[feature request] Browser style "open new tab"
Moderators: Hacker, petermad, Stefan2, white
[feature request] Browser style "open new tab"
Hello, this is another approach to the "tab reuse" problem we discussed in http://www.ghisler.ch/board/viewtopic.php?t=10602
I found that reusing of locked tabs I proposed there might be counter-logical in some situations, and I am to propose another solution of the "tab mayhem" problem.
How about there is a "open new tab" always visible on the tab menu. In IE7 its, a small tab containing the just a "new tab" glyph (e.g. the rightmost on the screenshot at http://flickr.com/photos/56874024@N00/116518732). The concept is also present on other browsers.
Clicking that tab would open new tab containing the current location, similar to what ctrl-t does.
MIDDLE clicking on that tab will "nuke" all unused tabs of the pane, similar to the solution proposed by sheepdog.
This approach is consistent with the current tcmd UI, and is solving two problems. First, it gives a click target to the users that would like to use mouse. Second, it solves the "tab mayhem" problem without the need of toolbar to be visible. It takes very minimal space on the tabs line, and stays next to the tabs, instead of somewhere on the button row.
What do you think?
I found that reusing of locked tabs I proposed there might be counter-logical in some situations, and I am to propose another solution of the "tab mayhem" problem.
How about there is a "open new tab" always visible on the tab menu. In IE7 its, a small tab containing the just a "new tab" glyph (e.g. the rightmost on the screenshot at http://flickr.com/photos/56874024@N00/116518732). The concept is also present on other browsers.
Clicking that tab would open new tab containing the current location, similar to what ctrl-t does.
MIDDLE clicking on that tab will "nuke" all unused tabs of the pane, similar to the solution proposed by sheepdog.
This approach is consistent with the current tcmd UI, and is solving two problems. First, it gives a click target to the users that would like to use mouse. Second, it solves the "tab mayhem" problem without the need of toolbar to be visible. It takes very minimal space on the tabs line, and stays next to the tabs, instead of somewhere on the button row.
What do you think?
- XPEHOPE3KA
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- majkinetor !
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2X*
you are so concerned about n00bies... funny.
2suncho
I like reusing of locked tabs.... new tab button sounds nice also, especialy if invisible by default.
you are so concerned about n00bies... funny.
2suncho
I like reusing of locked tabs.... new tab button sounds nice also, especialy if invisible by default.
Last edited by majkinetor ! on 2006-05-10, 14:29 UTC, edited 1 time in total.
Habemus majkam!
- XPEHOPE3KA
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/elliott-back/29723068/sirsilva wrote:the screenshot is too small can u pls upload a bigger one ?
It it empty tab, but when you point at it, a glyph appears. It is the typical "new document" icon, with a red "*" in the topleft corner.
Personally, I would keep the icon always there, but lets not go offtopic;) The question is, would others like such idea?
By default, tcmd asks if you really like to close all buttons.XPEHOPE3KA wrote:I dislike the middle button solution. One may press it accidently. Especially a new user.
Also, by default "open new" tab could be turned off. The point is, if it is widely used in browsers, it will soon became UI standard for tabbed browsing.
- StickyNomad
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1. I like the new tab button idea. Opera also uses it.
2. SpeedCommander has a very effective tab implementation. Check out the SC tab property dialog here. Works great!
3. In SC, when attempting to navigate a locked tab to a folder outside of that tab's allowed domain (again, see that property dialog), SC automatically activates the first unlocked tab at the left of that panel.
4. In the SC world, then, one could arbitrarily designate the first tab on the left of each panel as a "free" tab, so that when SC activates it in response to the situation described in 3 (above), SC doesn't "overwrite" a location one might have wanted preserved AND SC wouldn't arbitrarily add a new tab to the panel.
A combination of TC's current tab implementation with these ideas borrowed from SC and some of those expressed in this thread would be excellent.
2. SpeedCommander has a very effective tab implementation. Check out the SC tab property dialog here. Works great!
3. In SC, when attempting to navigate a locked tab to a folder outside of that tab's allowed domain (again, see that property dialog), SC automatically activates the first unlocked tab at the left of that panel.
4. In the SC world, then, one could arbitrarily designate the first tab on the left of each panel as a "free" tab, so that when SC activates it in response to the situation described in 3 (above), SC doesn't "overwrite" a location one might have wanted preserved AND SC wouldn't arbitrarily add a new tab to the panel.
A combination of TC's current tab implementation with these ideas borrowed from SC and some of those expressed in this thread would be excellent.
Licensed, Mouse-Centric, moving (slowly) toward Touch-centric