If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Rate Thread | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
.... like Tab Mix Plus does in Firefox (or did? I'm running an old
Firefox, so don't know if TMP still works on the new one). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Anybody who thinks there can be unlimited growth in a static, limited environment, is either mad or an economist. - Sir David Attenborough, in Radio Times 10-16 November 2012 |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
... like Tab Mix Plus does in Firefox (or did? I'm running an old Firefox, so don't know if TMP still works on the new one). Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. Mozilla (and Google earlier) decided to stop extensions from corrupting or destabilizing the chrome of their web browsers. A while ago, there was a Stacked Tabs experimental flag in Chrome where you could get Chrome to stack tabs rather than shrink them (go to chrome://flags and search for Stacked Tabs). Google took that away. That's what happens with these flags: they're considered experimental, so new ones can show up and old ones disappear. Google picked the name Chrome for their project's codename and it stuck when it got released. All web browsers have a chrome. Google just decided to use that attribute name for their project name. https://www.thewindowsclub.com/googl...eason-revealed In the meantime and if you don't like the TMP-alternative extensions to manage multiple tabs in Chrome (Tab Outliner, OneTab, TooManyTabs, Tab Glutton or Tab Menu), you could use Shift+Esc to get Chrome's own task manager from which you can pick which to change its focus. The problem is Chrome's task manager which mixes together all processes for Chrome, including those for each tab. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
In message , VanguardLH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: ... like Tab Mix Plus does in Firefox (or did? I'm running an old Firefox, so don't know if TMP still works on the new one). Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. Mozilla (and Google earlier) decided to stop extensions from corrupting or destabilizing the chrome of their web browsers. A while ago, there was a Stacked Tabs experimental flag in Chrome where you could get Chrome to stack tabs rather than shrink them (go to chrome://flags and search for Stacked Tabs). Google took that away. )-: That's what happens with these flags: they're considered experimental, so new ones can show up and old ones disappear. Google picked the name Chrome for their project's codename and it stuck when it got released. All web browsers have a chrome. Google just decided to use that attribute name for their project name. A rather unfortunate choice of term - I don't mean for the browser, i mean for the concept. It's far from obvious what it means - to me, and I'm sure to many others too. [] In the meantime and if you don't like the TMP-alternative extensions to manage multiple tabs in Chrome (Tab Outliner, OneTab, TooManyTabs, Tab Glutton or Tab Menu) Do any of them do multi-row tabs? (I could try them, but it sounds like you have, so it's easier to ask you.) , you could use Shift+Esc to get Chrome's own task manager from which you can pick which to change its focus. The problem is Chrome's task manager which mixes together all processes for Chrome, including those for each tab. I just tried it; it appears in a small window, sufficiently narrow that all I can see are the icons for the tabs. OK, I can widen it. (It doesn't help that the task titles for the tabs all start "Tab:", so I have to widen it more.) It wasn't obvious how to change focus to one of them - the only _button_ would kill that task, and clicking on one only shifted focus in the window; I tried double-clicking, half expecting it to kill the tab, but it did work. Thanks, but I think it's slower than just hovering over the tabs to find the one I want (I don't have _that_ many open at the moment - about 32). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "I'm a self-made man, thereby demonstrating once again the perils of unskilled labor..." - Harlan Ellison |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
VanguardLH WROTE: In the meantime and if you don't like the TMP-alternative extensions to manage multiple tabs in Chrome (Tab Outliner, OneTab, TooManyTabs, Tab Glutton or Tab Menu) Do any of them do multi-row tabs? (I could try them, but it sounds like you have, so it's easier to ask you.) They all have pictures at the extensions' pages at the Chrome store. You can get an idea of which layout you like best. Right now I'm using the Tab Glutton extension: simple and works. However, instead rows of tabs (which would have to be a separate side panel or other in-document frame since the tab bar cannot be altered), it shows a drop-down list of tabs. I don't see my eyes rolling left and right to scan tabs (or rows of them) as easier then my eyes rolling up and down to scan a list. I have used some others but eventually I got rid of them simply because I didn't much use them. In Firefox when you open lots of tabs, at the right end of its tab row appears a down-arrow. Click on that and you see a list of the tabs. Tab Glutton gives me a very similar listing, so it makes Firefox and Chrome similar in behavior (except Firefox's down-arrow is at the end of the tab row versus Tab Glutton which is a button in the command bar in Chrome). |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
