Chrome may dominate, but Firefox is a known name among browsers for a reason. Whether you care about features, performance, or privacy, it could be a better fit for you.
So at work, I am a web developer and a rare Firefox user. Team mates often come to me and say: “Hey Dragnucs, I’ve got this problem/bug/issue/whatever, can you help?” I often reply in lines of: “Show me X in your debugger tool”. Most often, they can’t do it in Chrome, so we just open Firefox, see X and find the issue.
The most common debug tools Firefox has that Chrome lacks are:
Styling:
Simpler style editor
Style inspector help (Show which and why rules are overridden)
Computed rules, flexbox and grid debugger, animation GUI editor, etc.
DOM:
Shows which elements are hidden
Shows attached events to nodes
Breakpoints on DOM changes, attributes changes, or node tree change
Better developper tools.
So at work, I am a web developer and a rare Firefox user. Team mates often come to me and say: “Hey Dragnucs, I’ve got this problem/bug/issue/whatever, can you help?” I often reply in lines of: “Show me X in your debugger tool”. Most often, they can’t do it in Chrome, so we just open Firefox, see X and find the issue.
The most common debug tools Firefox has that Chrome lacks are:
Styling:
DOM:
General: