reacted with heart emoji All reactions ❤️ 1 reaction --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . BalaKadiyala mentioned this pull request Jul 10, 2024 [Snyk] Upgrade nuxt from 3.7.0 to 3.12.2 BalaKadiyala/snyk-chat-goof#8 Open BalaKadiyala mentioned this pull request Jul 27, 2024 [Snyk] Upgrade nuxt from 3.7.0 to 3.12.3 BalaKadiyala/snyk-chat-goof#9 Open --> Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub . Already have an account? Sign in to comment --> Reviewers danielroe danielroe approved these changes --> Assignees No one assigned Labels 3.x dx enhancement server components --> Projects None yet --> Milestone No milestone --> Development Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues. Add fallback to server component's slot type Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . 3 participants Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit. This suggestion is invalid because no changes were made to the code. Suggestions cannot be applied while the pull request is closed. Suggestions cannot be applied while viewing a subset of changes. Only one suggestion per line can be applied in a batch. Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit. Applying suggestions on deleted lines is not supported. You must change the existing code in this line in order to create a valid suggestion. Outdated suggestions cannot be applied. 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2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://nodejs.org/docs/latest-v20.x/api/async_context.html
Asynchronous context tracking | Node.js v20.19.6 Documentation Skip to content Node.js About this documentation Usage and example Assertion testing Asynchronous context tracking Async hooks Buffer C++ addons C/C++ addons with Node-API C++ embedder API Child processes Cluster Command-line options Console Corepack Crypto Debugger Deprecated APIs Diagnostics Channel DNS Domain Errors Events File system Globals HTTP HTTP/2 HTTPS Inspector Internationalization Modules: CommonJS modules Modules: ECMAScript modules Modules: node:module API Modules: Packages Net OS Path Performance hooks Permissions Process Punycode Query strings Readline REPL Report Single executable applications Stream String decoder Test runner Timers TLS/SSL Trace events TTY UDP/datagram URL Utilities V8 VM WASI Web Crypto API Web Streams API Worker threads Zlib Code repository and issue tracker Node.js v20.19.6 documentation Node.js v20.19.6 Table of contents Asynchronous context tracking Introduction Class: AsyncLocalStorage new AsyncLocalStorage() Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.bind(fn) Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.snapshot() asyncLocalStorage.disable() asyncLocalStorage.getStore() asyncLocalStorage.enterWith(store) asyncLocalStorage.run(store, callback[, ...args]) asyncLocalStorage.exit(callback[, ...args]) Usage with async/await Troubleshooting: Context loss Class: AsyncResource new AsyncResource(type[, options]) Static method: AsyncResource.bind(fn[, type[, thisArg]]) asyncResource.bind(fn[, thisArg]) asyncResource.runInAsyncScope(fn[, thisArg, ...args]) asyncResource.emitDestroy() asyncResource.asyncId() asyncResource.triggerAsyncId() Using AsyncResource for a Worker thread pool Integrating AsyncResource with EventEmitter Index About this documentation Usage and example Index Assertion testing Asynchronous context tracking Async hooks Buffer C++ addons C/C++ addons with Node-API C++ embedder API Child processes Cluster Command-line options Console Corepack Crypto Debugger Deprecated APIs Diagnostics Channel DNS Domain Errors Events File system Globals HTTP HTTP/2 HTTPS Inspector Internationalization Modules: CommonJS modules Modules: ECMAScript modules Modules: node:module API Modules: Packages Net OS Path Performance hooks Permissions Process Punycode Query strings Readline REPL Report Single executable applications Stream String decoder Test runner Timers TLS/SSL Trace events TTY UDP/datagram URL Utilities V8 VM WASI Web Crypto API Web Streams API Worker threads Zlib Code repository and issue tracker Other versions 25.x 24.x LTS 23.x 22.x LTS 21.x 20.x LTS 19.x 18.x 17.x 16.x Options View on single page View as JSON Edit on GitHub Table of contents Asynchronous context tracking Introduction Class: AsyncLocalStorage new AsyncLocalStorage() Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.bind(fn) Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.snapshot() asyncLocalStorage.disable() asyncLocalStorage.getStore() asyncLocalStorage.enterWith(store) asyncLocalStorage.run(store, callback[, ...args]) asyncLocalStorage.exit(callback[, ...args]) Usage with async/await Troubleshooting: Context loss Class: AsyncResource new AsyncResource(type[, options]) Static method: AsyncResource.bind(fn[, type[, thisArg]]) asyncResource.bind(fn[, thisArg]) asyncResource.runInAsyncScope(fn[, thisArg, ...args]) asyncResource.emitDestroy() asyncResource.asyncId() asyncResource.triggerAsyncId() Using AsyncResource for a Worker thread pool Integrating AsyncResource with EventEmitter Asynchronous context tracking # Stability: 2 - Stable Source Code: lib/async_hooks.js Introduction # These classes are used to associate state and propagate it throughout callbacks and promise chains. They allow storing data throughout the lifetime of a web request or any other asynchronous duration. It is similar to thread-local storage in other languages. The AsyncLocalStorage and AsyncResource classes are part of the node:async_hooks module: import { AsyncLocalStorage , AsyncResource } from 'node:async_hooks' ; const { AsyncLocalStorage , AsyncResource } = require ( 'node:async_hooks' ); copy Class: AsyncLocalStorage # History Version Changes v16.4.0 AsyncLocalStorage is now Stable. Previously, it had been Experimental. v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 This class creates stores that stay coherent through asynchronous operations. While you can create your own implementation on top of the node:async_hooks module, AsyncLocalStorage should be preferred as it is a performant and memory safe implementation that involves significant optimizations that are non-obvious to implement. The following example uses AsyncLocalStorage to build a simple logger that assigns IDs to incoming HTTP requests and includes them in messages logged within each request. import http from 'node:http' ; import { AsyncLocalStorage } from 'node:async_hooks' ; const asyncLocalStorage = new AsyncLocalStorage (); function logWithId ( msg ) { const id = asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); console . log ( ` ${id !== undefined ? id : '-' } :` , msg); } let idSeq = 0 ; http. createServer ( ( req, res ) => { asyncLocalStorage. run (idSeq++, () => { logWithId ( 'start' ); // Imagine any chain of async operations here setImmediate ( () => { logWithId ( 'finish' ); res. end (); }); }); }). listen ( 8080 ); http. get ( 'http://localhost:8080' ); http. get ( 'http://localhost:8080' ); // Prints: // 0: start // 0: finish // 1: start // 1: finish const http = require ( 'node:http' ); const { AsyncLocalStorage } = require ( 'node:async_hooks' ); const asyncLocalStorage = new AsyncLocalStorage (); function logWithId ( msg ) { const id = asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); console . log ( ` ${id !== undefined ? id : '-' } :` , msg); } let idSeq = 0 ; http. createServer ( ( req, res ) => { asyncLocalStorage. run (idSeq++, () => { logWithId ( 'start' ); // Imagine any chain of async operations here setImmediate ( () => { logWithId ( 'finish' ); res. end (); }); }); }). listen ( 8080 ); http. get ( 'http://localhost:8080' ); http. get ( 'http://localhost:8080' ); // Prints: // 0: start // 0: finish // 1: start // 1: finish copy Each instance of AsyncLocalStorage maintains an independent storage context. Multiple instances can safely exist simultaneously without risk of interfering with each other's data. new AsyncLocalStorage() # History Version Changes v19.7.0 Removed experimental onPropagate option. v19.2.0, v18.13.0 Add option onPropagate. v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Creates a new instance of AsyncLocalStorage . Store is only provided within a run() call or after an enterWith() call. Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.bind(fn) # Added in: v19.8.0 Stability: 1 - Experimental fn <Function> The function to bind to the current execution context. Returns: <Function> A new function that calls fn within the captured execution context. Binds the given function to the current execution context. Static method: AsyncLocalStorage.snapshot() # Added in: v19.8.0 Stability: 1 - Experimental Returns: <Function> A new function with the signature (fn: (...args) : R, ...args) : R . Captures the current execution context and returns a function that accepts a function as an argument. Whenever the returned function is called, it calls the function passed to it within the captured context. const asyncLocalStorage = new AsyncLocalStorage (); const runInAsyncScope = asyncLocalStorage. run ( 123 , () => AsyncLocalStorage . snapshot ()); const result = asyncLocalStorage. run ( 321 , () => runInAsyncScope ( () => asyncLocalStorage. getStore ())); console . log (result); // returns 123 copy AsyncLocalStorage.snapshot() can replace the use of AsyncResource for simple async context tracking purposes, for example: class Foo { #runInAsyncScope = AsyncLocalStorage . snapshot (); get ( ) { return this .# runInAsyncScope ( () => asyncLocalStorage. getStore ()); } } const foo = asyncLocalStorage. run ( 123 , () => new Foo ()); console . log (asyncLocalStorage. run ( 321 , () => foo. get ())); // returns 123 copy asyncLocalStorage.disable() # Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Stability: 1 - Experimental Disables the instance of AsyncLocalStorage . All subsequent calls to asyncLocalStorage.getStore() will return undefined until asyncLocalStorage.run() or asyncLocalStorage.enterWith() is called again. When calling asyncLocalStorage.disable() , all current contexts linked to the instance will be exited. Calling asyncLocalStorage.disable() is required before the asyncLocalStorage can be garbage collected. This does not apply to stores provided by the asyncLocalStorage , as those objects are garbage collected along with the corresponding async resources. Use this method when the asyncLocalStorage is not in use anymore in the current process. asyncLocalStorage.getStore() # Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Returns: <any> Returns the current store. If called outside of an asynchronous context initialized by calling asyncLocalStorage.run() or asyncLocalStorage.enterWith() , it returns undefined . asyncLocalStorage.enterWith(store) # Added in: v13.11.0, v12.17.0 Stability: 1 - Experimental store <any> Transitions into the context for the remainder of the current synchronous execution and then persists the store through any following asynchronous calls. Example: const store = { id : 1 }; // Replaces previous store with the given store object asyncLocalStorage. enterWith (store); asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the store object someAsyncOperation ( () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the same object }); copy This transition will continue for the entire synchronous execution. This means that if, for example, the context is entered within an event handler subsequent event handlers will also run within that context unless specifically bound to another context with an AsyncResource . That is why run() should be preferred over enterWith() unless there are strong reasons to use the latter method. const store = { id : 1 }; emitter. on ( 'my-event' , () => { asyncLocalStorage. enterWith (store); }); emitter. on ( 'my-event' , () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the same object }); asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns undefined emitter. emit ( 'my-event' ); asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the same object copy asyncLocalStorage.run(store, callback[, ...args]) # Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 store <any> callback <Function> ...args <any> Runs a function synchronously within a context and returns its return value. The store is not accessible outside of the callback function. The store is accessible to any asynchronous operations created within the callback. The optional args are passed to the callback function. If the callback function throws an error, the error is thrown by run() too. The stacktrace is not impacted by this call and the context is exited. Example: const store = { id : 2 }; try { asyncLocalStorage. run (store, () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the store object setTimeout ( () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the store object }, 200 ); throw new Error (); }); } catch (e) { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns undefined // The error will be caught here } copy asyncLocalStorage.exit(callback[, ...args]) # Added in: v13.10.0, v12.17.0 Stability: 1 - Experimental callback <Function> ...args <any> Runs a function synchronously outside of a context and returns its return value. The store is not accessible within the callback function or the asynchronous operations created within the callback. Any getStore() call done within the callback function will always return undefined . The optional args are passed to the callback function. If the callback function throws an error, the error is thrown by exit() too. The stacktrace is not impacted by this call and the context is re-entered. Example: // Within a call to run try { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the store object or value asyncLocalStorage. exit ( () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns undefined throw new Error (); }); } catch (e) { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (); // Returns the same object or value // The error will be caught here } copy Usage with async/await # If, within an async function, only one await call is to run within a context, the following pattern should be used: async function fn ( ) { await asyncLocalStorage. run ( new Map (), () => { asyncLocalStorage. getStore (). set ( 'key' , value); return foo (); // The return value of foo will be awaited }); } copy In this example, the store is only available in the callback function and the functions called by foo . Outside of run , calling getStore will return undefined . Troubleshooting: Context loss # In most cases, AsyncLocalStorage works without issues. In rare situations, the current store is lost in one of the asynchronous operations. If your code is callback-based, it is enough to promisify it with util.promisify() so it starts working with native promises. If you need to use a callback-based API or your code assumes a custom thenable implementation, use the AsyncResource class to associate the asynchronous operation with the correct execution context. Find the function call responsible for the context loss by logging the content of asyncLocalStorage.getStore() after the calls you suspect are responsible for the loss. When the code logs undefined , the last callback called is probably responsible for the context loss. Class: AsyncResource # History Version Changes v16.4.0 AsyncResource is now Stable. Previously, it had been Experimental. The class AsyncResource is designed to be extended by the embedder's async resources. Using this, users can easily trigger the lifetime events of their own resources. The init hook will trigger when an AsyncResource is instantiated. The following is an overview of the AsyncResource API. import { AsyncResource , executionAsyncId } from 'node:async_hooks' ; // AsyncResource() is meant to be extended. Instantiating a // new AsyncResource() also triggers init. If triggerAsyncId is omitted then // async_hook.executionAsyncId() is used. const asyncResource = new AsyncResource ( type, { triggerAsyncId : executionAsyncId (), requireManualDestroy : false }, ); // Run a function in the execution context of the resource. This will // * establish the context of the resource // * trigger the AsyncHooks before callbacks // * call the provided function `fn` with the supplied arguments // * trigger the AsyncHooks after callbacks // * restore the original execution context asyncResource. runInAsyncScope (fn, thisArg, ...args); // Call AsyncHooks destroy callbacks. asyncResource. emitDestroy (); // Return the unique ID assigned to the AsyncResource instance. asyncResource. asyncId (); // Return the trigger ID for the AsyncResource instance. asyncResource. triggerAsyncId (); const { AsyncResource , executionAsyncId } = require ( 'node:async_hooks' ); // AsyncResource() is meant to be extended. Instantiating a // new AsyncResource() also triggers init. If triggerAsyncId is omitted then // async_hook.executionAsyncId() is used. const asyncResource = new AsyncResource ( type, { triggerAsyncId : executionAsyncId (), requireManualDestroy : false }, ); // Run a function in the execution context of the resource. This will // * establish the context of the resource // * trigger the AsyncHooks before callbacks // * call the provided function `fn` with the supplied arguments // * trigger the AsyncHooks after callbacks // * restore the original execution context asyncResource. runInAsyncScope (fn, thisArg, ...args); // Call AsyncHooks destroy callbacks. asyncResource. emitDestroy (); // Return the unique ID assigned to the AsyncResource instance. asyncResource. asyncId (); // Return the trigger ID for the AsyncResource instance. asyncResource. triggerAsyncId (); copy new AsyncResource(type[, options]) # type <string> The type of async event. options <Object> triggerAsyncId <number> The ID of the execution context that created this async event. Default: executionAsyncId() . requireManualDestroy <boolean> If set to true , disables emitDestroy when the object is garbage collected. This usually does not need to be set (even if emitDestroy is called manually), unless the resource's asyncId is retrieved and the sensitive API's emitDestroy is called with it. When set to false , the emitDestroy call on garbage collection will only take place if there is at least one active destroy hook. Default: false . Example