A few weeks ago I installed Firefox 3 Beta onto my work laptop, in order to test if two add-ins I wrote would need any tweaking to work. (These add-ins are simple search bars for people in my company to use to search our source code and our bug-tracking database.) They worked fine, once I jumped through the necessary hoops to convince Firefox that they weren’t viruses. But that’s irrelevant; this post is about two small “it’s about friggin time” improvements in Firefox 3. You can read about the big changes elsewhere.
The first of these changes is the way Firefox handles hyphens in text wrapping. After a long period of bickering, they finally decided that Firefox (like every other piece of software which displays text) can insert a line break after a hyphen character. This is something that is particularly annoying to me, since I sometimes use long, hyphenated phrases. (I’m sure there is a proper name for such a phrase, but I don’t know it. I guess that’s what I get for not being an English professor.)
Take for example this post from a few weeks ago in, as viewed in FF2 and FF3:
See how FF2 treats the long line as a single word, rather than breaking the words on hyphens? In Firefox 3 this has been corrected, which I think is super.
The other small thing is that tooltip text (usually from an object’s “title” attribute) is no longer truncated. This is mainly a nuisance to me on webcomics xkcd and Dinosaur Comics, where the tooltip text is usually kind of a second punchline. To demonstrate, here is a screenshot from a recent xkcd comic:
Much better in Firefox 3. These two improvements (and the new address bar features) make me excited to use Firefox 3. Of course, I won’t switch to it full-time until the final release, since most of my favorite add-ons don’t support FF3 yet.
March 19, 9:02 am
Those are nice fixes. In case you were still wondering, your super descriptive hyphenation is called a compound modifier. English FTW!