*You sort of already can save a tabset. Include all of the tabs you want to have in a bookmark folder and then right click it whenever you want them and select "Open all bookmarks".** *☆PhistucK
On Sat, Feb 14, 2009 at 20:26, Frederick Grose <[email protected]> wrote: > Very good start! Thanks for the references. Here is some feedback for > refinement of the feature: > > 1. The feature would be more discoverable if the docking icons were > activated over a much larger field of the screen, > 2. I had trouble finding a way to get a top-half window to complement > the bottom-half. (I found it, eventually; again a larger hint activation > area would be appreciated.) > 3. Restoring a previous view arrangement is a problem. > > Item 3 is the greatest challenge. The idea of corralling the tabs within > the parent window is an extension of the basic Chrome container frame. It > would divide the original frame into subgroups of tabs in the various tiled > arrangements. One might then fuse or divide groups to 'restore' to a > previous, or something similar to a previous, arrangement. > > Building on the above, it would be another great feature to be able to > actually *save and resume a tab set* by a new name tag. One might find and > restore them from the 'New Tab' gallery. > > Thanks for the great work! --Fred > On Feb 13, 4:00 pm, dhhwai <[email protected]> wrote: > Docking dragged > tabs in new windows has been implemented in the > development 2.0 branch. > When you drag a tab to certain positions on > the monitor, a docking icon > will appear. Release the mouse over the > docking icon to have the tab snap > to the docking position instead of > being dropped at the same size as the > original window. Docking > positions are: > Monitor top: make the dropped > tab maximized. > Monitor left/right: make the dropped tab full-height and > half-width, > aligned with the monitor edge. > Monitor bottom: make the > dropped tab full-width and half-height, > aligned with the bottom of the > monitor. > Browser-window left/right: fit the browser window and the dropped > tab > side-by-side across the screen. > Browser-window bottom: fit the > browser window and the dropped tab top- > to-bottom across the screen. > > > See Docking Dragged Tabs inhttp:// > sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/dev/getting-involved/dev-chann... > > andhttp://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=4628 > > The 2.0 > releases are dev channel only releases. If you're currently > not > subscribed to the dev channel, you might want to consider taking a > look. > Information about subscribing to the dev channel is here: > > http://dev.chromium.org/getting-involved/dev-channel > > On Feb 13, > 11:07 am, Frederick Grose <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > I would like > to resurrect this idea thread for more general tab placement, > http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-discuss/browse_frm/thread/4bc... > > > one hit on 'split tab'). > > It would save a lot of effort while trying to > compare 2 or more pages > > side-by-side or head-to-foot. > > > It would > also be useful for following an irc chat page while working in > > another > tab. Lot's of variations would be simplified. > > > How about if the drag > tab created a new window when dropped beyond the > > current window, but a > new side frame if nearer to same, or a new bottom > > frame if nearer to the > bottom of the current tab. Drop target would > > determine new placement and > parent tag. > > > Thanks for considering. > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Chromium Discussion mailing list: [email protected] View archives, change email options, or unsubscribe: http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-discuss -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