usage: class DBQuery extends AsyncResource { constructor ( db ) { super ( 'DBQuery' ); this . db = db; } getInfo ( query, callback ) { this . db . get (query, ( err, data ) => { this . runInAsyncScope (callback, null , err, data); }); } close ( ) { this . db = null ; this . emitDestroy (); } } copy Static method: AsyncResource.bind(fn[, type[, thisArg]]) # History Version Changes v20.0.0 The asyncResource property added to the bound function has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version. v17.8.0, v16.15.0 Changed the default when thisArg is undefined to use this from the caller. v16.0.0 Added optional thisArg. v14.8.0, v12.19.0 Added in: v14.8.0, v12.19.0 fn <Function> The function to bind to the current execution context. type <string> An optional name to associate with the underlying AsyncResource . thisArg <any> Binds the given function to the current execution context. asyncResource.bind(fn[, thisArg]) # History Version Changes v20.0.0 The asyncResource property added to the bound function has been deprecated and will be removed in a future version. v17.8.0, v16.15.0 Changed the default when thisArg is undefined to use this from the caller. v16.0.0 Added optional thisArg. v14.8.0, v12.19.0 Added in: v14.8.0, v12.19.0 fn <Function> The function to bind to the current AsyncResource . thisArg <any> Binds the given function to execute to this AsyncResource 's scope. asyncResource.runInAsyncScope(fn[, thisArg, ...args]) # Added in: v9.6.0 fn <Function> The function to call in the execution context of this async resource. thisArg <any> The receiver to be used for the function call. ...args <any> Optional arguments to pass to the function. Call the provided function with the provided arguments in the execution context of the async resource. This will establish the context, trigger the AsyncHooks before callbacks, call the function, trigger the AsyncHooks after callbacks, and then restore the original execution context. asyncResource.emitDestroy() # Returns: <AsyncResource> A reference to asyncResource . Call all destroy hooks. This should only ever be called once. An error will be thrown if it is called more than once. This must be manually called. If the resource is left to be collected by the GC then the destroy hooks will never be called. asyncResource.asyncId() # Returns: <number> The unique asyncId assigned to the resource. asyncResource.triggerAsyncId() # Returns: <number> The same triggerAsyncId that is passed to the AsyncResource constructor. Using AsyncResource for a Worker thread pool # The following example shows how to use the AsyncResource class to properly provide async tracking for a Worker pool. Other resource pools, such as database connection pools, can follow a similar model. Assuming that the task is adding two numbers, using a file named task_processor.js with the following content: import { parentPort } from 'node:worker_threads' ; parentPort. on ( 'message' , ( task ) => { parentPort. postMessage (task. a + task. b ); }); const { parentPort } = require ( 'node:worker_threads' ); parentPort. on ( 'message' , ( task ) => { parentPort. postMessage (task. a + task. b ); }); copy a Worker pool around it could use the following structure: import { AsyncResource } from 'node:async_hooks' ; import { EventEmitter } from 'node:events' ; import { Worker } from 'node:worker_threads' ; const kTaskInfo = Symbol ( 'kTaskInfo' ); const kWorkerFreedEvent = Symbol ( 'kWorkerFreedEvent' ); class WorkerPoolTaskInfo extends AsyncResource { constructor ( callback ) { super ( 'WorkerPoolTaskInfo' ); this . callback = callback; } done ( err, result ) { this . runInAsyncScope ( this . callback , null , err, result); this . emitDestroy (); // `TaskInfo`s are used only once. } } export default class WorkerPool extends EventEmitter { constructor ( numThreads ) { super (); this . numThreads = numThreads; this . workers = []; this . freeWorkers = []; this . tasks = []; for ( let i = 0 ; i < numThreads; i++) this . addNewWorker (); // Any time the kWorkerFreedEvent is emitted, dispatch // the next task pending in the queue, if any. this . on (kWorkerFreedEvent, () => { if ( this . tasks . length > 0 ) { const { task, callback } = this . tasks . shift (); this . runTask (task, callback); } }); } addNewWorker ( ) { const worker = new Worker ( new URL ( 'task_processor.js' , import . meta . url )); worker. on ( 'message' , ( result ) => { // In case of success: Call the callback that was passed to `runTask`, // remove the `TaskInfo` associated with the Worker, and mark it as free // again. worker[kTaskInfo]. done ( null , result); worker[kTaskInfo] = null ; this . freeWorkers . push (worker); this . emit (kWorkerFreedEvent); }); worker. on ( 'error' , ( err ) => { // In case of an uncaught exception: Call the callback that was passed to // `runTask` with the error. if (worker[kTaskInfo]) worker[kTaskInfo]. done (err, null ); else this . emit ( 'error' , err); // Remove the worker from the list and start a new Worker to replace the // current one. this . workers . splice ( this . workers . indexOf (worker), 1 ); this . addNewWorker (); }); this . workers . push (worker); this . freeWorkers . push (worker); this . emit (kWorkerFreedEvent); } runTask ( task, callback ) { if ( this . freeWorkers . length === 0 ) { // No free threads, wait until a worker thread becomes free. this . tasks . push ({ task, callback }); return ; } const worker = this . freeWorkers . pop (); worker[kTaskInfo] = new WorkerPoolTaskInfo (callback); worker. postMessage (task); } close ( ) { for ( const worker of this . workers ) worker. terminate (); } } const { AsyncResource } = require ( 'node:async_hooks' ); const { EventEmitter } = require ( 'node:events' ); const path = require ( 'node:path' ); const { Worker } = require ( 'node:worker_threads' ); const kTaskInfo = Symbol ( 'kTaskInfo' ); const kWorkerFreedEvent = Symbol ( 'kWorkerFreedEvent' ); class WorkerPoolTaskInfo extends AsyncResource { constructor ( callback ) { super ( 'WorkerPoolTaskInfo' ); this . callback = callback; } done ( err, result ) { this . runInAsyncScope ( this . callback , null , err, result); this . emitDestroy (); // `TaskInfo`s are used only once. } } class WorkerPool extends EventEmitter { constructor ( numThreads ) { super (); this . numThreads = numThreads; this . workers = []; this . freeWorkers = []; this . tasks = []; for ( let i = 0 ; i < numThreads; i++) this . addNewWorker (); // Any time the kWorkerFreedEvent is emitted, dispatch // the next task pending in the queue, if any. this . on (kWorkerFreedEvent, () => { if ( this . tasks . length > 0 ) { const { task, callback } = this . tasks . shift (); this . runTask (task, callback); } }); } addNewWorker ( ) { const worker = new Worker (path. resolve (__dirname, 'task_processor.js' )); worker. on ( 'message' , ( result ) => { // In case of success: Call the callback that was passed to `runTask`, // remove the `TaskInfo` associated with the Worker, and mark it as free // again. worker[kTaskInfo]. done ( null , result); worker[kTaskInfo] = null ; this . freeWorkers . push (worker); this . emit (kWorkerFreedEvent); }); worker. on ( 'error' , ( err ) => { // In case of an uncaught exception: Call the callback that was passed to // `runTask` with the error. if (worker[kTaskInfo]) worker[kTaskInfo]. done (err, null ); else this . emit ( 'error' , err); // Remove the worker from the list and start a new Worker to replace the // current one. this . workers . splice ( this . workers . indexOf (worker), 1 ); this . addNewWorker (); }); this . workers . push (worker); this . freeWorkers . push (worker); this . emit (kWorkerFreedEvent); } runTask ( task, callback ) { if ( this . freeWorkers . length === 0 ) { // No free threads, wait until a worker thread becomes free. this . tasks . push ({ task, callback }); return ; } const worker = this . freeWorkers . pop (); worker[kTaskInfo] = new WorkerPoolTaskInfo (callback); worker. postMessage (task); } close ( ) { for ( const worker of this . workers ) worker. terminate (); } } module . exports = WorkerPool ; copy Without the explicit tracking added by the WorkerPoolTaskInfo objects, it would appear that the callbacks are associated with the individual Worker objects. However, the creation of the Worker s is not associated with the creation of the tasks and does not provide information about when tasks were scheduled. This pool could be used as follows: import WorkerPool from './worker_pool.js' ; import os from 'node:os' ; const pool = new WorkerPool (os. availableParallelism ()); let finished = 0 ; for ( let i = 0 ; i < 10 ; i++) { pool. runTask ({ a : 42 , b : 100 }, ( err, result ) => { console . log (i, err, result); if (++finished === 10 ) pool. close (); }); } const WorkerPool = require ( './worker_pool.js' ); const os = require ( 'node:os' ); const pool = new WorkerPool (os. availableParallelism ()); let finished = 0 ; for ( let i = 0 ; i < 10 ; i++) { pool. runTask ({ a : 42 , b : 100 }, ( err, result ) => { console . log (i, err, result); if (++finished === 10 ) pool. close (); }); } copy Integrating AsyncResource with EventEmitter # Event listeners triggered by an EventEmitter may be run in a different execution context than the one that was active when eventEmitter.on() was called. The following example shows how to use the AsyncResource class to properly associate an event listener with the correct execution context. The same approach can be applied to a Stream or a similar event-driven class. import { createServer } from 'node:http' ; import { AsyncResource , executionAsyncId } from 'node:async_hooks' ; const server = createServer ( ( req, res ) => { req. on ( 'close' , AsyncResource . bind ( () => { // Execution context is bound to the current outer scope. })); req. on ( 'close' , () => { // Execution context is bound to the scope that caused 'close' to emit. }); res. end (); }). listen ( 3000 ); const { createServer } = require ( 'node:http' ); const { AsyncResource , executionAsyncId } = require ( 'node:async_hooks' ); const server = createServer ( ( req, res ) => { req. on ( 'close' , AsyncResource . bind ( () => { // Execution context is bound to the current outer scope. })); req. on ( 'close' , () => { // Execution context is bound to the scope that caused 'close' to emit. }); res. end (); }). listen ( 3000 ); copy
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2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/vox-media-jobs-worldwide
18 Vox Media jobs in Worldwide Skip to main content LinkedIn Vox Media in Worldwide Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Sign in Register now Any time Any time (18) Past month (15) Past week (2) Past 24 hours (1) Done Company Clear text Vox Media (15) Burt Intelligence. (2) Zevo360 Technologies Pvt Ltd (1) Done Job type Full-time (17) Part-time (1) Done Experience level Entry level (3) Mid-Senior level (15) Done Remote Hybrid (10) On-site (5) Remote (3) Done Get notified about new Vox Media jobs in Worldwide . Sign in to create job alert 18 Vox Media Jobs in Worldwide Video Producer, Vulture Video Producer, Vulture Vox Media New York, NY Actively Hiring 3 weeks ago Podcast Social Video Editor Podcast Social Video Editor Vox Media New York, NY Actively Hiring 1 week ago Podcast Social Media Producer Podcast Social Media Producer Vox Media New York, NY Actively Hiring 1 week ago ****** ********* *********, ******** ******* ****** ********* *********, ******** ******* *** ***** *** ****, ** Actively Hiring 16 hours ago *********** ********, ******** ***** ******* *********** ********, ******** ***** ******* *** ***** *** ****, ** Actively Hiring 2 weeks ago ****** ***** ******** ****** ***** ******** *** ***** *** ****, ** Actively Hiring 1 week ago ****** ******* ************ ********** ****** ******* ************ ********** *** ***** *** ****, ** Actively Hiring 1 week ago Sign in to view all job postings Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Sign in or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . New to LinkedIn? Join now or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . LinkedIn © 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional)) Language Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . Sign in to view more jobs Sign in Welcome back Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Sign in or By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . New to LinkedIn? Join now or New to LinkedIn? Join now By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy .
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.cron.calendar&hl=he
Notion Calendar - Apps on Google Play Games Apps Books Kids google_logo Play Games Apps Books Kids none search help_outline Sign in with Google play_apps Library &amp; devices payment Payments &amp; subscriptions reviews My Play activity redeem Offers Play Pass Personalization in Play settings Settings Privacy Policy • Terms of Service Games Apps Books Kids Notion Calendar Notion Labs, Inc. 4.6 star 13.7K reviews 1M+ Downloads Rated for 3+ info Install Share Add to wishlist About this app arrow_forward Notion Calendar lets you schedule meetings and control your time like never before. It deeply integrates with Google Calendar accounts so that all your events are synced. Along with speed, beauty, and light/dark modes, Notion Calendar includes powerful features: - CONNECTED TO NOTION — add Notion docs, projects, and timelines. - MULTIPLE TIME ZONES — pull the time zone column to the right to “travel to any city” and add more time zones. - ALL IN ONE PLACE — see one unified view across multiple calendars and auto-sync events between them. WIDGETS — featuring multiple sizes, rich previews of upcoming events, and a quick-add event button. - AVAILABLE IN 12 LANGUAGES — Japanese, Korean, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish. It’s time. Updated on Jul 11, 2025 Productivity Data safety arrow_forward Safety starts with understanding how developers collect and share your data. Data privacy and security practices may vary based on your use, region, and age. The developer provided this information and may update it over time. This app may share these data types with third parties Personal info, App activity and 2 others This app may collect these data types Personal info, App activity and 2 others Data is encrypted in transit You can request that data be deleted See details Ratings and reviews Ratings and reviews are verified info_outline arrow_forward Ratings and reviews are verified info_outline phone_android Phone laptop Chromebook tablet_android Tablet 4.6 13.3K reviews 5 4 3 2 1 Han more_vert Flag inappropriate January 4, 2025 The app is extremely buggy and often shuts down upon being opened so I find it hard to register new events from my phone, and I also wish we had as much ability to customize reminders like we do on desktop. That being said, I love the desktop app, and I appreciate the notifications coming thru on my phone. If I could ask for one thing, I&#39;d love to be able to save things natively to Notion Calendar without it having to link back to a database on my notion account or my google account. 11 people found this review helpful Did you find this helpful? Yes No Isaac Connor more_vert Flag inappropriate March 15, 2025 Very nice calendar app, easy to use, nice appearance. Just a couple of issues. First, the app doesn&#39;t include all the colours that Google Calendar does, which is annoying. Also, the max days you can see at once is 3, which is far too low. A week view is a basic feature of a calendar app, not to mention a month view. 110 people found this review helpful Did you find this helpful? Yes No Jose Sierra more_vert <ul class="VfPpk
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://opentelemetry.io/docs/concepts/context-propagation/#circle-half