In message , VanguardLH
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: VanguardLH WROTE: In the meantime and if you don't like the TMP-alternative extensions to manage multiple tabs in Chrome (Tab Outliner, OneTab, TooManyTabs, Tab Glutton or Tab Menu) Do any of them do multi-row tabs? (I could try them, but it sounds like you have, so it's easier to ask you.) They all have pictures at the extensions' pages at the Chrome store. You can get an idea of which layout you like best. OK, Looking. Thanks for the list. Tabs Outliner (couldn't find one without the s) looks rather complicated - more like a bookmarks (OK, Favorites) manager. OneTab is a bit extreme - reduces to one tab - but the memory saving looks attractive. (Though presumably means switching tabs is slow.) TooManyTabs - maybe. Tab Finder Light - looks promising. Tab Glutton - there are two with that name! I presume you're using the one by nsand. Tab Menu - looks nice and simple - nothing about groups etc. The installation warning messages are ambiguous: when I try "Tab Finder Light", Chrome tells me that "It can: Read and change all your data on the websites that you visit". The word "on" is ambiguous: does it mean "about", i. e. it can change locally-held data, or "at", i. e. change data held remotely? When I try "Tab Menu", it _doesn't_ give the above warning, just that "It can: Read your browsing history". Again, ambiguous - does this mean "and send it somewhere"? I don't mind the extension knowing it locally. (In practice, my history's probably logged somewhere anyway.) Think I'll go with that one - yes, nice and simple. (Would be nice if it scrolled when I move the cursor to the bottom one rather than having to use the almost-invisible scroll bar, but can't have everything!) Right now I'm using the Tab Glutton extension: simple and works. However, instead rows of tabs (which would have to be a separate side panel or other in-document frame since the tab bar cannot be altered), Since it can't be altered, it'd be nice if I could just make it disappear altogether, since it serves no purpose. it shows a drop-down list of tabs. I don't see my eyes rolling left and right to scan tabs (or rows of them) as easier then my eyes rolling And the up and down list can show more of the tab's title. up and down to scan a list. I have used some others but eventually I got rid of them simply because I didn't much use them. In Firefox when you open lots of tabs, at the right end of its tab row appears a down-arrow. Click on that and you see a list of the tabs. Tab Glutton gives me a very similar listing, so it makes Firefox and Chrome similar in behavior (except Firefox's down-arrow is at the end of the tab row versus Tab Glutton which is a button in the command bar in Chrome). Tab Menu is the same. (In Firefox, I'm still using Tab Mix Plus, which lets me have multiple lines of tabs, which I like.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Anyone can do any amount of work provided it isn't the work he is supposed to be doing at the moment. -Robert Benchley, humorist, drama critic, and actor (1889-1945) |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
VanguardLH WROTE: In Firefox when you open lots of tabs, at the right end of its tab row appears a down-arrow. Click on that and you see a list of the tabs. Tab Glutton gives me a very similar listing, so it makes Firefox and Chrome similar in behavior (except Firefox's down-arrow is at the end of the tab row versus Tab Glutton which is a button in the command bar in Chrome). Tab Menu is the same. (In Firefox, I'm still using Tab Mix Plus, which lets me have multiple lines of tabs, which I like.) I'm using Firefox Quantum which dropped legacy extensions, so TMP was lost. Many of its features were already in Firefox and I didn't use a lot of TMP's features, so it wasn't a big hit to me on losing TMP. The multi-row tabs was missed, though. However, I tend to group my web surfing within separate windows instead of mashing a bunch of tabs together in one window. I also use dexpot to organize my desktops in related tasks. I'll be switching from Tab Glutton (by nsand) to Tab Menu. Tab Glutton is prettier but it has too much whitespace; i.e., Tab Glutton wastes space. For example, as a test and with both installed, I opened 22 tabs. Tab Menu displayed all 22 tabs with room to spare (no scrollbar needed yet). Tab Glutton ran out of space to show only 10 of the 22 tabs and showed a scrollbar to get at the rest. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 14:35:45 +0100, in alt.windows7.general, "J. P. Gilliver
