Análises para Better Twitter
Better Twitter por Razvan Caliman
60 análises
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 12344652 , há 4 anosI'm LOVING this app. INstalled it about a month ago and it's worked perfectly. BUT, for the past 3 days my feed has been out of order. I'm wondering if Twitter is making adjustments to counter this?
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 16780570 , há 4 anosGreat app and prevents you from dealing with the trends on twitter that seem to always be happening!
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por conradonak , há 4 anos
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Chris Peterson , há 4 anosThis "Better Twitter" extension makes Twitter much less distracting and more usable. Thanks to this extension, I now prefer to read Twitter in Firefox on my laptop over the Twitter app on my phone!
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 14584648 , há 4 anos
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Aadil Ayub , há 4 anosThis extension lets you use Twitter without losing your sanity. 10/10 recommended.
- Really nice and easy add-on that does what it says. Would love an option to individually turn on/off number of tweet likes, retweets, and replies. Mainly useful so I know if there are replies to a tweet. Also, quote retweet numbers are also still there (when you click on a tweet).
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Lilacs Doom , há 4 anosIt's a simple add-on, but the implications of it are huge. It makes browsing Twitter a much better experience and points out external/sponsored information (literally the stuff that siphons our attention away). THANK YOU, Razvan, you've saved me a lot of time and energy. I hope more people realize what exists beyond the ads.
Resposta do programador
publicado a há 4 anosThank you for the kind words, Lilacs Doom! I'm glad the extension helps you. - Avaliado em 5 de 5por Édouard Lopez , há 4 anos
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 15699720 , há 5 anosDid what it said it was gonna do. 5/5 Stars.
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 13112025 , há 5 anos/*
The new Twitter interface (circa 2019) uses auto-generated markup
with obfuscated class names which are not guaranteed to be stable over time.
In order to remove unwanted parts of the UI when they appear,
we use CSS selectors in the stylesheet (content.css) to identify
areas of interest, then apply a short fake animation to them.
Here in JavaScript, we listen for all `animationstart` events, check if they match
one of the areas of interest (`AnimationEvent.target` points to the element matched
by the CSS seletor), then mark the target element or one of its ancestors. This marker
then causes a CSS selector from content.css to match and hide the intended element.
This is a convoluted but viable workaround for missing ancestor selectors in CSS.
*/
I used to use Stylus/Stylish filter to achieve my intentions, which are closely the same as what this addon does. However, since the major change introduced in this spring, my solution no longer works. I looked for a working addon to get the same result, but there seemed to be none.
Then, a few months later, I finally found this addon. This method (quoted above as comment) is brilliant!Resposta do programador
publicado a há 5 anosGlad you found the add-on and the technique described in the code useful. - Avaliado em 5 de 5por wloszynski , há 5 anos
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 16104928 , há 5 anos
- Avaliado em 5 de 5por TheSpiritBaby , há 5 anosIt does what it says. I love it. Razvan, awesome work.
Resposta do programador
publicado a há 5 anosCan you share the circumstances in which this happens?
The "Hide trends for you" option is tested to work on the English version of the twitter.com website.- Avaliado em 5 de 5por Utilizador do Firefox 14891329 , há 5 anos