Context propagation | OpenTelemetry The OpenTelemetry Logo OpenTelemetry Docs Ecosystem Status Community Training Blog English EN বাংলা (Bengali) English Español Français 日本語 (Japanese) Português Română (Romanian) Українська (Ukrainian) 中文 (Chinese) Light Dark Auto Ask AI (&amp;#x2318;-K)" class="td-search__input form-control td-search-input" placeholder="Ask AI or search…" aria-label="Ask AI or search…" autocomplete=off> Ask AI (&amp;#x2318;-K)" class="td-search__input form-control td-search-input" placeholder="Ask AI or search…" aria-label="Ask AI or search…" autocomplete=off> Docs What is OpenTelemetry? 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philosophy System use cases Object stores S3 OpenTelemetry SDK SDK Metrics Resource Android Browser CICD Cloud Cloud provider AWS ECS EKS Logs GCP Google Cloud AppHub Google Cloud Run Google Compute Engine Heroku CloudFoundry Container Deployment Device FaaS Host Kubernetes Openshift Operating system Process Service Webengine z/OS software RPC Connect Events gRPC JSON-RPC Metrics Spans Runtime environment .NET CPython Go JVM Node.js V8 JS engine System Container Kubernetes OpenShift OS process System URL Security Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures Handling sensitive data Community incident response guidelines Collector configuration Collector hosting Contributing Prerequisites Issues Submitting content Style guide Localization Blog Pull request checks Announcements Dev setup and more SIG practices Acknowledgements View page source Edit this page Create child page Create documentation issue On this page Context Propagation Example Traces Logs Metrics Custom Context Propagation Security best practices External services Baggage Support in Language SDKs Specification Docs Concepts Context propagation Context propagation Learn about the concept that enables Distributed Tracing. With context propagation, signals ( traces , metrics , and logs ) can be correlated with each other, regardless of where they are generated. Although not limited to tracing, context propagation allows traces to build causal information about a system across services that are arbitrarily distributed across process and network boundaries. To understand context propagation, you need to understand two separate concepts: context and propagation. Context Context is an object that contains the information for the sending and receiving service, or execution unit , to correlate one signal with another. When Service A calls Service B, Service A includes a trace ID and a span ID as part of the context. Service B uses these values to create a new span that belongs to the same trace, setting the span from Service A as its parent. This makes it possible to track the full flow of a request across service boundaries. Propagation Propagation is the mechanism that moves context between services and processes. It serializes or deserializes the context object and provides the relevant information to be propagated from one service to another. Propagation is usually handled by instrumentation libraries and is transparent to the user. In the event that you need to manually propagate context, you can use the Propagators API . OpenTelemetry maintains several official propagators. The default propagator uses the headers specified by the W3C TraceContext specification. Example A service called Frontend that provides different HTTP endpoints such as POST /cart/add and GET /checkout/ reaches out to a downstream service Product Catalog via an HTTP endpoint GET /product to receive details on products that a user wants to add to the cart or that are part of the checkout. To understand activities in the Product Catalog service within the context of requests coming from Frontend , the context (here: Trace ID and Span ID as &ldquo;Parent ID&rdquo;) is propagated using the traceparent header as it is defined in the W3C TraceContext specification. This means the IDs are embedded in the fields of the header: &lt;version&gt;-&lt;trace-id&gt;-&lt;parent-id&gt;-&lt;trace-flags&gt; For example: 00-a0892f3577b34da6a3ce929d0e0e4736-f03067aa0ba902b7-01 Traces As mentioned, context propagation allows traces to build causal information across services. In this example, the two calls to the HTTP endpoint GET /product of service Product Catalog can be correlated with their upstream calls in service Frontend by extracting the remote context from the traceparent header and injecting it into the local context to set the Trace ID and Parent ID. With that, it is possible in a backend like Jaeger to see two requests as spans of one trace. Logs OpenTelemetry SDKs are able to automatically correlate logs with traces. This means they can inject context (Trace ID, Span ID) into a log record. This not only enables you to see logs in the context of the trace and span they belong to, but it also enables you to see logs that belong together across service or execution unit boundaries. Metrics In the case of metrics, context propagation enables you to aggregate measurements in that context. For example, instead of only looking at the response time of all the GET /product requests, you can also get metrics for combinations of POST /cart/add > GET /product and GET /checkout &lt; GET /product . Name Calls Per Second Average Response Time * > GET /product 370 300ms POST /card/add > GET /product 330 130ms GET /checkout > GET /product 40 1703ms Custom Context Propagation For most use cases, you will find instrumentation libraries or native library instrumentation that handle the context propagation for you. In some cases no such support is available and you want to create that support for yourself. To do so you need to leverage the previously mentioned Propagators API: On the side of the sender, the context is injected into the carrier, for example, into the headers of an HTTP request. In other cases, you need to find a place that can store metadata for your request. On the receiving side, the context is extracted from the carrier. Again, in the case of HTTP, this is retrieved from the headers. In other cases, you pick the place you chose on the sending side to store the context. Note that it is possible to propagate context in protocols that do not have a dedicated field for metadata, but you have to make sure that on the receiving side they are extracted and removed before the data is processed, otherwise you may create undefined behavior. For the following languages a step-by-step tutorial exists for custom context propagation: Erlang JavaScript PHP Python Security best practices Propagation involves sending and receiving data across service boundaries, which can have security implications. External services When your service interacts with external services (services you do not own or trust), consider the following: Incoming context : Be cautious when accepting context from external sources. Malicious actors could send forged trace headers to manipulate your tracing data or potentially exploit vulnerabilities in context parsing. You might want to ignore or sanitize incoming context from untrusted sources. Outgoing context : Be mindful of what you propagate to external services. Internal trace IDs, span IDs, or baggage items might reveal sensitive information about your internal architecture or business logic. You may want to configure your propagators to not send context to external or public-facing endpoints. Baggage Baggage allows you to propagate arbitrary key-value pairs. Since this data is propagated across service boundaries, avoid putting sensitive information (like user credentials, API keys, or PII) in baggage, as it might be logged or sent to untrusted downstream services. Support in Language SDKs For the individual language-specific implementations of the OpenTelemetry API & SDK, you will find details on the support of context propagation in the respective documentation pages: C++ .NET Erlang Go Java JavaScript PHP Python Ruby Rust Swift Help wanted For languages .NET, Rust, and Swift, the language-specific documentation for context propagation is missing. If you know any of those languages and are interested to help, learn how you can contribute ! Specification To learn more about context propagation, see the Context specification . Feedback Was this page helpful? Yes No Thank you. Your feedback is appreciated! Please let us know how we can improve this page . Your feedback is appreciated! Last modified December 18, 2025: Add security best practices to context propagation docs (#8664) (2eff1a35) &copy; 2019&ndash;present OpenTelemetry Authors | Docs CC BY 4.0 All Rights Reserved
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/opentext-content-cloud/?trk=products_seo_search#main-content
OpenText Content Cloud | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn OpenText in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in OpenText Content Cloud Cloud Content Collaboration Software by OpenText See who's skilled in this Add as skill Contact us Report this product About OpenText Content Cloud offers customers choice and flexibility in how and where they deploy, with solutions ranging from intelligent capture to records management and archiving. Seamlessly integrate with critical business applications to increase productivity and automate information governance. This product is intended for Chief Financial Officer Human Resources Director Chief Technology Officer Chief Information Officer Vice President Information Technology Director of Compliance Director of Procurement Director of Risk Management Director of Infrastructure Chief People Officer Media Products media viewer No more previous content OpenText | Cloud Editions Information on the latest ECM/Content Services product release from OpenText OpenText Content Services - the next generation of ECM OpenText Content Services are the next generation of enterprise content management tools, expanding on the strengths of traditional ECM and enhancing the availability and value of information across the enterprise. Enterprise Content Management Systems | OpenText Extended ECM Platform Enterprise Content Management systems by OpenText help connect information across the business - which helps drive personal productivity and efficiency. OpenText Extended ECM Platform connects OpenText Content Suite to lead applications like Salesforce, SAP ERP and SuccessFactors, Microsoft SharePoint and Dynamics and more. It lets users work in the application they prefer to access all the data and documents they need to get their job done. And they always know they have the right version of th Strengthen your collaboration in Microsoft Teams with OpenText Extended ECM OpenText Extended ECM integration with Microsoft Teams allows organizations to embed the collaboration strengths of Teams within a structured business process by managing the creation, archiving and decommissioning of the Team. With Extended ECM, you can manage the full lifecycle of your Team’s work from start to finish! Introduction to OpenText Documentum D2 Documentum D2 is a highly configurable UI for Documentum that improves user adoption and productivity across a variety of content management tasks. It allows users to control their own, personalized view of information based on their role. No more next content Featured customers of OpenText Content Cloud DHFL Pramerica Life Insurance Insurance 19,362 followers Tata Power-DDL Utilities 104,008 followers Agility Transportation, Logistics, Supply Chain and Storage 384,933 followers Pharmascience Pharmaceutical Manufacturing 63,484 followers Los Angeles County Department of Human Resources Government Administration 25,138 followers Curbline Properties Real Estate 14,904 followers Red Deer County Government Administration 3,630 followers BAT Manufacturing 1,903,744 followers Snohomish County PUD Utilities 9,131 followers Black Sea Trade &amp; Development Bank (BSTDB) Banking 15,950 followers Show more Show less Similar products Atlas Atlas Cloud Content Collaboration Software Confluence Confluence Cloud Content Collaboration Software Miro Miro Cloud Content Collaboration Software Google Workspace Google Workspace Cloud Content Collaboration Software Box Box Cloud Content Collaboration Software DataLab DataLab Cloud Content Collaboration Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less OpenText products OpenText Business Network Cloud OpenText Business Network Cloud Supply Chain Management Software OpenText Developer Cloud OpenText Developer Cloud Low-Code Development Platforms OpenText Experience Cloud OpenText Experience Cloud Customer Experience Management Software OpenText Security &amp; Protection Cloud OpenText Security &amp; Protection Cloud Endpoint Protection Systems LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/mqgem-software-limited-mqscx/
MQSCX | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn MQGem Software Limited in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in MQSCX Message Queue Software by MQGem Software Limited See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About Extended MQSC (MQSCX) is a program which performs a similar function to the RUNMQSC program but improves on its usability, particularly when used in interactive mode. Many of the frustrating elements of RUNMQSC have been removed and entering MQSC commands is made faster, easier and less error prone. It also provides a powerful command language, including functions, making writing dynamic scripts and reports simplicity itself. Media Products media viewer No more previous content MQSCX Introduction Introducing the MQSCX Product, an IBM MQ Configuration and Scripting tool. This video will take the user through the basics of using the product. MQSCX Filtering This video demonstrates the various ways that MQSCX extends the standard filtering capabilities of the MQSC language making it far easier to display only those items you are interested in. MQSCX Control Language Introduction A brief introduction to the MQSCX Control Language. This video will introduce the concept of variables and show simple FOREACH loops. No more next content Similar products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software Texts Texts Message Queue Software Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Pro Edition for Eclipse Mosquitto Message Queue Software MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Unseen messenger - No last seen no blue tick Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less MQGem Software Limited products MO71 MO71 Message Queue Software MQEdit MQEdit Message Queue Software MQEV MQEV Message Queue Software MQGem Q MQGem Q Message Queue Software QLOAD QLOAD Message Queue Software Show more Show less LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/automattic-intensedebate/?trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_similar_products_section_product_link_result-card_full-click
IntenseDebate | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Automattic in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in IntenseDebate Commenting Systems by Automattic See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About IntenseDebate&#x27;s comment system enhances and encourages conversation on your blog or website. Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Thrive Comments Thrive Comments Commenting Systems Hyvor Talk Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Automattic products Day One Journal Day One Journal Jetpack Jetpack Server Backup Software Newspack Newspack Web Content Management (WCM) Systems Pocket Casts Pocket Casts Podcast Hosting Platforms Texts Texts Message Queue Software Tumblr Tumblr Social Networking Software Woo Woo E-Commerce Platforms WordPress VIP WordPress VIP Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Software WordPress.com WordPress.com Show more Show less LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/thrive-themes-thrive-comments/?trk=products_seo_search#main-content
Thrive Comments | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Thrive Themes in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Thrive Comments Commenting Systems by Thrive Themes See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About - Make Commenting Fun and Engaging - Thrive Comments brings the addictive triggers of social media and a conversion focus to your WordPress comments, through several innovative features like upvoting and downvoting, gamified comment incentives and an impressive number of after-comment-actions. Media Products media viewer No more previous content No more next content Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Hyvor Talk Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Thrive Themes products Thrive Optimize Thrive Optimize A/B Testing Software LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.notion.com/ja/product/docs
ドキュメント | Notion Notion Notionの機能 Notion AI 構築、文書作成、自動化をAIで エージェント 手動タスクを処理 エンタープライズサーチ 答えがすぐに見つかる AIミーティングノート AIによる完璧な文章 ドキュメント シンプルでパワフルなツール ナレッジベース すべてのナレッジが一か所に プロジェクト いろんなプロジェクトを上手に管理 サイト どんなコンテンツもすばやく公開 今すぐ試してみる AIのユースケースを見る Notion AIの機能を確認 マーケットプレイス 多様なニーズに対応したテンプレートがたくさん インテグレーション 使いたいアプリをNotionにすばやく接続 Webクリッパー ウェブからダウンロードしてNotionに保存 作業を素早くこなせるNotionデスクトップアプリをお試しください アプリをダウンロード メール カレンダー AI エンタープライズ 料金 もっと知る チーム エンジニアリング・プロダクト デザイン マーケティング IT チームの規模 スタートアップ SMB(中小企業) エンタープライズ 学生・教育関係者 学ぶ ヘルプセンター Notionアカデミー ユーザー事例 ブログ コミュニティ パートナープログラム 構築する API テンプレート セキュリティ コンサルタント 営業に問い合わせる ログイン Notionを無料で始める ドキュメント 次世代のメモ &amp; ドキュメント シンプルに、パワフルに、美しく。Notionの柔軟なビルディングブロックで、より効率的なコミュニケーションを。 Notionを無料で入手 デモの依頼 ミーティングのメモ 進捗とアクションアイテムで、人とプロジェクトをつなぎます。 テンプレートを複製する → テンプレートを複製する → デザインシステム 会社のすべてのデザインアセットを一か所に集約します。 テンプレートを複製する → テンプレートを複製する → プロジェクト要件 あらゆるタイプのプロジェクトに適合する、カスタマイズ可能なPRD。 テンプレートを複製する → テンプレートを複製する → ピッチデッキ あなたの会社のストーリーを生き生きと伝えます。 テンプレートを複製する → テンプレートを複製する → AI ミーティングノート AI ミーティングノート AI ミーティングノート AI ミーティングノート 単なるテキストや箇条書きにとどまらない コードスニペット 数十種類の言語のシンタックスハイライトに対応しています。 トグル セクションを折りたたんで、ドキュメントを読みやすくします。 画像と動画 LoomやYouTubeを直接埋め込んだり、端末から動画ファイルをアップロードしたりできます。 目次 クリックするとセクションへ移動し、自動的に更新されます。 チャート ライブチャートをあらゆるドキュメントに追加できます。 50種類以上のコンテンツタイプ ブロックが無限に入った箱のように、様々な種類のコンテンツを作成できます。 見つけやすいところにドキュメントを保存 すべてのチームのファイルを一目で確認 Notionのサイドバーは、どんな急成長にでも合わせてワークスペースを整理整頓します。 Notionでワークフローを効率化したことにより、時間を節約できるだけでなく、タスクの詳細や進捗状況を常に把握できるようになりました 若杉拓 トヨタ未来創生センター 同じページでチームの足並みを揃える コラボレーションや共同編集 ほかのユーザーによるコメントや編集のサジェストを許可します。「@」マークを入力して相手をメンションし、注意を引くことができます。 コメントを使って作業を非同期で進める フィードバックが集約されたビューにより、異なるタイムゾーンにいるメンバー間での作業が容易になります。 大勢が参加するミーティングも、ミーティングの議題をすばやく作成、かつインタラクティブで楽しめるものにできます。 Scott Stephens Kin + Carta、デザインオペレーションマネージャー PM、デザイナー、エンジニアなど、あらゆる職種に プロダクトマネージャー ロードマップを目標に結びつけ、何をいつリリースするのか、メンバー全員の理解と協力を促します。 PMのNotion活用事例を見る -&gt; デザイナー レビューラウンドを早め、リクエストの優先順位をつけ、期限を守ります。 デザイナーのNotion活用事例を見る -&gt; エンジニア スプリントやコーディングガイドライン、バグ修正などを一か所で管理することで、より早く機能をリリースできます。 エンジニアのNotion活用事例を見る -&gt; 同じ料金で、Wikiとプロジェクトが含まれています。 Wiki 情報が整理されておらず使いにくいワークスペースでは、迅速な作業は困難です。Notionでナレッジをすべて一元化して、そうした状況から脱却しませんか? プロジェクト チームや規模に関わらず、あらゆるタイプのプロジェクトを管理。 Figma、GitHubなどの情報を簡単に共有して、見ることができます。 インテグレーションをすべて見る → Figma 常に最新のデザインをチームで共有できます。 今すぐ試す → Amplitude リリース指標、テスト結果などを管理します。 今すぐ試す → GitHub プルリクエスト、イシュー、さらにはリポジトリをNotionに直接取り込むことができます。 今すぐ試す → Slack リンクを貼るだけで、ツールを切り替えなくてもメッセージ全文を見ることができます。 今すぐ試す → Jira 不具合の更新情報を確認したり、プロジェクト全体をデータベース化したりできます。 今すぐ試す → すべてのインテグレーションを見る ギャラリーに移動する → テンプレートを選択して始める テンプレートを見る → Mixpanelのデイリースタンドアップとタスク管理 テンプレートを試す → Notionのプロダクト要求仕様書 テンプレートを試す → Netflixのブランディングフレームワーク テンプレートを試す → 次のドキュメント作成はNotionで まずはお試しください。支払いとチームの追加は後から実施できます。 Notionを無料で入手 デモの依頼 日本語 Cookieの設定 © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 会社名 Notionについて 採用情報 セキュリティ ステータス 利用規約とプライバシー プライバシー権 ダウンロード iOS &amp; Android Mac &amp; Windows カレンダー Webクリッパー リソース ヘルプセンター 料金 ブログ コミュニティ インテグレーション テンプレート パートナープログラム Notion (ノーション) - エンタープライズ 小規模ビジネス パーソナル 詳しく見る →
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.notion.com/de/blog/how-teams-can-use-ai-meeting-notes-to-make-knowledge-automated-and