(John)" , wrote In message , VanguardLH writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: ... like Tab Mix Plus does in Firefox (or did? I'm running an old Firefox, so don't know if TMP still works on the new one). Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. Mozilla (and Google earlier) decided to stop extensions from corrupting or destabilizing the chrome of their web browsers. A while ago, there was a Stacked Tabs experimental flag in Chrome where you could get Chrome to stack tabs rather than shrink them (go to chrome://flags and search for Stacked Tabs). Google took that away. )-: That's what happens with these flags: they're considered experimental, so new ones can show up and old ones disappear. Google picked the name Chrome for their project's codename and it stuck when it got released. All web browsers have a chrome. Google just decided to use that attribute name for their project name. A rather unfortunate choice of term - I don't mean for the browser, i mean for the concept. It's far from obvious what it means - to me, and I'm sure to many others too. [] In the meantime and if you don't like the TMP-alternative extensions to manage multiple tabs in Chrome (Tab Outliner, OneTab, TooManyTabs, Tab Glutton or Tab Menu) Do any of them do multi-row tabs? (I could try them, but it sounds like you have, so it's easier to ask you.) , you could use Shift+Esc to get Chrome's own task manager from which you can pick which to change its focus. The problem is Chrome's task manager which mixes together all processes for Chrome, including those for each tab. I just tried it; it appears in a small window, sufficiently narrow that all I can see are the icons for the tabs. OK, I can widen it. (It doesn't help that the task titles for the tabs all start "Tab:", so I have to widen it more.) It wasn't obvious how to change focus to one of them - the only _button_ would kill that task, and clicking on one only shifted focus in the window; I tried double-clicking, half expecting it to kill the tab, but it did work. Thanks, but I think it's slower than just hovering over the tabs to find the one I want (I don't have _that_ many open at the moment - about 32). In any event it is a nice idea........maybe toggle it with a hot key...... Calling browsers' frames "Chrome" goes back to Steve Wozniak and Mosaic (if that worked for Apple) who looked at it and said "hey, those frames look like the chrome of a car....." (to paraphrase, probably). I understand he was also the guy who said "it looks like a mouse", referring to the new pointing device....... |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 08:12:44 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. You say "the chrome." Can you be more specific, please. What does "the chrome" mean in this sense. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
Ken Blake wrote:
VanguardLH wrote: Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. You say "the chrome." Can you be more specific, please. What does "the chrome" mean in this sense. Chromium is an open-sourced project for a web browser. Google added some proprietary components, so they called it Chrome. Before Chromium or Chrome, the "chrome" of a web browser was its frame, toolbars, menus, status bar, and other elements of its GUI distinct from its document window (where the web page gets rendered). Chrome was used by programmers to describe those components of a web browser long before Google decided to adopt the terminology for their product name. Newbies (Gen Z) not familiar with web browsers before Chrome showed up (2008) only know chrome (small "c") as [Google] Chrome (big "C"). Old farts, like me, know what was meant by the chrome for a web browser before Google even existed. https://www.pcmag.com/encyclopedia/t...browser-chrome Trying to find out the definition of "chrome" before Google glomed onto the term for a product name is pretty tough due to the flooding of search databases with Google's Chrome. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Chrome: is there an extension that puts tabs on multiple lines ...
On Fri, 5 Oct 2018 08:53:44 -0500, VanguardLH wrote:
Ken Blake wrote: VanguardLH wrote: Like Firefox 57+ (Quantum), Chrome doesn't let extensions mess with the chrome of the web browser, and the chrome includes the tabs. You say "the chrome." Can you be more specific, please. What does "the chrome" mean in this sense. Chromium is an open-sourced project for a web browser. Google added some proprietary components, so they called it Chrome. Before Chromium or Chrome, the "chrome" of a web browser was its frame, toolbars, menus, status bar, and other elements of its GUI distinct from its document window (where the web page gets rendered). Thanks very much. Chrome was used by programmers to describe those components of a web browser long before Google decided to adopt the terminology for their product name. Newbies (Gen Z) not familiar with web browsers before Chrome showed up (2008) only know chrome (small "c") as [Google] Chrome (big "C"). Old farts, like me, know what was meant by the chrome for a web browser before Google even existed. I'm probably an older fart than you; I'm 80. And although I've been working with computers (including programming them) since 1962, I wasn't familiar with the term. I only programmed mainframes and minicomputers |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|