One of the best pieces of news related to the recent release of version 3 of Mozilla’s Firefox browser
is that most popular extensions now work with it. In this post, I’ll
present an extensive guided tour to my favorite, free Firefox extension
of all: iMacros.
If you spend a lot of time in Firefox, and especially if you perform a
lot of repetitive tasks each day, iMacros can save you tons of time and
hassle. It sits in your Firefox toolbar, and lets you record tasks
whether they are oft-performed web development tasks, or simple tasks
such as opening a series of tabs you use each day. Here, in pictures, is
how it works.
Toolbar Availability and The Pop-Up Pane
After
you install iMacros, it sits in your Firefox toolbar as an icon. It’s
the gear-like icon on the right, just next to the address bar here.
If
you click on the iMacros icon, it opens up a pane in Firefox, on the
left, with a list of your favorite macros, as seen here (your list of
favorites will probably become much longer than this list).
Recording Macros
A
macro is simply a set of steps to be executed in order, and many people
shy away from the enormous efficiencies they offer because they think
macros require programming. Not so. In iMacros, you can just hit a
record button, begin performing a set of tasks you’d like to save as a
macro, and hit stop after the last task in the macro. As you can see
here, in the pop-up right next to your favorites list, a little tabbed
module makes it about as easy to record macros as it is to operate a DVD
player.
An Example: Recording and Saving a Macro
In this example of a macro recorded in iMacros, I will record a macro
titled “Tabbed Sites,” and its purpose will be to open separate tabs in
Firefox for three of my favorite web pages that I visit every day:
WebWorkerDaily, GigaOm, and OStatic. To begin with, I just hit Record in
the tabbed dialog seen above, and iMacro lets me know in red here that
it is recording my subsequent actions.
While
iMacros is recording, I will then open the home pages for the three web
sites in separate tabs, and iMacros will show me my list of actions as
seen at the bottom of the list at left.
My
final recording step is to hit Stop, just under the Record option in
the tabbed dialog we started out with. I then hit Save, which is located
just under the Record button, and enter the name of my macro, which is
“Tabbed Sites,” in this dialog that pops up.
Now, as you can see here, the saved and named macro “Tabbed Sites” is at the top of my list of favorite macros.
Using iMacros for Super Bookmarks
One
of the best of all uses for iMacros is to use it for super bookmarks.
To do this, first right-click on the macro that you want to bookmark,
and click Add to Bookmarks, as seen here.
This will bring up a dialog box, and you want to click on the Local option seen here.
And voila, you can see the “Tabbed Sites” macro listed at the bottom of my Bookmarks menu in Firefox, here.
Get
to know iMacros if you use Firefox. If you perform a lot of repetitive
HTML, CSS or other web development tasks, it can be particularly useful
for letting you record a series of actions you want to be able to
repeat. Similar to how my Tabbed Sites macro worked, you can also save
different collections of open tabs for favorite sites (perhaps Favorite
News Sites, Favorite Blogs, etc.), and have them all open in separate
tabs automatically in one step, whenever you want. There are many more
time-saving uses for this extension.
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