Firefox/Feature Brainstorming:User Interface: Difference between revisions

Added misplaced "Show link to open target" idea from "Brainstorming:text areas"
(→‎Back In New Tab: removed "back in new tab" entry which is already implemented)
(Added misplaced "Show link to open target" idea from "Brainstorming:text areas")
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* A better option could be to have a button named "Menu" in the toolbar which when clicked will present the normal menus which would cascade down."Something like the gimp."
* A better option could be to have a button named "Menu" in the toolbar which when clicked will present the normal menus which would cascade down."Something like the gimp."
**This should be optional for those of us who are not big fans of automatically hiding toolbars. Whether auto-hiding should be on or off by default doesn't matter if there is an easily accessible way to toggle it on or off. --[[User:Armaetin|Armaetin]] 20:21, 2 February 2007 (PST)
**This should be optional for those of us who are not big fans of automatically hiding toolbars. Whether auto-hiding should be on or off by default doesn't matter if there is an easily accessible way to toggle it on or off. --[[User:Armaetin|Armaetin]] 20:21, 2 February 2007 (PST)


== Save tabbed Session ==
== Save tabbed Session ==
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== Remember which page and window a page was opened from ==
== Remember which page and window a page was opened from ==
Remember which page and window (tab) a page was opened from.  Then allow the user to go back to that tab or window.  This extends the concept of browsing history and helps users to grasp how the content in visited pages relates together.
Remember which page and window (tab) a page was opened from.  Then allow the user to go back to that tab or window.  This extends the concept of browsing history and helps users to grasp how the content in visited pages relates together.
== Show link to open target as a line ==
When the pointer or focus is on a link to a page that is already open in the browser, show the link visually as a line from the source to the target.  When a link to an anchor is followed, flash a circle around the anchor on the page.  This fixes two common problems: not knowing where the link is supposed to follow, if the page is too short to be scrolled, and not seeing the context before the link because if the page scrolls the anchor to the first line.
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