Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Hierdie gesprek is in die argief. Vra asseblief 'n nuwe vraag as jy hulp nodig het.

Handling of web pages in a tab: view content, move/delete individual web pages IN a TAB

more options

A tab can contain multiple web pages. I can go forward and backward to look at the web pages, good. What I can't do is: Look at all web pages contained in a tab and access the one I want, extract a web page in a tab and open it alone in a new tab, delete selectively web pages contained in a tab AND I cannot open all web pages contained in a tab in separate tabs. In short: easy handling of tab content. (the extension tree style does not help).

Thanks!

A tab can contain multiple web pages. I can go forward and backward to look at the web pages, good. What I can't do is: Look at all web pages contained in a tab and access the one I want, extract a web page in a tab and open it alone in a new tab, delete selectively web pages contained in a tab AND I cannot open all web pages contained in a tab in separate tabs. In short: easy handling of tab content. (the extension tree style does not help). Thanks!

Gekose oplossing

A tab has its own history (back history, forward history). As far as I know, the only way to view the history is using the back/forward buttons. You can either right-click one of them or long-press one of them to drop down the list. This is similar to using the little down-arrow next to them in Internet Explorer 11.

While viewing the list, if you want to launch one of the pages in a different tab, you can try one of these methods:

  • Ctrl+click the history entry
  • middle-click the history entry with the mouse scroll wheel

Or if working with the list is too fiddly, you can duplicate the tab itself using either:

  • Ctrl+click the Reload button on the toolbar
  • middle-click the Reload button on the toolbar
  • Ctrl+click and drag the current tab to a new location on the tab bar and release it there

Then in the new tab you can use the tab history list to navigate to a different page.

Does that make sense?

As for any operations on more than one tab history entry at a time, I'm not aware of any built-in feature for that. Maybe there is an add-on which could do it?? You could search here: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/extensions/

Lees dié antwoord in konteks 👍 1

All Replies (3)

more options

Gekose oplossing

A tab has its own history (back history, forward history). As far as I know, the only way to view the history is using the back/forward buttons. You can either right-click one of them or long-press one of them to drop down the list. This is similar to using the little down-arrow next to them in Internet Explorer 11.

While viewing the list, if you want to launch one of the pages in a different tab, you can try one of these methods:

  • Ctrl+click the history entry
  • middle-click the history entry with the mouse scroll wheel

Or if working with the list is too fiddly, you can duplicate the tab itself using either:

  • Ctrl+click the Reload button on the toolbar
  • middle-click the Reload button on the toolbar
  • Ctrl+click and drag the current tab to a new location on the tab bar and release it there

Then in the new tab you can use the tab history list to navigate to a different page.

Does that make sense?

As for any operations on more than one tab history entry at a time, I'm not aware of any built-in feature for that. Maybe there is an add-on which could do it?? You could search here: https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/extensions/

more options

Hi Jefferson, you are as always over many years the BEST! Thank you very much. Just one thing is missing: Is there also a way to delete a web page from the history list?

more options

Wow, thanks.

I don't think there is any way to remove a page from tab history. Definitely right-click is not available. Possibly removing it from regular history would do it, but I haven't tested.

I guess tab history is a bit of a misnomer. The tab may have seen many more pages. It's really only the direct back-forward history.