Open the second tab and wait for 10 seconds then load a second website. To generate this bug you can set discarding period to 10 and the maximum number of tabs to 1. In this case, this tab is not going to be discarded unless at least more than one tab gets opened. There are some rare situations where a tab does the request and it gets rejected for one of the above reasons. So a single background tab cannot ask for discarding more than once. To be more precise, a tab will request the check only once when it just moved to background after the user-defined discarding period is over. To be optimal, this extension only requests checking the discarding conditions when it really is necessary. Still, the extension might sometimes not discard tabs with no good reason. The number of not-discarded tabs is less than the number that the user sets on the options page. From version 0.3.2, the extension adds a tooltip text to the toolbar button for this particular tab if such a condition meets. do not discard this tab is checked for this particular tab from the popup window). a tab matches a condition that prevents discarding (e.g. Skipping the discarding has two main reasons: 1. Seems like you are the only company who may listen to users and have enough capacity to deliver this feature.It seems sometimes the extension simply just not discard a background tab that it should. Microsoft, please, implement proper tab tree support in Edge. Also on Opera you can't hide tabbar and you need to follow a complex procedure to get it working on Vivaldi.Īlso there is a Chrome extension named Sidewise ( ) but it's a real pain to use it because of Chrome's UI limitations (it's a separate window, you can't hide horizontal tabbar). An ability to close a subtree with one clickĪt the moment Firefox is the only browser with first-class tab tree support (see ).Īlso there is a very good extension for Opera and Vivaldi (see ), but unfortunately not stable enough.Automatic tree structuring (when you open a new tab it becomes a child of current one).Guys, please implement tab tree support, it will be a real motivation for power users to migrate to Edge. But having now used it for a couple of weeks, it is so good that I would even consider a third screen just to put the Tabs Outliner window into. At the time I just went back to Firefox, where Tree Style Tabs worked well. That is why I gave up on it a year ago when I tried it in Chrome. The irritating thing is that I cannot dock the Tabs Outliner window with the other Edge Dev windows they have to be manually sized and sometimes seem to go out of line. It would make a good base for a Microsoft option. It has been exceedingly useful while doing family tree work, so that I can keep different lines of research apart, and even suspend them when I need to do real stuff, and return later. It can manage several different browser windows, and close them and reopen them at will, even days or weeks later. The key feature is that it can close your tabs for you, thus releasing memory and resources, yet still remember them and reopen them at will. It has an amazing set of features, and if used carefully it can be a real benefit. Kirk Since I last posted, and now that Edge Dev is able to use the Chrome store, I have been using Tabs Outliner, and have even paid a small sum for the full version (a few extras, but it helps encourage the developer).
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