Wie Teams Smart Notes nutzen können, um Wissen zu automatisieren und umsetzbar zu machen Notion Funktionen Notion-KI Erschaffen, schreiben, automatisieren Agenten Übernehmen manuelle Aufgaben Enterprise Suche Finde Antworten in Sekundenschnelle Smart Notes Perfekt geschrieben von der KI Dokumente Einfach und leistungsstark Wissensdatenbank Bündle dein Wissen Projekte Verwalte jede Art von Projekt Websites Veröffentliche alles Mögliche im Handumdrehen Loslegen KI-Anwendungsfälle entdecken Schau dir an, wozu die Notion-KI in der Lage ist Marktplatz durchstöbern Vorlagen für alles Mögliche Einbindungen anzeigen Verbinde deine Apps mit Notion Web Clipper herunterladen Speichere Inhalte aus dem Web in Notion Teste die Desktop-App von Notion für mehr Geschwindigkeit App herunterladen Mail Calendar KI Enterprise Tarife Erkunden Teams Entwicklung und Produkt Design Marketing IT Teamgröße Start-ups KMUs Konzerne Bildungswesen Lernen Hilfe-Center Notion Academy Erfahrungsberichte von Kund/-innen Blog Community Partnerprogramme Entwickeln API Vorlagen Sicherheit Beratung Fordere eine Demo an Anmelden Nutze Notion kostenlos Alle Beiträge ← ← Alle Beiträge Veröffentlicht am 18. Juli 2025 in Für Teams Wie Teams Smart Notes nutzen können, um Wissen zu automatisieren und umsetzbar zu machen Lesezeit 6 min Diesen Beitrag teilen Es fängt immer gleich an. Das Team diskutiert intensiv über die Strategie. Der nächste Produkt-Launch, die nächste Marketingkampagne oder der nächste Social-Media-Moment, von dem alle überzeugt sind, dass er „viral“ gehen wird. Es werden Entscheidungen getroffen und Aktionselemente geplant. Doch als das Projekt drei Wochen später ins Stocken gerät, kann sich niemand mehr so recht erinnern, was eigentlich entschieden wurde, warum, oder wer dafür verantwortlich ist. Das ist das Paradoxe an den Meeting-Notizen: Gerade der Versuch, Wissen zu bewahren, hindert uns daran, es überhaupt erst zu erstellen. Das bekannte Problem mit Meeting-Notizen Teams haben schon immer gewusst, dass Meetings wichtiges und institutionelles Wissen generieren. Diese Unterhaltungen beinhalten die DNA der tatsächlichen Arbeit von Organisationen sowie jede Entscheidung, die die Richtung eines Produkts oder eines Unternehmens beeinflusst. Und wenn eben dieser Kontext nicht erfasst wird, müssen Teams immer wieder dieselben Diskussionen führen, frühere Entscheidungen in Frage stellen und verlieren mit der Zeit wertvolle Erkenntnisse. Doch die Art und Weise, wie wir normalerweise Notizen erstellen – wenn eine Person in der Ecke sitzt und eifrig tippt – erzeugt eine allgemeine Spannung. Die engagiertesten Teilnehmenden, die scharfe Fragen stellen und Entscheidungen vorantreiben, sind oft am schlechtesten in der Lage, das Geschehen, zu dokumentieren. Sie sind zu sehr damit beschäftigt, nachzudenken, Punkte miteinander zu verbinden und das Gespräch zu steuern. Gleichzeitig wird der festgelegte Protokollant zum passiven Beobachter, der sich eher auf das Mitschreiben als auf seinen Beitrag konzentriert. Und das Ergebnis? Eine unstimmige und oft unvollständige Dokumentation, die zwar das „Was“ erfasst, aber das „Warum“ auslässt. Aktionselemente gehen in Zusammenfassungen oder unvollständigen Listen unter. Bei wichtigen Entscheidungen fehlt dann der Kontext. Nachbesprechungen finden auf den Fluren statt, weil das offizielle Protokoll die tatsächlichen Nuancen des Meetings nicht widerspiegelt. Und selbst wenn Teams umfassende Notizen machen , landen n diese oft verstreut in persönlichen Notizen, in E-Mail-Threads oder abgespeichert in Dokumenten, die niemand findet, wenn man sie braucht. Die Informationen sind vorhanden, aber nicht zugänglich, wenn Entscheidungen getroffen werden müssen oder wenn neue Kolleg/-innen verstehen müssen, wie das Team dorthin gekommen ist, wo es heute steht. Diese Fragmentierung von Informationen hat ihren Preis. Projekte verzögern sich, weil Teams Zeit damit verschwenden, nach dem nötigen Kontext zu suchen. Neue Mitarbeitende haben Schwierigkeiten, die Hintergründe bestehender Systemen nachzuvollziehen. Selbst wer nur ein einziges Gespräch verpasst hat, kann sich für das nächste unvorbereitet fühlen. Die geistige Belastung, vergangene Entscheidungen erinnern und rekonstruieren zu müssen, lenkt von zukunftsorientierter Arbeit ab. Kann ich KI dafür nutzen, Meeting-Notizen zu erstellen? Zum Glück verändern KI-Tools diese Dynamik grundlegend, da sie den Zielkonflikt zwischen Teilnahme und Dokumentation auflösen. Anstatt Teams vor die Wahl zwischen guten Gesprächen und guter Dokumentation zu stellen, übernimmt KI die routinemäßige Protokollierung, während sich Menschen auf die strategische Zusammenarbeit konzentrieren können. Moderne KI-Tools zur Notizenerstellung können wichtige Schlüsselmomente in Gesprächen erkennen, umsetzbare Elemente herausfiltern und Informationen so organisieren, dass sie direkt nutzbar werden. Der Effekt macht sich direkt bemerkbar: Wenn die Dokumentation ganz automatisch erfolgt, verbessern sich auch die Meetings. Mitarbeitende beteiligen sich aktiver, wenn sie sich nicht darum sorgen müssen, alles mitzuschreiben: Diskussionen verlaufen freier, und Aktionselemente werden klar benannt und im richtigen Kontext verortet. Das Fazit ist klar: Die menschliche Aufmerksamkeit kann sich auf die kreative und strategische Arbeit konzentrieren, die Unternehmen wirlich voranbringen. Warum Teams KI für Meeting-Notizen nutzen sollten Die KI-Meeting-Assistenten, die diese Meeting-Notizen erstellen, lösen ganz grundlegende Probleme, indem sie die Erfassung automatisieren und es Teams ermöglichen, sich auf strategischere und kreativere Arbeiten zu fokussieren. Hier sind einige konkrete Möglichkeiten, wie Smart Notes die Arbeitsweise deines Teams verbessern können: Erfasse alles ohne Ablenkung. Die KI transkribiert jedes Wort, damit sich die Teilnehmenden auf die Unterhaltung konzentrieren können. Niemand muss die Aufmerksamkeit zwischen Zuhören und Dokumentieren aufteilen, was zu besseren Diskussionen und einer kreativeren Problemlösung führt. Zum Beispiel können sich Produktteams bei Design-Reviews ganz auf visuelles Feedback und gemeinsames Iterieren konzentrieren, anstatt jede Designentscheidung manuell festhalten zu müssen. Einheitliche und umsetzbare Zusammenfassungen. KI kann sehr zuverlässig wichtige Entscheidungen, Aktionselemente und Diskussionspunkte anhand immer gleicher Kriterien identifizieren. Teams können sich darauf verlassen, nutzbare Zusammenfassungen in einem vorhersehbaren Format zu erhalten, sodass sich relevante Informationen leicht erfassen und gezielt umsetzen lassen. Wenn zum Beispiel ein Führungsteam eine strategische Planungsbesprechung durchführt, erhält es denselben Detaillierungsgrad und dieselbe Struktur, unabhängig davon, wie komplex die Diskussion ist oder wer dabei im Raum sitzt. Einbindung in bestehende Arbeit. Moderne KI-Tools für Meeting-Notizen können direkt mit den Tools und Prozessen verbunden werden, die Teams bereits nutzen, anstatt ein weiteres Informationssilo zu schaffen. Aktionselemente fließen in Aufgabenverwaltungssysteme ein und Entscheidungen sind mit den entsprechenden Projektdokumenten verknüpft. Marketingteams, die Kampagnen-Planungssitzungen durchführen, können direkt auf Content-Kalender, Creative Briefs und Launch-Pläne verlinken, sodass alle Zugriff auf die relevanten Informationen haben. Durchsuchbare Meeting-Historie. Mit zunehmendem Wachstum wird das institutionelle Wissen zu einem Wettbewerbsvorteil und das richtige KI-Tool für Meeting-Notizen macht jedes Meeting sofort durchsuchbar. Anstatt sich daran zu erinnern, in welchem Meeting ein bestimmtes Thema besprochen wurde, können Teams den relevanten Kontext ganz einfach finden, indem sie in ihrem Workspace danach suchen. Ein Engineering Lead kann nach einem bestimmten Fachbegriff suchen und sofort die Diskussionen finden, die zu den aktuellen Architekturentscheidungen geführt haben, selbst aus Gesprächen, die vor Monaten stattfanden. Diese wichtigen Gespräche bilden auch den Kontext für verwandte KI-Tools, wie z. B. Enterprise Search und den Recherche-Modus der Notion-KI. Notion Smart Notes: Entwickelt für besser vernetzte Zusammenarbeit Während viele Tools – von Otter über Fireflies bis hin zu Fathom – Meetings transkribieren und zusammenfassen können, bietet Notion Smart Notes Teams ein perfektes Meeting-Gedächtnis , direkt dort, wo sie ohnehin arbeiten. Anstatt isolierte Besprechungsprotokolle in einem separaten Tool zu erstellen, werden Notion Smart Notes automatisch Teil der Wissensdatenbank deines Teams. Am wichtigsten ist aber vielleicht, dass Notion Smart Notes eine natürliche und direkte Nachbereitung ermöglicht. Da sich die Notizen in demselben Workspace befinden, in dem auch die Teams ihre Projekte verwalten, Aufgaben verfolgen und zusammenarbeiten, ist der Weg von einem Meeting zur Aktion fast unmittelbar, insbesondere dann, wenn du eine Vorlage für Meeting-Notizen verwendest . Aktionselemente gehen nicht verloren oder werden vergessen – sie können mit nur wenigen Klicks in eine Aufgabe oder ein Projekt umgewandelt werden. Und sobald die Meeting-Notizen erstellt sind, können sie mit Enterprise Search sofort durchsucht werden. Wenn jemand verstehen muss, wie eine Entscheidung getroffen wurde oder wie die nächsten Schritte aussehen, kann die Person in Meeting-Notizen, Projektdokumentationen und Team-Datenbanken gleichzeitig suchen. Kollektives Wissen bleibt nicht länger ungenutzt, da es tatsächlich gefunden werden kann. Erste Schritte mit Smart Notes Du bist bereit, Smart Notes einzuführen – wie geht es dann weiter? Wähle ein Tool , das zu deinem aktuellen Ökosystem passt. Nutzt du Notion? Slack? Google Workspace? Microsoft Teams? Teste es in einem risikoarmen Umfeld (z. B. bei einem internen Brainstorming), bevor du es in wichtigen Produkt- oder Kundenbesprechungen einführst. Binde es in dein Aufgabenmanagement ein , sodass die Aktionselemente direkt an die zuständigen Personen weitergeleitet werden. Bestimmt internen eine/-n Ansprechpartner/-in , um dafür zu sorgen, dass die Teams mit den neuen KI-Workflows vertraut sind. KI ist die Zukunft der Meeting-Dokumentation Kannst du KI nutzen, um Meeting-Notizen zu erstellen? Absolut! Es gibt den Teilnehmenden die Freiheit, sich auf die strategische Seite der Meetings zu konzentrieren – Fragen zu stellen, Ideen einzubringen und die Richtung zu klären – während automatisch Entscheidungen, Aktionselemente und Begründungen erzeugt werden. Die Zukunft der Arbeit hängt von Teams ab, die schnell agieren können und gleichzeitig den Kontext im Blick behalten. Notion Smart Notes bietet beides: die Geschwindigkeit automatisierter Dokumentation kombiniert mit dem Kontext integrierten Wissensmanagements. Wenn deine Meeting-Notizen mit allem anderen verbunden sind, was dein Team erstellt, wird jedes Gespräch zu einem Teil deines Wettbewerbsvorteils. Diesen Beitrag teilen Jetzt testen Lege im Internet oder auf dem Desktop los Wir haben auch passende Mac- und Windows-Apps. Wir haben auch passende iOS- und Android-Apps. Web-App Teilen Registrieren Desktop-App Suchen Updates Einstellungen und Mitglieder Neue Seite Vorlagen Importieren Papierkorb Neue Seite Teilen Mac Windows Apple App-Store Google App Store Verwendest du Notion bei der Arbeit? Demo anfordern 4:19 Aus dem App-Store herunterladen Deutsch Cookie-Einstellungen © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 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2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/uas/login?session_redirect=%2Fproducts%2Freddit-com-reddit&amp;trk=products_details_guest_primary_call_to_action
LinkedIn Login, Sign in | LinkedIn Sign in Sign in with Apple Sign in with a passkey By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . or Email or phone Password Show Forgot password? Keep me logged in Sign in We’ve emailed a one-time link to your primary email address Click on the link to sign in instantly to your LinkedIn account. If you don’t see the email in your inbox, check your spam folder. Resend email Back New to LinkedIn? Join now Agree & Join LinkedIn By clicking Continue, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement , Privacy Policy , and Cookie Policy . LinkedIn © 2026 User Agreement Privacy Policy Community Guidelines Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Send Feedback Language العربية (Arabic) বাংলা (Bangla) Čeština (Czech) Dansk (Danish) Deutsch (German) Ελληνικά (Greek) English (English) Español (Spanish) فارسی (Persian) Suomi (Finnish) Français (French) हिंदी (Hindi) Magyar (Hungarian) Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) Italiano (Italian) עברית (Hebrew) 日本語 (Japanese) 한국어 (Korean) मराठी (Marathi) Bahasa Malaysia (Malay) Nederlands (Dutch) Norsk (Norwegian) ਪੰਜਾਬੀ (Punjabi) Polski (Polish) Português (Portuguese) Română (Romanian) Русский (Russian) Svenska (Swedish) తెలుగు (Telugu) ภาษาไทย (Thai) Tagalog (Tagalog) Türkçe (Turkish) Українська (Ukrainian) Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese) 简体中文 (Chinese (Simplified)) 正體中文 (Chinese (Traditional))
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/snippyly-superflow/?trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_similar_products_section_product_link_result-card_full-click#main-content
Superflow | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Velt in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Superflow Commenting Systems by Velt See who's skilled in this Add as skill Try now Report this product About Superflow enables you to collaborate on‍ live websites like you collaborate on Google Docs or Figma. You can comment directly on website layouts, components &amp; copy without leaving the live site. This product is intended for Designer Founder Developer Co-Founder Web Developer Agency Owner Product Manager Product Designer Marketing Manager Marketing Specialist Media Products media viewer No more previous content Introducing Superflow Adding comments on desktop and mobile websites. No more next content Featured customers of Superflow Harvey. Advertising Services 802 followers Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems IntenseDebate IntenseDebate Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Thrive Comments Thrive Comments Commenting Systems Hyvor Talk Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Velt products Velt Velt Software Development Kits (SDK) LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://github.com/baiwusanyu-c
baiwusanyu-c (白雾三语) · GitHub Skip to content Navigation Menu Toggle navigation Sign in Appearance settings Platform AI CODE CREATION GitHub Copilot Write better code with AI GitHub Spark Build and deploy intelligent apps GitHub Models Manage and compare prompts MCP Registry New Integrate external tools DEVELOPER WORKFLOWS Actions Automate any workflow Codespaces Instant dev environments Issues Plan and track work Code Review Manage code changes APPLICATION SECURITY GitHub Advanced Security Find and fix vulnerabilities Code security Secure your code as you build Secret protection Stop leaks before they start EXPLORE Why GitHub Documentation Blog Changelog Marketplace View all features Solutions BY COMPANY SIZE Enterprises Small and medium teams Startups Nonprofits BY USE CASE App Modernization DevSecOps DevOps CI/CD View all use cases BY INDUSTRY Healthcare Financial services Manufacturing Government View all industries View all solutions Resources EXPLORE BY TOPIC AI Software Development DevOps Security View all topics EXPLORE BY TYPE Customer stories Events &amp; webinars Ebooks &amp; reports Business insights GitHub Skills SUPPORT &amp; SERVICES Documentation Customer support Community forum Trust center Partners Open Source COMMUNITY GitHub Sponsors Fund open source developers PROGRAMS Security Lab Maintainer Community Accelerator Archive Program REPOSITORIES Topics Trending Collections Enterprise ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS Enterprise platform AI-powered developer platform AVAILABLE ADD-ONS GitHub Advanced Security Enterprise-grade security features Copilot for Business Enterprise-grade AI features Premium Support Enterprise-grade 24/7 support Pricing Search or jump to... Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests... --> Search Clear Search syntax tips Provide feedback --> We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously. Include my email address so I can be contacted Cancel Submit feedback Saved searches Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly --> Name Query To see all available qualifiers, see our documentation . Cancel Create saved search Sign in Sign up Appearance settings Resetting focus You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. Dismiss alert {{ message }} baiwusanyu-c Follow Overview Repositories 140 Projects 0 Packages 0 Stars 587 Sponsoring 0 More Overview Repositories Projects Packages Stars Sponsoring baiwusanyu-c Follow 🔥 再次入门 rust 中... 白雾三语 baiwusanyu-c 🔥 再次入门 rust 中... Follow 最近变成写react的拉磨驴了 812 followers &middot; 163 following @vue-vine @vuejs Chengdu 17:30 (UTC +08:00) czh740132583@gmail.com X @baiwusanyu Achievements x3 x2 x3 x3 Achievements x3 x2 x3 x3 Organizations Block or Report Block or report baiwusanyu-c --> Block user Prevent this user from interacting with your repositories and sending you notifications. Learn more about blocking users . You must be logged in to block users. Add an optional note Maximum 250 characters. Please don&#39;t include any personal information such as legal names or email addresses. Markdown supported. This note will be visible to only you. Block user Report abuse Contact GitHub support about this user’s behavior. Learn more about reporting abuse . Report abuse Overview Repositories 140 Projects 0 Packages 0 Stars 587 Sponsoring 0 More Overview Repositories Projects Packages Stars Sponsoring baiwusanyu-c / README .md 👋 Hi there, I'm 白雾三语. (or ByWu) 🍤🍻 Front-end architect 🍓🥝 Open source enthusiast 🏔 I like natural scenery Pinned Loading vuejs/ core vuejs/core Public 🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web. TypeScript 52.7k 9k nuxt/ nuxt nuxt/nuxt Public The Full-Stack Vue Framework. TypeScript 59.3k 5.5k vuejs/ vue-vapor vuejs/vue-vapor Public archive Vue Vapor is a variant of Vue that offers rendering without the Virtual DOM. TypeScript 2.4k 116 ikun-svelte/ ikun-ui ikun-svelte/ikun-ui Public 🐔A Svelte.js based UnoCSS UI library that allows you to make websites TypeScript 1.5k 93 vue-vine/ vue-vine vue-vine/vue-vine Public Another style of writing Vue components. TypeScript 1.4k 69 unplugin/ unplugin-vue-cssvars unplugin/unplugin-vue-cssvars Public 🌀 A vue plugin that allows you to use vue's CSSVars feature in css files TypeScript 113 21 Something went wrong, please refresh the page to try again. If the problem persists, check the GitHub status page or contact support . Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Footer &copy; 2026 GitHub,&nbsp;Inc. Footer navigation Terms Privacy Security Status Community Docs Contact Manage cookies Do not share my personal information You can’t perform that action at this time.
