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Check boxes in dialog boxes are missing

  • 11 tontu
  • 3 am na jafe-jafe bii
  • 10 views
  • i mujjee tontu mooy gacl

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When clicking on a file that is to be downloaded from the internet a dialog box opens. The dialog box offers a few choices but there is no way to choose because the radio buttons are missing. Also, there is a scroll bar but is not visible; you have to "guess" where it is to find it. Safe mode displays the same behavior. A reset didn't help. I'm using openSUSE 42.2. Thanks.

When clicking on a file that is to be downloaded from the internet a dialog box opens. The dialog box offers a few choices but there is no way to choose because the radio buttons are missing. Also, there is a scroll bar but is not visible; you have to "guess" where it is to find it. Safe mode displays the same behavior. A reset didn't help. I'm using openSUSE 42.2. Thanks.

gacl moo ko soppali ci

Saafara biñ tànn

I just found out how to make checkboxes appear: Search for a page with checkboxes and open it, click and hold on an image on the same page that the checkbox is, place it on top of where a checkbox should be, and release. The checkbox should appear, along with the scrollbar and all other related functions. Really strange behavior, but it works. Not the best solution but that's all I got.

Jàng tontu lii ci fi mu bokk 👍 0

All Replies (11)

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OK. Firefox just crashed and upon restart the issue was fixed. Thanks anyway. You guys are doing a good thing.

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After a restart the problem came back. So I deleted .Mozilla and .cache/Mozilla, removed Firefox, and installed Firefox. But the problem's still there.

gacl moo ko soppali ci

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Try a different theme and icon pack in your Linux distribution.

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Saafara yiñ Tànn

I just found out how to make checkboxes appear: Search for a page with checkboxes and open it, click and hold on an image on the same page that the checkbox is, place it on top of where a checkbox should be, and release. The checkbox should appear, along with the scrollbar and all other related functions. Really strange behavior, but it works. Not the best solution but that's all I got.

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Firefox since 46.0 has required GTK 3.4 at minimum to run so as a result it needs a GTK3 theme to theme Firefox. It looks like you have a GTK2 theme in use as to why Firefox looks unthemed and some things are missing in Firefox.

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The GTK version installed in my machine is 3.2, according to YaST.

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gacl said

The GTK version installed in my machine is 3.2, according to YaST.

openSUSE 14.1 has GTK 3.16.7 so for openSUSE 14.2 you likely mean GTK 3.20 (3.20.9 ?) (three.twenty).

Your Firefox looks like it is unthemed white and if you are missing scrollbar arrows, so either you are using XFCE which uses GTK2 Themes or KDE.

James moo ko soppali ci

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Start Firefox in Safe Mode to check if one of the extensions ("3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem.

  • Switch to the DEFAULT theme: "3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Appearance
  • Do NOT click the "Refresh Firefox" button on the Safe Mode start window
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James said

gacl said
The GTK version installed in my machine is 3.2, according to YaST.

openSUSE 14.1 has GTK 3.16.7 so for openSUSE 14.2 you likely mean GTK 3.20 (3.20.9 ?) (three.twenty).

Your Firefox looks like it is unthemed white and if you are missing scrollbar arrows, so either you are using XFCE which uses GTK2 Themes or KDE.

Sorry, 3.20.9 is correct. This is the latest version of openSUSE, though: 42.2. It comes standard with KDE.

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cor-el said

Start Firefox in Safe Mode to check if one of the extensions ("3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Extensions) or if hardware acceleration is causing the problem.
  • Switch to the DEFAULT theme: "3-bar" menu button or Tools -> Add-ons -> Appearance
  • Do NOT click the "Refresh Firefox" button on the Safe Mode start window

The default theme is the only theme available.

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Even easier than my previous "solution" is to drag whatever image is there on a particular page that I may be visiting and drag-and-drop it on top of the scroll bar. The scrollbar appears as if with magic. Hopefully openSUSE will upgrade GTK - I don't want to mess with it and break something. The solution is easy enough although it has to be done every time the browser is started. I'm going to mark it as solved even if it's not really solved.