Previously, ctrl-shift-T only reopened tabs and worked per-window. I think it’s much more intuitive that way, since it’s cleanly separated from other features (ctrl-shift-N) and works kind of like ctrl-T.
Previously, ctrl-shift-T only reopened tabs and worked per-window. I think it’s much more intuitive that way, since it’s cleanly separated from other features (ctrl-shift-N) and works kind of like ctrl-T.
I’ve narrowed my tabs with userchrome.css so that they look like this. I think you could make the min-width even smaller so that the scrolling never happens, but then the tab icons won’t be visible.
Can’t bother debugging my userchrome right now to give a reproducible example but I think this is the relevant part:
.tabbrowser-tab[fadein]:not([pinned]) {
min-width: 30px !important;
padding-inline: 0 !important; /* not sure why I added this */
}
It looks like some of the codepens are not working for me on FF 114 and Edge 114, for example this one where the flame is apparently supposed to rotate around the button. I guess those features are only coming later? A bit confusing since the guide makes it sound like they’re already well-supported.
Interesting idea, but forget Firefox, I don’t see how website designers could target that either. For example, if you have the same buffer open in two windows but scrolled to different positions, what value will
document.scrollingElement.scrollTop
have? Similarly, different windows can have different dimensions, but webpages generally expect that there’s only one viewport and adjust for that.