Use Vimium add-on and have a pop-up to search your open tab.
Or if you prefer no add-ons or don’t know how to use Vim keybindings then type your search query in the search bar like this:
% my tab title
Comment on It's never been a better time to switch to Firefox
scytale@lemm.ee 11 months agoThanks for the recommendation. I need to organize my 100+ tabs.
Use Vimium add-on and have a pop-up to search your open tab.
Or if you prefer no add-ons or don’t know how to use Vim keybindings then type your search query in the search bar like this:
% my tab title
bloopernova@programming.dev 11 months ago
Tree Style Tab also lets you bookmark whole trees. I’m often jumping between different coding languages, or different areas of DevOps on a weekly basis, and tree bookmarks help. I can “file away” a bunch of research and load it all back later, and still have the tree! Very useful for context switching.
WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Have you tried tab session manager? I was planning on testing it to check if it provides additional value…
bloopernova@programming.dev 11 months ago
No I haven’t, but I’m intrigued!
aubertlone@lemmy.world 11 months ago
I have and it’s great.
Also, unlike a lot of people I just delete vast swathes of my tabs from time to time.
Let’s be honest, you didn’t need it and I didn’t need it.
But I’m still gad I can go back to a random tab from a week ago from a session I had closed out of
superduperenigma@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Tree style tabs on it’s own just sounds like it would be enabling my tab-hoarding tendencies. But bookmarking entire trees of tabs is too good to pass up.
MonkderZweite@feddit.ch 11 months ago
Though reloading the tree do only from sidebar (ctrl+b). Loading from bookmarks window is bugged, undoes trees upon loading.