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.notion.com/th/security
Notion Security &amp; Compliance | SOC 2 Certified, trusted by Enterprises Notion ฟีเจอร์ Notion AI สร้าง เขียน ทำให้เป็นอัตโนมัติ เอเจนต์ จัดการงานที่ต้องทำเอง Enterprise Search ค้นหาคำตอบทันที AI Meeting Notes ให้ AI ช่วยเขียนได้อย่างเพอร์เฟ็กต์ เอกสาร เรียบง่ายและทรงพลัง ฐานความรู้ แหล่งรวมความรู้ของคุณ โปรเจ็กต์ จัดการโปรเจ็กต์ ไซต์ เผยแพร่ทุกอย่างได้ทันใจ เริ่มต้นใช้งาน สำรวจกรณีการใช้งาน AI ดูว่า Notion AI ทำอะไรได้บ้าง เลือกดูมาร์เก็ตเพลส เทมเพลตสำหรับทุกอย่าง ดูการรวมระบบ เชื่อมต่อแอพของคุณกับ Notion ดาวน์โหลด Web Clipper บันทึกจากเว็บมายัง Notion ลองใช้แอพ Notion บนเดสก์ท็อปเลย จะได้สัมผัสประสบการณ์ที่เร็วกว่าเดิม ดาวน์โหลดแอพ อีเมล ปฏิทิน AI Enterprise ราคา สำรวจ ทีม วิศวกรรมและผลิตภัณฑ์ การออกแบบ การตลาด IT ขนาดทีม สตาร์ทอัพ SMBs Enterprise การศึกษา เรียนรู้ ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ Notion Academy เรื่องราวของลูกค้า บล็อก ชุมชน โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ สร้าง API เทมเพลต การรักษาความปลอดภัย ที่ปรึกษา ขอรับการสาธิต เข้าสู่ระบบ Security &amp; privacy Your security, safety, and privacy is our top priority — and we build Notion accordingly. Security Notion takes a security-by-design approach to protecting your data. Our team continues to make investments so you can use Notion with confidence. Our security practices → Security infrastructure Notion’s infrastructure is designed with layers of protection to help ensure your data is secure while transmitted, stored, or processed. Protections include but are not limited to encryption, least privilege access, secure software development, and a public bug bounty program . Operational security Our information security team continuously implements new security controls and monitors Notion for malicious activity across our infrastructure, networks, and assets. Product security Notion provides a robust set of in product data protection and admin controls for greater visibility and control over our data. Enterprise admins can deploy Notion to their organizations with SSO via SAML 2.0, provision users through SCIM, and track activity with the audit log features. Enterprise admins can also fine tune permission controls and guests, and manage team organizations. Privacy Notion maintains a comprehensive privacy compliance program and is committed to partnering with its customers and vendors on privacy compliance efforts. This page highlights some of the key aspects of our program. How we handle your data At Notion our team is dedicated to developing and implementing data privacy processes and safeguards that meet industry standards and best practices. We conduct ongoing training for our teams to ensure that they are up to speed with developments in legislation and essential privacy and security practices. Every Notion employee and contractor signs up to non-disclosure terms to maintain the confidentiality and security of your data. Notion also holds any vendors that handle personal data to the same data management, security, and privacy practices and standards to which we hold ourselves. Agreements At Notion we strive to keep all of our agreements up to date with the latest regulations and industry standards. Our Master Subscription Agreement and Data Processing Addendum describe in detail Notion’s data privacy processes, standards, safeguards and our compliance with data protection legislation. To ensure that our terms track with the GDPR, CCPA and other global privacy standards we continually have our terms assessed by leading privacy experts in multiple jurisdictions. Data governance Data governance relates to the policies and procedures that dictate how data is procured and used throughout its life cycle. From creation and collection to processing, distribution, storage and deletion. Notion’s commitment to data governance is key to keeping our users data secure, private, accurate, and accessible. Policies At Notion we want to be as transparent as possible with our customers about how we collect, process, store, and use their personal data. In order to achieve this Notion maintains comprehensive and detailed policies regarding how we handle your personal information. These policies describe in detail how our users can exercise their rights with regard to their data. GDPR The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is a comprehensive data protection law that governs the collection of and use of personal data of EU residents, and that allows data subjects to exercise control over their data. As the GDPR is widely considered to be the most stringent global privacy standard, we have mapped our privacy program to the GDPR and other global privacy regulations. Compliance Notion maintains a comprehensive security and privacy program to provide advanced security features in our Enterprise plan that are designed to protect your data in accordance with various regulatory and industry standards. Notion has been attested by independent third-party auditors. If you’d like a copy of the compliance reports, please reach out to  [email&#160;protected]  for our Trust portal. SOC 2 Type 2 The SOC 2 Type 2 is an audit report performed by an independent third-party certified by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) to evaluate a service organization&#x27;s controls related to the Trust Services Criteria (TSC). The SOC 2 Type 2 report assesses the effectiveness of these controls over a period of time and is intended to provide assurance to customers and stakeholders that the organization has implemented adequate controls to protect their data. ISO 27001, ISO 27701, ISO 27017, ISO 27018 ISO is an international standard development organization, and Notion has achieved certifications for four ISO standards: ISO 27001, ISO 27701, ISO 27017, and ISO 27018. The standards outline requirements for establishing, implementing, and continuously improving Notion’s Information Security Management System (ISMS) and Privacy Information Management System (PIMS). HIPAA The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) is a US federal law that was enacted in 1996 that requires the protection and confidential handling of protected health information (PHI) by covered entities such as healthcare providers, health plans, and healthcare clearinghouses, as well as their business associates. Provided businesses subject to HIPAA leverage the Notion Enterprise-grade security features described in our Help Center article here and sign Notion’s Business Associate Agreement they may process PHI within their Notion workspace. BSI C5 (Cloud Computing Compliance Controls Catalogue)  BSI C5 is a security standard developed by the German Federal Office for Information Security. It outlines baseline security controls for cloud service providers. C5 includes additional control requirements relating to data location, service provisioning, place of jurisdiction, existing certifications, information disclosure obligations, and a full-service description. Artificial intelligence (AI) governance Notion leverages AI to improve the core product experience and provide real value to our users in their day-to-day work. We strive to do this in a way that’s trustworthy, reliable, and user-centric. Safe &amp; secure: Notion takes a safety-first approach to artificial intelligence. Our AI features and partners undergo security and legal reviews prior to Notion utilizing their services. These security practices apply to our AI features and AI development process. Our security practices → Transparency: At Notion, we want to be transparent with our customers about our AI products. In order to achieve this Notion maintains a Help Center and Terms and Privacy page to outline how our AI products’ functionality and privacy practices. Our terms &amp; privacy policy → Empowering: We aim to create AI-enhanced experiences that aren’t just interesting — but rather, genuinely useful in your day-to-day work. To achieve this, the development of our AI-powered features is grounded in extensive research to understand the needs of our users. Data governance: Your data is yours. Our AI Subprocessors are prohibited from using Customer Data to train models.  The controls and permissions with respect to access and use of customer data will be respected. Reliability Notion is relied on from creatives to cooperations - as such, everyone deserves a platform they can count on. With robust uptime guarantees and multi-level redundancy, you can trust Notion will be there when you need it. Enterprise-grade Infrastructure We partner with AWS and Cloudflare to build a world-class architecture and to ensure users that Notion is built for maximum business resilience. High availability &amp; Failover Notion keeps your data safe by having multiple zones for redundancy, have a comprehensive backup program, and regularly testing our disaster recovery and business continuity program. Notion offers a guaranteed uptime of 99.9%, so users can trust that we’ll be there when you need us. For Notion’s service level terms, please refer here . Service Status Notion makes it transparent and easy with a real-time view of Notion’s availability through the status page . Learn about our enterprise plan Interested in advanced security and control? Let us know your needs and we can help! ปิดกล่องโต้ตอบ ส่งเรียบร้อยแล้ว ชื่อ * นามสกุล * อีเมลที่ทำงาน * ตำแหน่งงาน * ชื่อบริษัท * ขนาดบริษัท * เลือก... พนักงาน 1-99 คน พนักงาน 100-299 คน พนักงาน 300-1999 คน พนักงาน 2000 คนขึ้นไป ประเทศหรือภูมิภาค * เลือก... เบอร์โทร (ไม่บังคับ) เหตุผลที่ติดต่อ * เลือก... ต้องการพูดคุยเกี่ยวกับกรณีใช้งานสำหรับองค์กร ต้องการดูตัวเลือกราคา ต้องการดูการสาธิตผลิตภัณฑ์ กำลังมองหาราคาสำหรับนักเรียน/องค์กรไม่แสวงหาผลกำไร กำลังมองหาการสนับสนุนด้านผลิตภัณฑ์หรือการเรียกเก็บเงิน อื่นๆ (โปรดระบุรายละเอียดเพิ่มเติมด้านล่าง) กรอกรายละเอียดเพิ่มเติม (ไม่บังคับ) ติดต่อฝ่ายขาย รหัสผ่าน ภาษาไทย การตั้งค่าคุกกี้ © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. บริษัท เกี่ยวกับเรา ร่วมงานกับเรา ความปลอดภัย สถานะ เงื่อนไขและความเป็นส่วนตัว สิทธิความเป็นส่วนตัวของคุณ ดาวน์โหลด iOS และ Android Mac และ Windows ปฏิทิน Web Clipper แหล่งข้อมูล ศูนย์ช่วยเหลือ ราคา บล็อก ชุมชน การรวมระบบ เทมเพลต โปรแกรมพาร์ทเนอร์ Notion สำหรับ Enterprise ธุรกิจขนาดเล็ก ส่วนตัว สำรวจเพิ่ม →
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.notion.com/ja/product/enterprise-search
Notion AIによるエンタープライズサーチ | 組織のあらゆるツールを一括検索 Notion Notionの機能 Notion AI 構築、文書作成、自動化をAIで エージェント 手動タスクを処理 エンタープライズサーチ 答えがすぐに見つかる AIミーティングノート AIによる完璧な文章 ドキュメント シンプルでパワフルなツール ナレッジベース すべてのナレッジが一か所に プロジェクト いろんなプロジェクトを上手に管理 サイト どんなコンテンツもすばやく公開 今すぐ試してみる AIのユースケースを見る Notion AIの機能を確認 マーケットプレイス 多様なニーズに対応したテンプレートがたくさん インテグレーション 使いたいアプリをNotionにすばやく接続 Webクリッパー ウェブからダウンロードしてNotionに保存 作業を素早くこなせるNotionデスクトップアプリをお試しください アプリをダウンロード メール カレンダー AI エンタープライズ 料金 もっと知る チーム エンジニアリング・プロダクト デザイン マーケティング IT チームの規模 スタートアップ SMB(中小企業) エンタープライズ 学生・教育関係者 学ぶ ヘルプセンター Notionアカデミー ユーザー事例 ブログ コミュニティ パートナープログラム 構築する API テンプレート セキュリティ コンサルタント 営業に問い合わせる ログイン Notionを無料で始める エンタープライズサーチ 一括検索で、仕事の効率がぐんと上がる。 検索結果は数秒、詳細なレポートはわずか数分で。 すべてチームのワークスペース内で完結します。 Notionを無料で入手 デモ動画を見る 一時停止 どうやら、広告ブロッカーが動画の再生をブロックしているようです。 以前は解決に何時間もかかっていたデバッグも、今ではNotion AIに頼むだけで、わずか数分で済むようになりました。 John Allard OpenAI、エンジニアリング担当 どこに隠れていても、必ず答えを見つけ出します。 アプリを横断して検索 AIコネクターを使えば、お気に入りの業務ツールとの連携が可能。Notion AIを使って一括検索し、必要な情報を取得できます。 心地よい回答の速さ 最新情報に基づく、文脈に合った回答をすぐに得られるので、作業が滞りません。 信頼できる検索結果 すべての回答には、検証済みの内容と出典が含まれ、ユーザーが選択した情報源のみが使用されます。 Notion AIのおかげで、新入社員は必要な情報をすぐに見つけることができるので、オンボーディングの時間を数日から数週間短縮できています Scott Entwistle Remote、シニアリクルーター 業務時間を週に1日分は短縮できています!Notion AIを使うと、ナレッジを素早く処理して、正確な回答を得ることができます。さらに、新しいコンテンツの下書きや、その他のタスクの準備も、わずか数秒でできます Matthias Lambrecht ecosio、プロダクトオーナー Notion AIは本当にすごいです。その存在すら知らなくて検索できなかった組織内のナレッジを、見つけ出してくれます Faith Lierheimer dbt Labs、シニアテクニカルインストラクター リサーチモードは調査作業を効率化します。 あらゆる情報源やWebからデータを集め、数分で詳細なレポートを作成、保存・共有できます。 作業時間が大幅に短縮 利用中のワークスペース、アプリ、さらにウェブ上の情報も、数分で解析できます。 思考の負担を軽減 Notion AIによって、質問が段階的なリサーチプロセスに変換されます。 高速なレポート作成 完成度の高いレポートを瞬時に保存、共有できます。手作業は不要です。 文書作成をゼロから始める必要はありません。 データが散在しても難なくまとまります。 JiraチケットやGitHubのプルリクエスト、SlackやMicrosoft Teamsでのチームのやり取りなどを含めて、プロジェクトの要約を作成できます。 顧客調査レポートが、数分で完了します。 フィードバックを素早く把握し、製品開発を加速。リサーチモードでは、ユーザーの声、Zendeskのチケット(近日対応予定)を分析し、ウェブ上の有効なフィードバック情報も検出できます。 万全の準備で会議に参加できます。 たとえば、顧客会議が控えている場合には、リサーチモードを使えば、社内ドキュメント、ウェブ、そして Salesforce(近日対応予定)から競合他社の情報を収集して会議に備えます。 自分に合った方法で検索、分析しましょう。 AIモデルを自分で選択 あなたのワークスペースで、希望のAIモデルを選び、チャットを開始できます。料金無料、あなたのデータがAIモデル学習用に使用されることはありません。 アップロードされたPDFを検索 Notion AIは、Notionワークスペース、Google Drive、SharePoint、OneDriveにアップロードされたPDFを検索できます。 安心して検索できます。 Notion AIセキュリティの詳細はこちら→ 権限設定を遵守 Notion AIは、ユーザーご自身がアクセス権限を有する情報のみを抽出するため、セキュリティが保たれています。ご利用の連携アプリの情報に関しても同様です。 ユーザーのデータは学習に使用されません Notionは、ユーザーデータのモデル学習への使用を禁止する契約をAIサブプロセッサーと結んでいます。 セキュリティとデータ保護要件 SOC 2(Type 2)、ISO 27001、GDPR、CCPAに準拠し、ゼロデータ保持ポリシーに対応(エンタープライズのみ)。 暗号化プロトコル Notion AIの使用中、あなたのデータはTLS 1.2以上のプロトコルで通信中に暗号化されます。 検索範囲を自在に管理 検索対象のアプリ、情報源(インターネット等)、AIモデルは、ユーザーが任意で選択。すべて自分でコントロールできます。 何でもこなす多機能AIワークスペース。料金はシンプル。 無料で試す → 相場料金 Notion エンタープライズサーチ:約US$35/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています チャットボット:約US$20/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています 会議の文字起こし:約US$18/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています 文書作成ツール:約US$20/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています メール管理ツール:約US$30/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています カレンダー管理ツール:約US$15/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています チームWiki:約US$10/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています プロジェクト管理ツール:約US$10/ユーザー ✔️ 含まれています 合計:US$150以上/ユーザー 合計:US$20ドルから/ユーザー よくあるご質問 Notion AIは、どのような方法で、複数のアプリを横断して検索するのですか? Notion AIは、AIコネクタを活用して、ユーザーの権限設定に基づき、ご利用の業務ツール内のコンテンツをインデックス化することにより、組織内のナレッジを検索します。質問を受けると、Slackのメッセージ、Google Drive上のファイルやPDF、Jiraのチケット、GitHubのIssueやプルリクエスト、その他の連携アプリを検索し、最も関連性の高い情報を迅速に取得します。 Notion AIは安全ですか? はい、安全です。Notion AIは、ユーザーがアクセス権限を有する情報のみを表示します。SOC 2(Type 2)、ISO 27001、GDPR(一般データ保護規則)、CCPAなどの厳格なセキュリティ基準に準拠しており、エンタープライズプランではデータ保持をしない「ゼロデータ保持ポリシー」に対応しています。 Notion AIは、複数の情報源からレポートを作成できますか? もちろん作成可能です。リサーチモードを使えば、Norion AIが連携アプリやウェブ上のデータを分析し、即時共有可能な詳細なレポートを作成します。これにより、何日もかかるリサーチの手間を減らすことができます。 Notion AIと連携できるツールを教えてください。 現在、Slack、Google Drive、GitHub、Jira、Microsoft Teams、SharePoint、OneDriveなどのアプリとの連携が可能です。さらに今後、Linear、Gmail、Salesforce、Zendesk、Boxなどへの対応も近日予定されています。こうした連携により、社内外のあらゆるナレッジソースを網羅的に横断する、統合検索を実現できます。 Notion AIの検索対象とする情報源を自分で選択できますか? はい、選択できます。Notion AIの検索対象と検索方法は、ユーザーにより決定されます。検索対象に含むアプリ、ドキュメント、ウェブの情報源を任意で選択することにより、ユーザーは、検索体験を完全に自分自身でコントロールすることができます。 Notion AIは、従来のエンタープライズ水準の検索ツールとどう違うのですか? 従来の検索ツールとは異なり、Notion AIの機能は、単にファイルを見つけ出すことに限られません。質問の意図を理解し、出典付きの最新情報を提示し、複雑な問いに対しては論理的に分析を行い、数分で詳細なリサーチレポートを生成することができます。 日本語 Cookieの設定 © 2026 Notion Labs, Inc. 会社名 Notionについて 採用情報 セキュリティ ステータス 利用規約とプライバシー プライバシー権 ダウンロード iOS &amp; Android Mac &amp; Windows カレンダー Webクリッパー リソース ヘルプセンター 料金 ブログ コミュニティ インテグレーション テンプレート パートナープログラム Notion (ノーション) - エンタープライズ 小規模ビジネス パーソナル 詳しく見る →
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/categories/note-taking-software?trk=organization_guest_main_product_card_category_link
