Reviews for Lightweight Themes Manager
15 reviews for this add-on
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Exactly what I was looking for! Without this I cant get my TB version 52.9.1to install lightweight themes, they would just open in a web browser instead of TB.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
risolve a my problme, to install a theme in thuderbird.
easyend goog
Rated 1 out of 5 stars
In the Past a very good addon, but it does not work in firefox 47 until firefox 54 aktually ! It shows a blank page. I can´t reach my downloaded jaso-file themes.
Rated 3 out of 5 stars
I loved the add-on - but it stopped working when I updated above version 46. Please fix!
This user has a previous review of this add-on.Rated 4 out of 5 stars
very impressive simple and clean
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
What an awesome idea by this apps creator. Makes everything so much simpler to.Thank you soooo much for your time and effort!
Contribute, people, don't want this wonderful add-on to go away!!
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
the appearance of my browser has become incredibly enjoyable. Thank you for this theme
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Amazing
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
In Firefox 47, Tools, Lightweight Themes and I get a blank page instead of the normal full page of showing my personas!!
Thanks to solve this BUG with the FF47 version.
Thanks to the developer for this great addon.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Just loved it
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
I like this program, it makes it easier to keep an eye on my favs themes.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Yes, it works well.
Thank you for this add-on.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Pretty, I like it.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
This is a nice way to manage personas (lightweight themes that only change the toolbar graphic, leaving the icons alone). You can hover over each theme, and see what it looks like without actually changing the theme. In the FF default theme manager, you have to enable the theme, and if you have a lot, you might forget which one you had originally. Helpful.
One bit of advice--I found that the Compact View was easiest for me to use--all I want is the ability to enable/disable each theme; the default view gives you all sorts of incidental crud that the theme author inserted.
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
When many lightweight themes are installed, this add-on makes managing them extremely easy, including (but probably not limited to):
-- telling lightweight themes and complete themes apart from each other (in the Add-on Manager they appear interspersed in a single list; this extension opens a page listing only lightweight themes);
-- checking how a lightweight theme other than the current one would look like if it were enabled (by hovering the mouse over the thumbnail);
-- finding which lightweight themes were installed from an obsolete URL (such as getpersonas.com) and need to be refreshed if they are to be used again in the future. (These "obsolete" add-ons are shown in the LWTM without a thumbnail.)
---- WARNING: Reinstalling the same lightweight theme, but from a working URL (such as addons.mozilla.org), which can be done by means of the link in the LWTM page, won't make the obsolete entry disappear; and AFAICT there is no [_Uninstall_] button for lightweight themes. AFAIK the only way to uninstall a lightweight theme consists of removing the corresponding {...} entry, with one (but not both) of the separating commas around it, in the value of the preference lightweightThemes.usedThemes in about:config. Since that value can be extremely long, especially if many lightweight themes are installed, I recommend to do this as follows:
1. In about:config, find the preference lightweightThemes.usedThemes, right click it, and select "Copy Value";
2. Paste the value into your favourite text editor and edit it there;
3. Copy the new value (as it appears in your editor) to the clipboard;
4. in about:config, double-click lightweightThemes.usedThemes (the old value will appear, selected, in an input box in a popup) then click Ctrl+V (to paste the new value which you copied at step 3) then click the [_OK_] button at the bottom of the popup. If you then refresh about:addons or the LWTM (or both) you should notice that the unwanted entry has disappeared.
P.S. Of course, in Thunderbird, about:config is the "Config Editor" which can be opened by means of a button in the "Advanced" preferences.
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