find.find()
Searches for text in a tab.
You can use this function to search normal HTTP(S) web pages. It searches a single tab: you can specify the ID of a particular tab to search, or it will search the active tab by default. It searches all frames in the tab.
You can make the search case-sensitive and make it match whole words only.
By default, the function just returns the number of matches found. By passing in the includeRangeData
and includeRectData
options, you can get more information about the location of the matches in the target tab.
This function stores the results internally, so the next time any extension calls find.highlightResults()
, then the results of this find call will be highlighted, until the next time someone calls find()
.
This is an asynchronous function that returns a Promise
.
Syntax
browser.find.find(
queryphrase,
options
)
Parameters
options
Optional
-
object
. An object specifying additional options. It may take any of the following properties, all optional:
-
caseSensitive
-
boolean
. If true
the, the search is case-sensitive. Defaults to false
.
-
entireWord
-
boolean
. Match only entire words: so "Tok" will not be matched inside "Tokyo". Defaults to false
.
-
includeRangeData
-
boolean
. Include range data in the response, which describe where in the page DOM the match was found. Defaults to false
.
-
includeRectData
-
boolean
. Include rectangle data in the response, which describes where in the rendered page the match was found. Defaults to false
-
matchDiacritics
-
boolean
. If true
, the search distinguishes between accented letters and their base letters. For example, when set to true
, searching for "résumé" does not find a match for "resume". Defaults to false
.
-
tabId
-
integer
. ID of the tab to search. Defaults to the active tab.
-
queryphrase
-
string
. The text to search for.
Return value
A Promise
that will be fulfilled with an object containing up to three properties:
-
count
-
integer
. The number of results found.
rangeData
Optional
-
array
. If includeRangeData
was given in the options
parameter, then this property will be included. It is provided as an array of RangeData
objects, one for each match. Each RangeData
object describes where in the DOM tree the match was found. This would enable, for example, an extension to get the text surrounding each match, so as to display context for the matches.
The items correspond to the items given in rectData
, so rangeData[i]
describes the same match as rectData[i]
.
Each RangeData
contains the following properties:
-
endOffset
-
The ordinal position of the end of the match within its text node.
-
endTextNodePos
-
The ordinal position of the text node in which the match ended.
-
framePos
-
The index of the frame containing the match. 0 corresponds to the parent window. Note that the order of objects in the rangeData
array will sequentially line up with the order of frame indexes: for example, framePos
for the first sequence of rangeData
objects will be 0, framePos
for the next sequence will be 1, and so on.
-
startOffset
-
The ordinal position of the start of the match within its text node.
-
startTextNodePos
-
The ordinal position of the text node in which the match started.
rectData
Optional
-
array
. If includeRectData
was given in the options
parameter, then this property will be included. It is an array of RectData
objects. It contains client rectangles for all the text matched in the search, relative to the top-left of the viewport. Extensions can use this to provide custom highlighting of the results.
Each RectData
object contains rectangle data for a single match. It has two properties:
-
rectsAndTexts
-
An object containing two properties, both arrays:
rectList
: an array of objects which each have four integer properties: top
, left
, bottom
, right
. These describe a rectangle relative to the top-left of the viewport.
textList
: an array of strings, corresponding to the rectList
array. The entry at textList[i]
contains the part of the match bounded by the rectangle at rectList[i]
.
For example, consider part of a web page that looks like this:

If you search for "You may", the match needs to be described by two rectangles:

In this case, in the RectData
that describes this match, rectsAndTexts.rectList
and rectsAndTexts.textList
will each have 2 items.
textList[0]
will contain "You ", and rectList[0]
will contain its bounding rectangle.
textList[1]
will contain "may", and rectList[1]
will contain its bounding rectangle.
-
text
-
The complete text of the match, "You may" in the example above.
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
WebView Android |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
find |
No |
No |
57 |
? |
No |
No |
? |
? |
No |
? |
No |
? |
options |
No |
No |
57 |
? |
No |
No |
? |
? |
No |
? |
No |
? |
Basic examples
Search the active tab for "banana", log the number of matches, and highlight them:
function found(results) {
console.log(`There were: ${results.count} matches.`);
if (results.count > 0) {
browser.find.highlightResults();
}
}
browser.find.find("banana").then(found);
Search for "banana" across all tabs (note that this requires the "tabs" permission or matching host permissions, because it accesses tab.url
):
async function findInAllTabs(allTabs) {
for (const tab of allTabs) {
const results = await browser.find.find("banana", { tabId: tab.id });
console.log(`In page "${tab.url}": ${results.count} matches.`);
}
}
browser.tabs.query({}).then(findInAllTabs);
Using rangeData
In this example the extension uses rangeData
to get the context in which the match was found. The context is the complete textContent
of the node in which the match was found. If the match spanned nodes, the context is the concatenation of the textContent
of all spanned nodes.
Note that for simplicity, this example doesn't handle pages that contain frames. To support this you'd need to split rangeData
into groups, one per frame, and execute the script in each frame.
The background script:
async function getContexts(matches) {
const activeTabArray = await browser.tabs.query({
active: true,
currentWindow: true,
});
const tabId = activeTabArray[0].id;
await browser.tabs.executeScript(tabId, { file: "get-context.js" });
const contexts = await browser.tabs.sendMessage(tabId, {
ranges: matches.rangeData,
});
for (const context of contexts) {
console.log(context);
}
}
browser.browserAction.onClicked.addListener((tab) => {
browser.find.find("example", { includeRangeData: true }).then(getContexts);
});
The content script:
function getNodes() {
const walker = document.createTreeWalker(
document,
window.NodeFilter.SHOW_TEXT,
null,
false
);
const nodes = [];
while ((node = walker.nextNode())) {
nodes.push(node);
}
return nodes;
}
function getContexts(ranges) {
const contexts = [];
const nodes = getNodes();
for (const range of ranges) {
let context = nodes[range.startTextNodePos].textContent;
let pos = range.startTextNodePos;
while (pos < range.endTextNodePos) {
pos++;
context += nodes[pos].textContent;
}
contexts.push(context);
}
return contexts;
}
browser.runtime.onMessage.addListener((message, sender, sendResponse) => {
sendResponse(getContexts(message.ranges));
});
Using rectData
In this example the extension uses rectData
to "redact" the matches, by adding black DIVs over the top of their bounding rectangles:

Note that in many ways this is a poor way to redact pages.
The background script:
async function redact(matches) {
const activeTabArray = await browser.tabs.query({
active: true,
currentWindow: true,
});
const tabId = activeTabArray[0].id;
await browser.tabs.executeScript(tabId, { file: "redact.js" });
await browser.tabs.sendMessage(tabId, { rects: matches.rectData });
}
browser.browserAction.onClicked.addListener((tab) => {
browser.find.find("banana", { includeRectData: true }).then(redact);
});
The content script:
function redactRect(rect) {
const redaction = document.createElement("div");
redaction.style.backgroundColor = "black";
redaction.style.position = "absolute";
redaction.style.top = `${rect.top}px`;
redaction.style.left = `${rect.left}px`;
redaction.style.width = `${rect.right - rect.left}px`;
redaction.style.height = `${rect.bottom - rect.top}px`;
document.body.appendChild(redaction);
}
function redactAll(rectData) {
for (const match of rectData) {
for (const rect of match.rectsAndTexts.rectList) {
redactRect(rect);
}
}
}
browser.runtime.onMessage.addListener((message) => {
redactAll(message.rects);
});