Best Note-Taking Software | Products | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Clear text Used by Used by Consultant (3) Founder (3) Student (3) Chief Executive Officer (3) Lawyer (2) See all products Find top products in Note-Taking Software category Software used to make brief records of plans, ideas, and reminders. - Organize key information with text, lists, and audio memos - Store multiple notes in searchable format - Collaborate on projects and share notes across devices 89 results Evernote Note-Taking Software by Evernote Take notes anywhere. Find information faster. Share ideas with anyone. Meeting notes, web pages, projects, to-do lists—with Evernote as your note taking app, nothing falls through the cracks. View product Granola Note-Taking Software by Granola The AI notepad for people in back-to-back meetings. You jot the things that matter to you (like a regular notepad) and Granola transcribes in the background. When the meeting ends, Granola uses AI to enhance your notes and make them great. You can chat with Granola about your meeting notes: ask it to recall things, analyse themes across notes or to take actions, like writing a follow up email. No bots join your calls, and Granola works with every meeting platform on Mac or Windows. And you can use it in person or on outbound phone calls on iPhone. View product Standard Notes Note-Taking Software by Proton Standard Notes is a free, secure note-taking app with powerful end-to-end encryption, unparalleled privacy features, and seamless cross-platform syncing on unlimited devices. View product Simplenote Note-Taking Software by Automattic The simplest way to keep notes. Light, clean, and free. Simplenote is now available for iOS, Android, Mac, and the web. View product Goodnotes 6 Note-Taking Software by Goodnotes Goodnotes turns complexity into clarity. Goodnotes 6 - Notes Reimagined. View product Find products trusted by professionals in your network See which products are used by connections in your network and those that share similar job titles Sign in to view full insights AI Meeting Assistant Note-Taking Software by Avoma Get customizable instant AI meeting notes and auto update CRM fields. Transform the way your team works with Avoma’s AI Meeting Assistant. Record, transcribe, and analyze conversations to save 4+ hours each week, eliminating the manual work that slows teams down. Avoma organizes your meeting notes with custom templates. It breaks conversations into smart chapters, and drafts follow-up emails in seconds. Get instant answers about past meetings with Ask Avoma. Automatically update CRM fields for sales frameworks, such as MEDDIC and SPICED. View product Noteshelf 3 Note-Taking Software by Fluid Touch Pte Ltd Welcome to the world of effortless note-taking! 📝 Noteshelf 3 revolutionizes the way you capture ideas and information, making beautiful note-taking a breeze. Bid farewell to distractions and embrace a potent, meticulously organized note-taking experience. Our ingenious note organization ensures that your valuable thoughts and concepts are never lost in the shuffle. And, with AI-generated handwritten notes, you can infuse a personal touch into your digital notebook, stepping into the future of note-taking. Become a part of our vibrant community of note-takers! Share your remarkable notes, insights, and tips by tagging us with #noteshelf and mentioning @noteshelfapp. We take pride in featuring the creativity of our users! 🌟 Unleash the full potential of your digital notebook with Noteshelf 3. Embark on your note-taking journey today and elevate your productivity to new heights! 🚀 #NoteShelf #DigitalNotes #Productivity View product Scribeflo Note-Taking Software by Codiant - A YASH Technologies Company Scribeflo is an AI-powered medical scribe that captures patient conversations in real time and converts them into structured clinical notes. Built for physicians, therapists, and healthcare providers, it ensures HIPAA-compliant documentation, saves hours of charting, reduces burnout, and helps clinicians focus on delivering quality patient care. View product Prosa Meemo - Automatic Meeting AI Transcription for Bahasa Indonesia Note-Taking Software by Prosa.ai Meemo power up your productivity by automatically transcribe audio to text &amp; manage your company’s meetings View product Notability Note-Taking Software by Notability Stop just taking notes. Start learning from them. Personalized, AI-powered summaries, quizzes, flashcards, and more. View product See more How it works Explore Discover the best product for your need from a growing catalog of 25,000 products and categories trusted by LinkedIn professionals Learn Evaluate new tools, explore trending products in your industry and see who in your network is skilled in the product Grow Join communities of product users to learn best practices, celebrate your progress and accelerate your career LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/automattic-intensedebate/?trk=products_details_guest_similar_products_section_similar_products_section_product_link_result-card_image-click
IntenseDebate | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Automattic in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in IntenseDebate Commenting Systems by Automattic See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About IntenseDebate&#x27;s comment system enhances and encourages conversation on your blog or website. Similar products Coral Coral Commenting Systems ProjectHuddle ProjectHuddle Commenting Systems CommentSold CommentSold Commenting Systems Superflow Superflow Commenting Systems Thrive Comments Thrive Comments Commenting Systems Hyvor Talk Hyvor Talk Commenting Systems Sign in to see more Show more Show less Automattic products Day One Journal Day One Journal Jetpack Jetpack Server Backup Software Newspack Newspack Web Content Management (WCM) Systems Pocket Casts Pocket Casts Podcast Hosting Platforms Texts Texts Message Queue Software Tumblr Tumblr Social Networking Software Woo Woo E-Commerce Platforms WordPress VIP WordPress VIP Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Software WordPress.com WordPress.com Show more Show less LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.linkedin.com/products/alibaba-group-container-service-for-kubernetes-ack/?trk=products_details_guest_other_products_by_org_section_product_link_result-card_full-click
Container Service for Kubernetes (ACK) | LinkedIn Skip to main content LinkedIn Alibaba Group in Asan Expand search This button displays the currently selected search type. When expanded it provides a list of search options that will switch the search inputs to match the current selection. Jobs People Learning Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Clear text Join now Sign in Container Service for Kubernetes (ACK) Container Management Software by Alibaba Group See who's skilled in this Add as skill Learn more Report this product About Alibaba Cloud Container Service for Kubernetes provides flexible management of Kubernetes containerized applications. Media Products media viewer No more previous content No more next content Similar products Google Kubernetes Engine Google Kubernetes Engine Container Management Software Docker Docker Container Management Software Pixie Pixie Container Management Software Rancher Rancher Container Management Software RKE RKE Container Management Software OCI Container Engine for Kubernetes OCI Container Engine for Kubernetes Container Management Software Sign in to see more Show more Show less Alibaba Group products AliwareMQ for IoT AliwareMQ for IoT Message Queue Software LinkedIn &copy; 2026 About Accessibility User Agreement Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Copyright Policy Brand Policy Guest Controls Community Guidelines English (English) Language
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://www.crn.com/news/ai/2025/ddn-ceo-on-the-company-s-ai-mission-and-the-essential-role-partners-play
DDN CEO On The Company’s AI Mission And The ‘Essential Role’ Partners Play DDN CEO On The Company’s AI Mission And The ‘Essential Role’ Partners Play ‘At the end of the day, the key is data intelligence, and so the underlying hardware and infrastructure is commodity. I think how Snowflake and AWS look at it is the right way. They deliver services. The infrastructure is commodity,’ says DDN CEO Alex Bouzari. DDN is typically classified as a storage vendor, but that’s not how CEO Alex Bouzari describes his company. Instead, Bouzari, in an exclusive conversation just before the start of this week’s big Nvidia GTC event, told CRN that DDN is a data intelligence company, and that that data intelligence is nearly completely focused on providing the data needed to build AI models and AI inference capabilities. Bouzari discussed a couple of recent technologies introduced Monday, including IndustrySync, a new suite of one-click AI-engineered solutions for financial services, life sciences, and autonomous driving, and xFusionAI, which merges AI model training and inference into a single optimized platform. [Related: AI Storage Play: 26-Year-Old DDN Snags $300M Investment At $5B Valuation ] Bouzari also took time to clear up any idea that the Chatsworth, Calif.-based firm is just a storage vendor. He noted that the underlying hardware for storage, as well as for compute and networking, are all commodities today, with the value all in the software. “[The enterprise pivot] from on-prem to the cloud was all about the data,” he said. “It’s not about storage. It’s not about infrastructure. AWS is delivering services powered by some infrastructure, but the value is in the services. The infrastructure is commodity. Same thing here.” With its shift to data intelligence, DDN’s business is now focused on AI, Bouzari said. “It’s most of our focus,” he said. “Look, even our HPC customers are transforming their workloads into AI. We’re in a world economy pivot being enabled by AI in everything we do at work, at play, health, security. It’s crossing everything. And AI is certainly our very high growth engine. I think our AI business in 2024 quadrupled over 2023. It’s significantly more than half of our revenue now. It will most probably double again this year, at least.” There’s a lot going on at DDN and its push to be a prime provider of data intelligence for AI. To learn more, read CRN’s entire discussion with Bouzari, which has been lightly edited for clarity. DDN is introducing some big technologies at Nvidia GTC. What’s new? Basically, three things. What we’re increasingly seeing is that in order for AI to really get in its stride, it requires enterprise adoption. Enterprise adoption means it has to be easy to deploy, easy to manage for enterprises regardless of size, it has to be non-disruptive to the IT organization, and it has to add business value to the organization. So we’ve put together what we call IndustrySync. Our customers time and again ask us to package a solution that can get deployed more easily and faster to provide the benefits of AI transformation and the business outcomes from AI without having to get into the weeds. We started out with three industries where the AI ROI is the most obvious: financial services, life sciences, and autonomous driving. In all three industries, we have lots of customers, but they have a certain level of infrastructure, a certain level of sophistication, a certain level of staffing. For every one of those, there’s another 10 or 20 [potential customers] who want to deploy but they don’t have the staffing or the budgets or the time to do it themselves. And so packaging and integrating the solutions is something that they’ve been asking us for. We’re starting with these three industries, and then will broaden it. For these industries, the business outcome benefits are obvious. In financial services, with algo (algorithmic) trading, we give a 10x improvement in processing speed. It’s substantial. That’s why we have so many financial services industry customers for AI. Life sciences, same thing. Pharmaceuticals companies doing drug discovery significantly shrink the time and cost it takes to bring a new drug to market, costs that are measured at the low end in the tens of millions of dollars and at the high end billions of dollars. So it’s very significant. And with autonomous driving, you have to capture lots of sensor data in real time. You have to process it and analyze it. And everybody’s racing to get to Level 5 autonomy. … IndustrySync is a set of integration services. DDN is not a systems integrator. We want to partner with systems integrators and VARs and resellers and so on. We definitely don’t want to take business away from them. This is just a way to facilitate the deployment of enterprise AI, the same way Nvidia is not a systems integrator, yet they get involved with reference architectures and best practices. They send people to customer sites to help them basically integrate Nvidia technologies into their environment. We are doing the same thing. We’ve done hundreds and hundreds of these deployments, and in these three industries in particular. So we’re like, ‘Okay, we have a huge amount of knowledge about how to make these deployments easier, faster, less painful for customers. So let’s just step in and do it for them.’ Where do channel partners come to play? Channel partners will do the physical deployment. We will be there alongside them in addressing the challenges a channel partner won’t necessarily be able to handle. We don’t want to take money away from the channel partners. Channel partners play an essential role in this. As a matter of fact, we’re increasingly shifting to become a channel-driven organization. We do not want to sell direct. We do not want channel partners to be a fulfillment vehicle. We want the relationship to be symbiotic, to be value-add. We want our channel partners, our VARs, our resellers, our systems integrators, to get value, deliver value to customers with the services that they’re bringing to bear, the integration of the solutions. These integrations are oftentimes in the customer’s data center. Then you need the domain experts to come in and ensure that everything is working perfectly. We are the domain experts. They are the integrators and the deployers of the solution. We bring domain expertise the same way Nvidia brings in domain expertise. We bring the domain expertise so that the customer says, ‘Oh, wow, this was phenomenal. I’m going to step it up.’ It’s a way to accelerate the adoption of AI by enterprises. What is the second new technology DDN is introducing at Nvidia GTC? Yes, DDN xFusionAI. We have our EXAScaler parallel file system, and we’ve done hundreds of millions of dollars of AI revenue with it. It’s solving the problems of scale, efficiency at scale, pre-training and post-training of large language models, accelerating all of that, helping GPUs run at 100 percent efficiency. The EXAScaler software gives customers the ability to do it in a smaller footprint, because there is not enough data center space with enough power and GPUs in the world. We also just launched DDN Infinia few weeks ago to significantly improve the latency attributes on the inference side of things. So think agentic AI, multi-modal. The data is increasingly multi-modal. It’s text and images and audio and video and so on. AI models have grown substantially in size. We have some customers who are north of a trillion parameters in their models. The listing of the models is something that requires a certain type of technology. That’s what Infinia does, while addressing inference. xFusionAI integrates these two together to solve the full end-to-end AI workflow. A couple of years ago, people were saying, ‘Well, you need one infrastructure for model and model training, and another for inference.’ Now those worlds are coming together. It’s not realistic to ask organizations to have two different sets of infrastructure for two different parts of AI. So by bringing EXAScaler and Infinia together, integrating the two together under xFusionAI, we’re basically covering all the elements and all of the aspects of the AI framework, from the listing, pre-training, post-training, inference, and insight, addressing latency requirements, acceleration, and so on. That’s basically what xFusionAI is doing. Because the investments are so substantial, you don’t want to invest in one infrastructure for inference and one for model training. You have to extract more value. You need flexibility in on-prem and multi-cloud approaches because of the scarcity of GPUs, data center space and power, and so on. It has to be a hybrid model, where they can grab the data wherever it might reside. They have to be able to process it in the most cost-effective locations, at the right level of SLA (service level agreements), and then they need to get insight. So customers need a very flexible hybrid model where you’re doing on-prem and multi-cloud, and you’re hitting all of the pieces of the pipeline so you can decide what to do where. xFusionAI brings all that together so organizations can maximize the business outcome value from their AI journey, their AI initiative, their AI transformation. OK, let’s zoom out a bit. How do you define DDN? We maximize business outcomes for any organization that has an AI initiative underway. DDN is a software capability that accelerates, enhances, and delivers flexible outcomes driven by AI for businesses in every industry and use case. Historically, we delivered appliances in data centers that maximized efficiency in terms of a given infrastructure. Today, the value we’re delivering is really in two places. It is above the stack, meaning the acceleration of the AI frameworks on both the model training and inference sides. But it’s also use cases. So let’s say you’re a bank, and fraud detection is a very big deal. Fraud detection requires real-time catching of fraud and determining what is a false positive, is a positive, or a negative. We are helping organizations extract value from AI in their business outcomes, powered by AI framework acceleration and enabled by efficiency in the data center, both on-prem and in the cloud. … Our job is to deliver the highest value to the business layer in industries driven by AI. That’s what our whole focus is. All the technological developments we’re doing are focused on that. The acceleration of the AI frameworks is very important, because it’s an industry which is moving so quickly. You have to be able to make TensorFlow or PyTorch more efficient. I think Jensen [Huang, Nvidia CEO] was saying that Nvidia has 150 developers just on TensorFlow alone. All they do is optimize that. So optimization of the AI frameworks is very important in order to drive the business outcome value that each industry and each company is pursuing. That also means you have to make it easier for organizations to deploy these things. We deliver data intelligence. AI without data intelligence is meaningless. All these things that people are doing, all these investments in GPUs and infrastructure, in networking and storage and what have you, the whole point is to gain insight to deliver business value. We are in the data intelligence business. We’re not in the infrastructure business, we’re not in the storage business, we’re not in the on-prem or cloud business. We’re in the data intelligence business. We maximize the value that organizations get from their data. So it’s incorrect to call DDN a storage vendor? Would you call Snowflake a storage vendor? It’s data, right? It’s the same thing. But it’s data that is delivering value to enterprises and organizations. It’s their way of delivering data intelligence and data enablement for IT organizations. We’re the same. We’re delivering data intelligence in AI initiatives. Look, storage is a commodity. Networking is a commodity. Compute is a commodity. It is the underlying hardware. It’s commodity. I was talking about it with Jensen a couple of weeks ago. I said, ‘OK, do we all agree that all of the hardware is commodity? He was like, ‘Yeah, absolutely, it’s all commodity.’ You have to extract value that is business-enabled and do it non-disruptively for the IT organization. Otherwise, the IT organization won’t embrace it. [The enterprise pivot] from on-prem to the cloud was all about the data. It’s not about storage. It’s not about infrastructure. AWS is delivering services powered by some infrastructure, but the value is in the services. The infrastructure is commodity. Same thing here. The difference, in the world of AI, is not in the shift from on-prem to cloud. You need both on-prem and multi-cloud, simply because you cannot consume some things or move massive amounts of data in the cloud because it’s way too expensive. [For example,] in a multi-modal world, you’re not going to move videos around in the cloud. AWS would be very happy, but you will go bankrupt if you try to do that. So it has to be hybrid, meaning both on-prem and multi-cloud. At the end of the day, the key is data intelligence, and so the underlying hardware and infrastructure is commodity. I think how Snowflake and AWS look at it is the right way. They deliver services. The infrastructure is commodity. Our conversation has focused on AI. Is AI now the entire focus of DDN? It’s most of our focus. Look, even our HPC customers are transforming their workloads into AI. We’re in a world economy pivot being enabled by AI in everything we do at work, at play, health, security. It’s crossing everything. And AI is certainly our very high growth engine. I think our AI business in 2024 quadrupled over 2023. It’s significantly more than half of our revenue now. It will most probably double again this year, at least. But even our HPC customers, forget AI workloads, what they’re doing is being AI-enabled. I think AI is permeating everything. And so we are an AI company, not because it’s cool to be AI, but because everything is becoming AI-enabled. It’s permeating everything. [Like Nvidia is not really a semiconductor company,] I would argue that we’re not a storage company. But I think this will need to evolve. We came up with the term ‘data intelligence,’ and then six months later, Databricks adopted it. They call themselves a data intelligence company as well. Somehow what we came up with is getting traction. It’s all goodness. They are a data intelligence company. I think Palantir is data intelligence. We’re all looking at it differently, but it’s all about getting intelligence from data in different ways. [Also,] increasingly we’re selling software. We’re deploying software in the cloud and hyperscalers. We now have Infinia deployed in hyperscalers. The underlying hardware, it’s commodity. If some customers want us to provide a turnkey solution because it’s easier, absolutely we will do it. But the real value is in software because you can deploy it more easily. You have your own hardware. Here is a DDN Infinia. Do whatever hardware. We don’t want to be in the hardware business. Anything else we need to know about DDN? We’re pushing very hard to accelerate our channel programs. We’re investing heavily in that we want to become, first and foremost, a channel-friendly company. We’ve hired somebody to run our reseller and VAR channels. We’ve hired somebody to run our GSI channels. We’ve hired somebody to run our server vendor channels. We’re pivoting into full-on channel. We don’t want to sell direct. This industry is moving too fast, and to really deliver value to customers, we need partners. Doing it direct makes absolutely no sense.
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://nuxt.com/blog/v3-11#chunk-naming
Nuxt 3.11 · Nuxt Blog v4.2.2 Docs Modules Templates Resources Enterprise Blog Search… k 59.3K Blog Nuxt 3.11 Release ·   March 16, 2024 Nuxt 3.11 Nuxt 3.11 is out - with better logging, preview mode, server pages and much more! Daniel Roe @danielroe.dev This is possibly the last minor release before Nuxt v4, and so we&#39;ve packed it full of features and improvements we hope will delight you! ✨ 🪵 Better logging When developing a Nuxt application and using console.log in your application, you may have noticed that these logs are not displayed in your browser console when refreshing the page (during server-side rendering). This can be frustrating, as it makes it difficult to debug your application. This is now a thing of the past! Now, when you have server logs associated with a request, they will be bundled up and passed to the client and displayed in your browser console. Asynchronous context is used to track and associate these logs with the request that triggered them. ( #25936 ). For example, this code: pages/index.vue &lt; script setup &gt; console . log ( &#39; Log from index page &#39; ) const { data } = await useAsyncData ( () =&gt; { console . log ( &#39; Log inside useAsyncData &#39; ) return $fetch ( &#39; /api/test &#39; ) } ) &lt;/ script &gt; will now log to your browser console when you refresh the page: Log from index page [ ssr ] Log inside useAsyncData at pages/index.vue 👉 We also plan to support streaming of subsequent logs to the Nuxt DevTools in future. We&#39;ve also added a dev:ssr-logs hook (both in Nuxt and Nitro) which is called on server and client, allowing you to handle them yourself if you want to. If you encounter any issues with this, it is possible to disable them - or prevent them from logging to your browser console. nuxt.config.ts export default defineNuxtConfig ( { features : { devLogs : false // or &#39;silent&#39; to allow you to handle yourself with `dev:ssr-logs` hook }, } ) 🎨 Preview mode A new usePreviewMode composable aims to make it simple to use preview mode in your Nuxt app. plugins/test.client.ts const { enabled , state } = usePreviewMode () When preview mode is enabled, all your data fetching composables, like useAsyncData and useFetch will rerun, meaning any cached data in the payload will be bypassed. Read more in Docs &gt; API &gt; Composables &gt; Use Preview Mode . 💰 Cache-busting payloads We now automatically cache-bust your payloads if you haven&#39;t disabled Nuxt&#39;s app manifest, meaning you shouldn&#39;t be stuck with outdated data after a deployment ( #26068 ). 👮‍♂️ Middleware routeRules It&#39;s now possible to define middleware for page paths within the Vue app part of your application (that is, not your Nitro routes) ( #25841 ). nuxt.config.ts export default defineNuxtConfig ( { routeRules : { &#39; /admin/** &#39; : { // or appMiddleware: &#39;auth&#39; appMiddleware : [ &#39; auth &#39; ] }, &#39; /admin/login &#39; : { // You can &#39;turn off&#39; middleware that would otherwise run for a page appMiddleware : { auth : false } }, }, } ) Read more in Docs &gt; Guide &gt; Concepts &gt; Rendering#route Rules . ⌫ New clear data fetching utility Now, useAsyncData and useFetch expose a clear utility. This is a function that can be used to set data to undefined, set error to null , set pending to false , set status to idle , and mark any currently pending requests as cancelled. ( #26259 ) &lt; script setup lang = &quot; ts &quot; &gt; const { data , clear } = await useFetch ( &#39; /api/test &#39; ) const route = useRoute () watch ( () =&gt; route . path , ( path ) =&gt; { if ( path === &#39; / &#39; ) clear () } ) &lt;/ script &gt; Read more in Docs &gt; Getting Started &gt; Data Fetching . 🕳️ New #teleports target Nuxt now includes a new &lt;div id=&quot;teleports&quot;&gt;&lt;/div&gt; element in your app within your &lt;body&gt; tag. It supports server-side teleports, meaning you can do this safely on the server: app.vue &lt; template &gt; &lt; Teleport to = &quot; #teleports &quot; &gt; &lt; span &gt; Something &lt;/ span &gt; &lt;/ Teleport &gt; &lt;/ template &gt; 🚦 Loading indicator and transition controls It&#39;s now possible to set custom timings for hiding the loading indicator, and forcing the finish() method if needed ( #25932 ). There&#39;s also a new page:view-transition:start hook for hooking into the View Transitions API ( #26045 ) if you have that feature enabled. 🛍️ Server- and client-only pages This release sees server- and client-only pages land in Nuxt! You can now add a .server.vue or .client.vue suffix to a page to get automatic handling of it. Client-only pages will render entirely on the client-side, and skip server-rendering entirely, just as if the entire page was wrapped in &lt;ClientOnly&gt; . Use this responsibly. The flash of load on the client-side can be a bad user experience so make sure you really need to avoid server-side loading. Also consider using &lt;ClientOnly&gt; with a fallback slot to render a skeleton loader ( #25037 ). ⚗️ Server-only pages are even more useful because they enable you to integrate fully-server rendered HTML within client-side navigation. They will even be prefetched when links to them are in the viewport - so you will get instantaneous loading ( #24954 ). 🤠 Server component bonanza When you are using server components, you can now use the nuxt-client attribute anywhere within your tree ( #25479 ). nuxt.config.ts export default defineNuxtConfig ( { experimental : { componentIslands : { selectiveClient : &#39; deep &#39; } }, } ) You can listen to an @error event from server components that will be triggered if there is any issue loading the component ( #25798 ). Finally, server-only components are now smartly enabled when you have a server-only component or a server-only page within your project or any of its layers ( #26223 ). Server components remain experimental and their API may change, so be careful before depending on implementation details. 🔥 Performance improvements We&#39;ve shipped a number of performance improvements, including only updating changed virtual templates ( #26250 ), using a &#39;layered&#39; prerender cache ( #26104 ) that falls back to filesystem instead of keeping everything in memory when prerendering - and lots of other examples. 📂 Public assets handling We have shipped a reimplementation of Vite&#39;s public asset handling, meaning that public assets in your public/ directory or your layer directories are now resolved entirely by Nuxt ( #26163 ), so if you have added nitro.publicAssets directories with a custom prefix, these will now work. 📦 Chunk naming We have changed the default _nuxt/[name].[hash].js file name pattern for your JS chunks. Now, we default to _nuxt/[hash].js . This is to avoid false positives by ad blockers triggering off your component or chunk names, which can be a very difficult issue to debug. ( #26203 ) You can easily configure this to revert to previous behaviour if you wish: nuxt.config.ts export default defineNuxtConfig ( { vite : { $client : { build : { rollupOptions : { output : { chunkFileNames : &#39; _nuxt/[name].[hash].js &#39; , entryFileNames : &#39; _nuxt/[name].[hash].js &#39; } } } } }, } ) 💪 Type fixes Previously users with shamefully-hoist=false may have encountered issues with types not being resolved or working correctly. You may also have encountered problems with excessive type instantiation. We now try to tell TypeScript about certain key types so they can be resolved even if deeply nested ( #26158 ). There are a whole raft of other type fixes, including some regarding import types ( #26218 and #25965 ) and module typings ( #25548 ). ✅ Upgrading As usual, our recommendation for upgrading Nuxt is to run: nuxi upgrade --force This will refresh your lockfile as well, and ensures that you pull in updates from other dependencies that Nuxt relies on, particularly in the unjs ecosystem. 👉 Full release notes Read the full release notes of Nuxt v3.11.0 . Thank you for reading this far! We hope you enjoy the new release. Please do let us know if you have any feedback or issues. Happy Nuxting ✨ ← Back to blog Copy URL Copy URL Nuxt on LinkedIn Nuxt on Bluesky Nuxt on X     Table of Contents Table of Contents 🪵 Better logging 🎨 Preview mode 💰 Cache-busting payloads 👮‍♂️ Middleware routeRules ⌫ New clear data fetching utility 🕳️ New #teleports target 🚦 Loading indicator and transition controls 🛍️ Server- and client-only pages 🤠 Server component bonanza 🔥 Performance improvements 📂 Public assets handling 📦 Chunk naming 💪 Type fixes ✅ Upgrading 👉 Full release notes Links Edit this article Star on GitHub Become a Sponsor Nuxt on Discord Nuxt on Bluesky Nuxt on X Nuxt on GitHub Community Nuxters Team Design Kit Explore Modules Templates Showcase Enterprise Support Agencies Sponsors Subscribe to our newsletter Stay updated on new releases and features, guides, and community updates. Subscribe Nuxt on X Nuxt on BlueSky Nuxt on LinkedIn Nuxt on Discord Nuxt on GitHub Copyright © 2016-2026 Nuxt - MIT License
