Lucas Levrel wrote:

Le 11 janvier 2011, Paul B. Gallagher a écrit :

But I only want it to replace /blank/ tabs.

Yes, but regular bookmarks behave the same way: they either replace the
current tab (blank or not), or open in a new tab (the current being
blank or not). Or did I miss some functionality?

Before changing my pref, a regular bookmark replaced an existing page or tab, but a groupmark left the existing one intact.

Since changing the pref, a groupmark always replaces the existing page or tabs. So for example, I just had three tabs open, two of them blank, and chose a groupmark with four tabs, and I ended with a total of four tabs. The tab with content was lost, and so were the two blank ones.

I then tested with one tab having content and five blank tabs, and the four-page groupmark replaced all six with its own set of four. It acted as if it didn't know there were five blank tabs available for it, and forced the tab with content closed even though it didn't have to.

I can force the groupmark to open its four tabs in a new window, but I can't tell it to add those four tabs to an existing window or set of tabs.

The difference between a bookmark and a groupmark is I can tell a bookmark to open in a new tab, but I can't tell a groupmark to open in new tabs. It's either "replace all my open tabs" or "open in a new window."

--
War doesn't determine who's right, just who's left.
--
Paul B. Gallagher

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