The terms "extension" and "add-on" seem interchangeable, but I have seen instances where people seem to mean different things with "extension" vs "add-on."

Clarity please?

Thanks!

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it's the same. don't you mean the difference between extension/add-on and plugin? – JP Hellemons Jan 11 '10 at 10:51
Yes, your question is valid as well. I should have grafted your question onto mine. However, if you click on Tools -> Add-ons, the resulting dialog displays a separate pane for extensions and plug-ins, suggesting extensions are are a subset of add-ons and not identical. – Crashalot Jan 12 '10 at 19:01
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6 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Add-ons are installable enhancements to the Mozilla Foundation's projects (and compatible variants such as Portable Firefox). Add-ons allow the user to add or augment application features, use themes to his or her liking, and handle new types of content.

Extensions can be used to modify the behavior of existing features to the application or add entirely new features. Extensions are especially popular with Firefox, because Mozilla developers intend for the browser to be a fairly minimalistic application in order to reduce software bloat and bugs, while retaining a high degree of extensibility, so that individual users can add the features that they prefer.

Reading Add-on (Mozilla) may help

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In this context, extensions are a subset of addons.

So addons are an umbrella term for extensions, themes, dictionaries etc.

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Addons and extensions are the same, it's a whole that includes themes aswell.

The different part here are the plugins, that help your browser perform specific functions like viewing special graphic formats or playing multimedia files such as the adobe reader, flash, silverlight, quicktime etc.

Plugins are slightly different from extensions, which modify or add to existing functionality.

In fact in the browser itself it uses both terms interchangeably "Get Add-ons" but once installed they reside under the "Extensions" tab.

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@Johannes Rössel: I've modified the definition of plugin using the one provided by mozilla to ease understanding. – johnnyArt Jan 11 '10 at 10:55
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Add-on refers to both extensions and themes, Firefox 3 (IIRC) moved both themes and extensions to a single menu item.

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Add-on is an inclusive term for a category of augmentation modules that are subdivided into plugins, themes, search engines, extensions, snap-ins, or various other vendor-specific names.

  • A plugin (plug-in, addin, add-in, addon or add-on) is a computer program that interacts with a main (or host) application (a web browser or an email program, for example) to provide a certain, usually very specific, function on demand.

  • In computing, a patch is a small piece of software designed to update or fix problems with a computer program or its supporting data. This includes fixing bugs, replacing graphics and improving the usability or performance.

  • In computing, skins and themes are custom graphical appearances (GUIs) that can be applied to certain software and websites in order to suit the different tastes of different users.

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I have already checked and it turns out that nobody in the world can explain the difference between firefox's "extensions" and "plugins", both of which are categorized as "addons". This is because computer nerds the world over are hopeless at categorizing and organising information. It's like trying to figure out whether a feature will appear under a "system" menu or "administrative tools" menu, or perhaps it's "administrative tools" but under a "system" menu or wait maybe a "system" menu under an "administrative tools" menu. Computer nerds are generally verybad at organizing information and thinking logically. That's why almost all software is completely hare-brained. There is no difference between and extension and a plugin except in the minds and mindset of the programmers. They have their way of looking at it, which has no bearing though on reality. Lunacy is the cause of the problem here.

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