![]() Continuing this topic, I saw an admin of the TMP forum (not the developer, mind you) admit, that big changes could be coming to the extension, including availability for another browser. Speaking of TMP in particular, it is the Swiss Army Knife of tab extensions in today’s browser landscape, so a detailed view on what would be possible and what not would be too involved. Some other functions are impossible to duplicate though. ![]() Both methods are limited in scope and ability, but it is possible to imitate a reasonable number features this way. The only thing an extension can do is to imitate the tab-bar in a different place, such as the extra sidebar in a new window (like the vertical/tree-style tab extensions ‘Tabs Outliner’ or ‘Sidewise Tree Style Tabs’ already offer, though Opera has its own sidebar API that would make this easier) or in the popup you get by clicking on the extension icon. It is not so surprising then, that an extension doesn’t have any influence at all on the tab bar itself, not on Chrome or any browsers that use Chromium as their own engine (such as Opera, Vivaldi, Yandex, Iron, etc). Since its inception, the Chrome developers have been singlemindedly following the doctrine of developing a browser with very limited configuration options. Will that particular feature survive past 2017? Nobody can say and I don’t care to speculate.Īd Question 2: There is no extension like Tab Mix Plus on Chrome and there never will be. As soon as there’s not enough space to display all opened tabs, a dropdown-button appears with a list of all tabs in order of appearance. Currently Firefox respects a minimum tab width of 100 pixel (I think), which is set to overflow into a scrollable tab-bar. I can give you some answers and go into more detail than Martin did, but I doubt you’re going to like much of what I’ll say.Īd Question 1: Unless Firefox changes its own UI functionality drastically once WebExtensions remain the only type allowed, then no, this exact problem Martin has described will not occur. Now You: How do you handle Chrome's too many open tabs annoyance? It does not do away with the horizontal tabs bar however. vTabs - The extension brings vertical tab lists to Chrome.You may use it to switch to open tabs in the same browser window or other windows, or close tabs directly. Tabs Outliner - The extension opens a tree style view of open tabs in the browser when activated.Tabs Manager Plus - Adds a search and previews to tabs in Chrome.Tabs Limiter with Queue - Sets a fixed tab limit in Chrome, and queues any excess tabs that you may open.Tab Activate - Simple extension that forces Chrome to open new tabs in the foreground.TabSense - The extension lists all open tabs, regardless of browser window, on a single page in the browser. ![]() Simple Window Saver - Save browser windows as sessions, and load those sessions at any time in the future again. ![]() Open tabs again individually, or all at once.
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