On 11/21/2017 12:34 PM, Leif Halvard Silli wrote:
Hi. Sorry for my belated follow-up. See below.

On 15 Nov 2017, at 9:58, Hussein Shafie wrote:

    On 11/14/2017 05:53 PM, Leif Halvard Silli wrote:

        Browsers allow us to open links in background tabs. This allows
        users to
        finish working with the current page, before handling/reading
        the opened
        files. This have some organizational advantages for the user.

    Please explain how this works in a browser (e.g. point me to an
    article or doc).

    All the browsers I use just have "Open Link in a New Tab" entry in
    their contextual menu and a user preference (set once for all)
    called "When you open a link in a new tab, switch to it immediately".

I hope the following is helpful.

  * Our basic expereience is the same, I suppose: In Safari and Firefox
    for Mac, when you Command-Click on a link, the page is typically
    opened in a tab, in the background, by which I mean that the browser
    does NOT switch to it immediately. Firefox and Safari have, as you
    say, an opition in the preferences to tell the browser to switch to
    the opened tab immediately.
  * However, you may also override the default behavior by pressing (on
    a Mac) Shift-Command while clicking the link - then both Safari and
    Firefox will perform an immediate switch to the new tab. (I suppose
    this behavior is ”reveresed” to open in background if you, in the
    preferences, tell the browser to always perform an immediate switch.)

The XMLmind editors, by contrast, always perform an immediate switch to
the tab where the followed link gets opened. And there is no option in
the preferences - that I have discovered - by which you can change the
default behavior so that it always open links in the background. And it
also has no other way to, on a case-by-case basis, allow the user to
override the behavior so that the link gets opened in a background tab.

By the way: Historically, browsers defaulted to switch immediately, and
only “nerdy” browsers (such as, on Mac, the iCab - http://www.icab.de)
opened the link in the background or allowed the user to use a
shortcut-click command to open links in the background. At least, that
is how I recall history ...,

        I now edit an Ebook with 66 part, chapter and section files. I
        need to
        remove some unneccesary text at the beginning of each
        part/chapter/section.

        I would have liked to open e.g. all section files that belong to a
        chapter as background tabs, so that I could work with them, before
        continuing with next chapter.

        So, all in all: Any chance the XMLmind editors could receive a 'open
        linked file in background tab' feature?



Thank you for this explanation. We now understand the feature you want and also why you want it.

I'm sorry but we do not plan to implement this feature as you are the only user to have requested it.






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