Firefox analyzes the text that has been entered by the user in the Firefox address bar when the user sends it to the browser. Depending on the configuration of Firefox one out of two possible actions are performed. The default way of handling text that is not an url is to send it to Google’s Browse By Name service which will load the best direct match and show a search results page if no match is found.
The second action is the auto-complete feature that kicks in under certain circumstances only be default. Entering Mozilla will load the mozilla.com website automatically because that is the best match in the Google search engine for that name. A search for www.mozilla on the other hand will be auto-completed by Firefox. The browser will append the .com suffix to the query and load the same website.
Not everyone is living in the United States and some users might prefer a country domain extension instead of the default .com suffix. This option can be changed in the Firefox preferences. Entering about:config in the Firefox address bar will load the preferences.
Filtering for the term fixup will show the four parameters on the screenshot above. A user can change the default prefix and suffix to something else by double-clicking the entries or disable the auto-complete feature completely by setting the browser.fixup.alternate.enabled parameter to false.
Custom Prefix and Suffix Auto-Complete In Firefox
Tags: auto complete, firefox, firefox 3, firefox config, firefox tips, mozilla-firefox
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