Closed
Bug 75203
Opened 23 years ago
Closed 23 years ago
poor right-click support
Categories
(SeaMonkey :: Bookmarks & History, enhancement)
Tracking
(Not tracked)
VERIFIED
WORKSFORME
People
(Reporter: zsigri, Assigned: bugs)
Details
From Bugzilla Helper: User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win98; en-US; 0.8.1) Gecko/20010323 BuildID: 2001032319 I cannot open a link in a *new* window by right-clicking a bookmark in the Manage Bookmarks menu. It is a great feature in NS Communicator but it is missing from Mozilla or NS6. Reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: Click Bookmarks on the Personal Toolbar, Click Manage Bookmarks... and right-click a bookmark to see that there is no choice to open a link in a *new* window. Actual Results: I could not open a link in a new window. Expected Results: Offer a choice to open a link in a new window. I am for Mozilla because I do not like the idea of 'one world - one browser'. Why drop a feature that *used to* make Netscape superior to Internet Explorer?
Comment 1•23 years ago
|
||
build 2001040604 : it always open a link that way in a new window
Comment 2•23 years ago
|
||
Exactly, the Open option will open the bookmark in a new window. I think a wording change would be unnecessary here too. Should this be marked WONTFIX?
Comment 3•23 years ago
|
||
actually this is a worksforme, as it works (|open| opens in a new window). this is a selfbuilt post0.8.1
Status: UNCONFIRMED → RESOLVED
Closed: 23 years ago
Resolution: --- → WORKSFORME
Comment 4•23 years ago
|
||
whoa people. First of all bookmarks ALWAYS open in a new window from the manage bookmarks window. The behavior was switched around a while back for whatever reason. If there's a bug then the bug is that there is no way to open a bookmark in the topmost navigator window from the manage window. this bug is technically invalid but to save spam i'll just mark it verified now.
Status: RESOLVED → VERIFIED
Updated•20 years ago
|
Product: Browser → Seamonkey
You need to log in
before you can comment on or make changes to this bug.
Description
•