2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/pull/25932
feat(nuxt): custom loading reset/hide delay + force `finish()` by divine · Pull Request #25932 · nuxt/nuxt · GitHub Skip to content Navigation Menu Toggle navigation Sign in Appearance settings Platform AI CODE CREATION GitHub Copilot Write better code with AI GitHub Spark Build and deploy intelligent apps GitHub Models Manage and compare prompts MCP Registry New Integrate external tools DEVELOPER WORKFLOWS Actions Automate any workflow Codespaces Instant dev environments Issues Plan and track work Code Review Manage code changes APPLICATION SECURITY GitHub Advanced Security Find and fix vulnerabilities Code security Secure your code as you build Secret protection Stop leaks before they start EXPLORE Why GitHub Documentation Blog Changelog Marketplace View all features Solutions BY COMPANY SIZE Enterprises Small and medium teams Startups Nonprofits BY USE CASE App Modernization DevSecOps DevOps CI/CD View all use cases BY INDUSTRY Healthcare Financial services Manufacturing Government View all industries View all solutions Resources EXPLORE BY TOPIC AI Software Development DevOps Security View all topics EXPLORE BY TYPE Customer stories Events &amp; webinars Ebooks &amp; reports Business insights GitHub Skills SUPPORT &amp; SERVICES Documentation Customer support Community forum Trust center Partners Open Source COMMUNITY GitHub Sponsors Fund open source developers PROGRAMS Security Lab Maintainer Community Accelerator Archive Program REPOSITORIES Topics Trending Collections Enterprise ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS Enterprise platform AI-powered developer platform AVAILABLE ADD-ONS GitHub Advanced Security Enterprise-grade security features Copilot for Business Enterprise-grade AI features Premium Support Enterprise-grade 24/7 support Pricing Search or jump to... Search code, repositories, users, issues, pull requests... --> Search Clear Search syntax tips Provide feedback --> We read every piece of feedback, and take your input very seriously. Include my email address so I can be contacted Cancel Submit feedback Saved searches Use saved searches to filter your results more quickly --> Name Query To see all available qualifiers, see our documentation . Cancel Create saved search Sign in Sign up Appearance settings Resetting focus You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. Dismiss alert {{ message }} nuxt / nuxt Public Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings Fork 5.5k Star 59.3k Code Issues 816 Pull requests 114 Discussions Actions Projects 1 Security Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Insights Additional navigation options Code Issues Pull requests Discussions Actions Projects Security Insights feat(nuxt): custom loading reset/hide delay + force finish() #25932 New issue Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community. Sign up for GitHub By clicking &ldquo;Sign up for GitHub&rdquo;, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement . We’ll occasionally send you account related emails. Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account Jump to bottom Merged danielroe merged 12 commits into nuxt : main from divine : useloadingindicator Mar 6, 2024 Merged feat(nuxt): custom loading reset/hide delay + force finish() #25932 danielroe merged 12 commits into nuxt : main from divine : useloadingindicator Mar 6, 2024 Conversation 7 Commits 12 Checks 0 Files changed Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . Conversation This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters. Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters Show hidden characters Copy link Contributor divine commented Feb 23, 2024 🔗 Linked issue Fix : #24938 ❓ Type of change 👌 Enhancement (improving an existing functionality like performance) 📚 Description 📝 Checklist I have linked an issue or discussion. I have added tests (if possible). I have updated the documentation accordingly. --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . --> All reactions feat: useLoadingIndicator resetDelay, hideDelay and force start/stop 34d137e Copy link bolt-new-by-stackblitz bot commented Feb 23, 2024 Run &amp; review this pull request in StackBlitz Codeflow . --> All reactions --> Sorry, something went wrong. Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . github-actions bot added 3.x enhancement labels Feb 23, 2024 divine added 4 commits February 23, 2024 12:11 fix: typescript parameter 47c14c5 fix: typescript annotations &hellip; 3999365 and we're done yay! fix: typescript parameter 957865e feat: rewrite function call d8dcd21 danielroe reviewed Feb 24, 2024 View reviewed changes packages/nuxt/src/app/composables/loading-indicator.ts Outdated Show resolved Hide resolved Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . divine and others added 7 commits February 24, 2024 13:29 feat: make force as parameter d7c9aab feat: make force parameter optional 9e9c29d style: lint 015c62a Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into useloadingindicator c1e77b2 fix: type timeouts 3c54415 refactor: simplify implementation a2f550e fix: avoid clearing hide timeouts on clear() 1f8d30a danielroe changed the title feat: useLoadingIndicator resetDelay, hideDelay and force start/stop feat(nuxt): allow customising loading indicator resetDelay / hideDelay + forcing finish() Mar 6, 2024 danielroe changed the title feat(nuxt): allow customising loading indicator resetDelay / hideDelay + forcing finish() feat(nuxt): custom loading reset/hide delay + force finish() Mar 6, 2024 danielroe approved these changes Mar 6, 2024 View reviewed changes danielroe merged commit 83314f1 into nuxt : main Mar 6, 2024 github-actions bot mentioned this pull request Mar 6, 2024 v3.11.0 #25964 Merged divine deleted the useloadingindicator branch April 22, 2024 07:02 BalaKadiyala mentioned this pull request Jun 22, 2024 [Snyk] Upgrade nuxt from 3.7.0 to 3.11.2 BalaKadiyala/snyk-chat-goof#7 Open buglavecz mentioned this pull request Sep 15, 2024 fix(nuxt): call page:loading:end only once with nested pages #29009 Merged --> Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub . Already have an account? Sign in to comment --> Reviewers danielroe danielroe approved these changes --> Assignees No one assigned Labels 3.x enhancement --> Projects None yet --> Milestone No milestone --> Development Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues. [feat] useLoadingIndicator force reset function Uh oh! There was an error while loading. Please reload this page . 2 participants Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit. This suggestion is invalid because no changes were made to the code. Suggestions cannot be applied while the pull request is closed. Suggestions cannot be applied while viewing a subset of changes. Only one suggestion per line can be applied in a batch. Add this suggestion to a batch that can be applied as a single commit. Applying suggestions on deleted lines is not supported. You must change the existing code in this line in order to create a valid suggestion. Outdated suggestions cannot be applied. 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2026-01-13T09:30:05
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2026-01-13T09:30:05
https://nuxt.com/blog/v3-12#testing-nuxt-4-changes
Nuxt 3.12 · Nuxt Blog v4.2.2 Docs Modules Templates Resources Enterprise Blog Search… k 59.3K Blog Nuxt 3.12 Release ·   June 10, 2024 Nuxt 3.12 Nuxt 3.12 is out - full of improvements and preparing the way for Nuxt 4! Daniel Roe @danielroe.dev We&#39;re on the road to the release of Nuxt 4, but we&#39;ve not held back in Nuxt v3.12. 🚀 Testing Nuxt 4 changes Nuxt 4 is on the horizon, and it&#39;s now possible to test out the behaviour changes that will be coming in the next major release ( #26925 ) by setting an option in your nuxt.config.ts file: nuxt.config.ts export default defineNuxtConfig ( { future : { compatibilityVersion : 4 , }, } ) As we&#39;ve been merging PRs for Nuxt 4, we&#39;ve been enabling them behind this flag. As much as possible we&#39;re aiming for backwards compatibility - our test matrix is running the same fixtures in both v3 and v4 compatibility mode. There is a lot to say here, with 10+ different PRs and behaviour changes documented and testable, but for full details, including migration steps, see the v4 upgrade documentation . We&#39;d be very grateful for early testing of what&#39;s coming in Nuxt 4! 🙏 📜 Nuxt Scripts auto-install We&#39;ve been gradually working to release Nuxt Scripts . It&#39;s currently in public preview, but we&#39;re near a public release, so we&#39;ve added some stubs for composables that (when used) will prompt installing the @nuxt/scripts module. 👉 Watch out for the launch - and an article explaining more! 🌈 Layer auto-registration and bugfixes Just like ~/modules , any layers within your project in the ~/layers directory will now be automatically registered as layers in your project ( #27221 ). We also now correctly load layer dependencies, which should resolve a range of issues with monorepos and git installations ( #27338 ). 🌐 Built-in accessibility improvements We now have a built-in &lt;NuxtRouteAnnouncer&gt; component and corresponding useRouteAnnouncer composable, which will be added by default to new Nuxt templates going forward. For full details, see the original PR (#25741) and documentation . We&#39;re continuing to work on nuxt/a11y - expect to hear more on that in future! 🔥 Performance improvements We&#39;ve landed some performance improvements as well, many of which are behind the compatibilityVersion: 4 flag, such as a move away from deeply reactive asyncData payloads. Significant improvements include deduplicating modules ( #27475 ) - which will apply mostly to layer users who specify modules in their layers. In one project, we saw 30s+ improvement in starting Nuxt. We&#39;ve also improved Vite dev server start up time by excluding common ESM dependencies from pre-bundling, and would suggest module authors consider doing the same ( #27372 ). We improved chunk determinism, so sequential builds should be less likely to have completely different chunk hashes ( #27258 ). And we tree shake more client-only composables from your server builds ( #27044 ), and have reduced the size of server component payloads ( #26863 ). 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Multi-app support We&#39;ve landed a couple of changes that take us toward a place of supporting multi-app natively in Nuxt, including a multiApp experimental flag ( #27291 ) and the ability to have multiple Nuxt app instances running in parallel at runtime ( #27068 ). While it&#39;s not yet ready, please do follow along on the tracker issue , and feel free to pitch in if this is interesting to you. ⛑️ DX wins We now serialise more things in your dev server logs, including VNodes ( #27309 ) and URLs . We also addressed a bug that could lead to a frozen dev server. When accessing private runtime config in the browser, we now let you know with a more informative error message ( #26441 ). 🪨 Stabilising features We&#39;ve removed some experimental options that have been stabilised and which we feel no longer need to be configurable: experimental.treeshakeClientOnly (enabled by default since v3.0.0) experimental.configSchema (enabled by default since v3.3.0) experimental.polyfillVueUseHead (disabled since v3.4.0) - implementable in user-land with plugin experimental.respectNoSSRHeader (disabled since v3.4.0) - implementable in user-land with server middleware We&#39;ve also enabled scanPageMeta by default ( #27134 ). This pulls out any page metadata in your definePageMeta macro, and makes it available to modules (like @nuxtjs/i18n ) so they can augment it. This unlocks much better module/typed routing integration, but has a potential performance cost - so please file an issue if you experience any problems. 💪 Type improvements We now have support for typed #fallback slots in server components ( #27097 ). We&#39;ve also improved some defaults in your generated tsconfig.json , including setting module: &#39;preserve&#39; if you have a locally installed TypeScript v5.4 version ( see docs ) - see #26667 , #27485 . 📦 Module author/power user improvements We have shipped a range of type improvements for module authors, including: support for typed module options in installModule ( #26744 ) the option to specify compatibility with certain builders (vite/webpack) in module options ( #27022 ) a new onPrehydrate hook for hooking into the browser hydration cycle ( #27037 ) the ability to access and update resolved runtime configuration within modules, with new build-time useRuntimeConfig and updateRuntimeConfig utils ( #27117 ) 🎨 Inlined UI templates If you previously used @nuxt/ui-templates then it may be worth knowing that we have moved them from a separate repository into the nuxt/nuxt monorepo. (This is purely a refactor rather than a change, although you can expect some new designs for Nuxt v4.) ✅ Upgrading As usual, our recommendation for upgrading is to run: npx nuxi@latest upgrade --force This will refresh your lockfile as well, and ensures that you pull in updates from other dependencies that Nuxt relies on, particularly in the unjs ecosystem. Full Release Notes Read the full release notes of Nuxt v3.12.0 . A huge thank you to the 75+ Nuxt contributors and community members who have been part of this release. ❤️ Finally, thank you for reading this far! We hope you enjoy v3.12, and please do let us know if you have any feedback or issues. 🙏 Happy Nuxting ✨ ← Back to blog Copy URL Copy URL Nuxt on LinkedIn Nuxt on Bluesky Nuxt on X     Table of Contents Table of Contents 🚀 Testing Nuxt 4 changes 📜 Nuxt Scripts auto-install 🌈 Layer auto-registration and bugfixes 🌐 Built-in accessibility improvements 🔥 Performance improvements 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Multi-app support ⛑️ DX wins 🪨 Stabilising features 💪 Type improvements 📦 Module author/power user improvements 🎨 Inlined UI templates ✅ Upgrading Full Release Notes Links Edit this article Star on GitHub Become a Sponsor Nuxt on Discord Nuxt on Bluesky Nuxt on X Nuxt on GitHub Community Nuxters Team Design Kit Explore Modules Templates Showcase Enterprise Support Agencies Sponsors Subscribe to our newsletter Stay updated on new releases and features, guides, and community updates. Subscribe Nuxt on X Nuxt on BlueSky Nuxt on LinkedIn Nuxt on Discord Nuxt on GitHub Copyright © 2016-2026 Nuxt - MIT License
2026-01-13T09:30:05