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Re: Tab bar
From: |
Richard Stallman |
Subject: |
Re: Tab bar |
Date: |
Tue, 08 Apr 2008 11:35:49 -0400 |
Is this because you don't use web browsers? In most modern web browsers
a tab displays a web page, but the same tab can switch between different
web pages (so web pages are equivalent to Emacs buffers). When the user
wants to visit a new page, then depending on such option, the browser
can either open it in the same tab or create a new tab.
Now I see what you mean. In effect, the new buffer can replace
the old one in the tab bar, or it can add to the tab bar.
If a window has a list of preferred buffers, and normally generates
its list of tabs from that, these two options would be (1) the new
buffer replaces the old buffer in the list of preferred buffers, or
(2) the new buffer is added to the list of preferred buffers.
It makes sense. My only doubt is whether we could find room
in the keys and buttons for these two options.
- Tab bar (was: Neat features in Eclipse editor), Juri Linkov, 2008/04/06
- Re: Tab bar, David Koppelman, 2008/04/06
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/06
- Re: Tab bar, David Koppelman, 2008/04/06
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/06
- Re: Tab bar, Richard Stallman, 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar,
Richard Stallman <=
- Re: Tab bar, Jason Rumney, 2008/04/08
- RE: Tab bar, Drew Adams, 2008/04/08
- Re: Tab bar, Richard Stallman, 2008/04/09
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/09
- Re: Tab bar, Richard Stallman, 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar, Lennart Borgman (gmail), 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/07
- RE: Tab bar, Drew Adams, 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar, Stefan Monnier, 2008/04/07
- Re: Tab bar, Juri Linkov, 2008/04/08