Increase code font size in firefox developer tool
FirefoxFont SizeFirefox Developer-ToolsFirefox Problem Overview
How to increase code fonts in Firefox developer tools? I know that there is a zoom function but I want to set the font size only for the code.
Firefox Solutions
Solution 1 - Firefox
- Open Firefox Developer Tools
- Press Ctrl++ on Unix/Win or Cmd++ on Mac
To be clear, I mean the + key. You don't need to hold the Shift key while doing it.
Solution 2 - Firefox
Maybe an easier way will be to open about:config
and set
devtools.toolbox.zoomValue
to bigger value.
Solution 3 - Firefox
You need to modify userChrome.css
under ~/.mozilla/firefox/[profile-name]/chrome
with this:
/* Styles for Web developer tools */
@namespace url(http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml);
.CodeMirror {
font-family: "Ubuntu Mono", monospace !important;
font-size: 15pt !important;
}
The result looks like this:
This only changes the debugger and style editor. There's a different selector for the html inspector. Not sure what that is yet.
Solution 4 - Firefox
Open Firefox and type about:support
. In Application Basics section chose Profile Folder - Open Folder. It will fire your file manager. If there is no chrome
folder than create it. After that go to this chrome
folder and create an userChrome.css
file, open it in a text editor and add :
.devtools-monospace {font-size: 12px!important;}
Save. Be sure to restart Firefox.
UPDATE: One thing bothered me - while typing in the devtools console the text actually a bit smaller than on output (after pressing Enter). In order to make it the same we need to change font-size for its corresponding css class too. I don't know its class name yet so I just set
* { font-size: 12px !important; }
globally and it works.
Solution 5 - Firefox
So sure, as stated before, the short answer is cmd++.
But the + sign might not be directly accessible on your keyboard (no numeric key pad, laptop, strange layout).
You then have to press maj
first to access the + sign, like, for example on the american keyboard layout: maj+=.
Unfortunately, even if you are correctly focused on the dev tool pane, cmd+maj+= increases the font of the web view pane, while cmd+- decreases the font on the dev tool pane.
And you end-up with a web tool pane with a font size so small that it is unreadable, and no way to increase it.
Then @Thal's answer comes handy, once focused to the dev tool pane cmd+0 resets the dev tool's font size to the original.
If you want to answer the question like @Timothy_Truckle is asking for, here are a couple of them (still focus on the dev tool pane, of course):
- switch to the US keyboard layout and press cmd+=
- find a keyboard layout with the + directly accessible, switch to it, and press cmd++
That's for you guys wondering why some find it hard to simply press cmd++ or why some find it hard to focus on the dev tool pane (because they actually focus on the dev tool pane, but the result is as if they were focused on the web view pane).
Solution 6 - Firefox
You can specify a style for the devtools-monospace
class selector. To do so, edit userChrome.css
in your mozilla profile's chrome
directory, and specify the CSS properties you want. For example:
.devtools-monospace {
font-family: "Source Code Pro",monospace !important;
font-size: 16px !important;
}
The userChrome.css
needs to be in the chrome
folder of your Firefox profile. If the folder don't exist, create it. Your userChrome.css
will then override the CSS from Firefox dev tools after you restart the browser.
To find your profile in Windows OS type: Strg + R and then enter:
%APPDATA%\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\
Solution 7 - Firefox
Some elements of Firefox can be styled in the userChrome.css file situated in your Firefox profile's chrome folder.
As of 2018, modify/create ~/.mozilla/firefox/[profile-name]/chrome/userChrome.css with something similar to:
@-moz-document url-prefix("chrome://devtools/content/") {
* { font-size: 13px !important; }
}
Then restart Firefox.
The solution on the Mozilla forums almost has it right: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1198481
Using Ctrl+= or Cmd+= was not ideal for me since it increased fonts for all the elements of the window, including the tab names.
Using .devtools-monospace { font-size: 13px !important;}
was almost ok, but it did not affect the Debugger and Network tabs.
Using @bohag_bihu's solution had side effects for the address bar and some other text inputs.
Solution 8 - Firefox
I accidentally had my firefox developer window resized to the minimum (couldn't even read it anymore), "CMD +" (mac) didn't work for me, well only for the main web page even if the console was focused, I just hit: "CMD 0" and it came back to normal, if it can be a good alternative to anyone else ;)
Solution 9 - Firefox
As John said, the way to increase the font-size in the devtools is to use ctrl/cmd+, just like you would on a web page. In fact the devtools is a webpage. You just need to make sure that the devtools frame is focused first.
I'm afraid there's no way to only increase the font-size for the code right now.
Solution 10 - Firefox
For certain Mozilla versions (I was testing on Mozilla SeaMonkey equivalent to Mozilla Firefox 52 ESR), an explicitly set root element is required.
This will work:
@namespace xul url("http://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.xul");
@namespace html url("http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml");
while this won't:
@namespace url("http://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.xul");
@namespace html url("http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml");
Once @namespace
rules have been set,
you only need to add selectors and styles:
.devtools-monospace,
.CodeMirror,
.CodeMirror pre {
font-family: "Courier New", monospace !important;
font-size: 10pt !important;
}
Solution 11 - Firefox
This one works on FF => 68.0 Linux with userChrome.css
. Inspector tools are now using CSS variables and the inspector tree itself is loaded in an iframe so none of the tweaks actually worked esp. with .CodeMirror
classes.
You can find all the variables in this file (just copy paste below URL in FF to view source)
resource://devtools/client/themes/variables.css
For the userChrome.css
part here's what solved it for me.
/* @namespace url(http://www.mozilla.org/keymaster/gatekeeper/there.is.only.xul); */
:root {
/* Text sizes */
--theme-code-font-size: 13px !important;
}
> If userChrome.css
is not loaded create userContent.css
and add the same rulesets. Tried and tested on FF Mac/Linux 89