After using Chrome for a decade and switching back to Firefox, one feature I missed was the ability to right-click and Go to [url] directly, for any selected text that vaguely resembles a URL.

I made Goto foo to approximately replicate Chrome’s behavior in Firefox, but it would be nice if no extension were necessary.

  • wia
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    621 year ago

    Huh? Firefox does this though. Highlight an address and right click then select open in new tab or whatever.

      • IP adresses are pretty edge case yeah. I dont know if that should even be supported. The “example.com” does actually work tho, its just if you only include “.co” in your selection, it doesn’t recognize it as a URL even tho .co is the national TLD of Colombia. But all that really needs to change is to support all existing TLD’S and maybe IP addresses if there is community interest in it.

    • @clearleaf@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I ran into this not long after seeing this post. This site disables links and the options aren’t there. I find the context menu is pretty strange in general. But the problems it causes are small and easy to move on from so it’s never really questioned. It honestly seems to have a mind of it’s own sometimes. Not nearly as bad as the windows explorer context menu though.

  • @Voltage808s@kerala.party
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    1 year ago

    the first option when you right click a text vaguely resembling a link is “open link in new tab” or something like that. Its the same thing as go to [url]

  • Yote.zip
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    221 year ago

    I highlight the URL text, then drag it to my tab bar to open it. That could be an option if the workflow is not too annoying to use.

    • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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      111 year ago

      I do the same

      Another option i’m aware of is CTRL+C, T, V and enter (Keyboard combo to Copy, open new tab, paste, go)

    • @p1mrx@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      101 year ago

      Interesting, that does appear to solve the same problem.

      In my decades of using web browsers, I can’t say that I’ve ever tried dragging text to the address bar. That’s not very discoverable, and the drag action messes with the page’s scroll position.

  • craigevil
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    151 year ago

    open about:config change middlemouse.contentLoadURL from false to true.

  • @akilou@sh.itjust.works
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    111 year ago

    Highlight it and drag it up to the tabs bar. It’ll open in a new tab. Or drag it onto an existing tab and it’ll open in that tab. Highlight any arbitrary text, do the same, and it’ll search that text in your default search engine.

  • paraphrand
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    111 year ago

    Don’t let everyone “well actually” you, here. The fact you are making this robust is great.

    Feature idea: holding down Alt/Option changes the menu to open in a new tab.

    • @p1mrx@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      11 year ago

      ‘New Tab’ is the default/only behavior currently.

      I notice that Chrome supports Ctrl-click (background tab) and Shift-click (new window), and Firefox provides a modifiers array, so I think I could replicate this.

      • paraphrand
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        1 year ago

        Oh, sounds good. It would be best to follow similar conventions. I’m a Safari person, so I didn’t know New Tab was default in Firefox. Making the menu say it will be a new tab would be good.

        • @p1mrx@sh.itjust.worksOP
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          21 year ago

          I’ve added support for Ctrl/Command/Shift in v1.7, but the menu text is unchanged because I don’t know which keys are pressed prior to the click event. This matches Chrome’s behavior.

  • kubica
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    71 year ago

    Maybe it is more visible that way, but the same can be done clicking on open link or open in private window.

    • @p1mrx@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      41 year ago

      Firefox’s ‘Open Link’ feature is quite limited compared to Chrome. For example, try navigating to lemmy.ml using the “Firefox@lemmy.ml” link in the sidebar.

      Even in cases where it works, it doesn’t preview the link target in the context menu.

  • Netscape, then Mozilla, then Firefox had this feature on middle-button-click for literally decades. Firefox devs killed it years ago, despite howls of protest.

    You could literally highlight any text, anywhere, and a middle-click in the browser window would navigate there. It was awesome. Basically a web equivalent of X-windows’ middle-click paste feature.

      • @mr_strange@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        No you can’t. The code was changed years ago to only work if the text in the PRIMARY buffer “sort of looks like it might be a URL”.

        That defeats the whole point of the feature. If someone has written “go to example.domain, it’s amazing”, without bothering to make “example.domain” a link anchor, or even prepending “https://”, then there’s no easy way to actually visit the site. Previously, I could just select the text I wanted, middle-click into a browser window, and hey presto. Doesn’t work any more.

  • Caveman
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    31 year ago

    Use double click to highlight instead of single click to select words instead of characters.

  • @dhtseany@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I agree with you 100% and highlighting text and choosing the new tab option isn’t always viable. I often have to copy text from outside the browser and paste it into the address bar, I really miss that feature of Chrome.

    Edit: why the down votes? He makes a fair point that some of you are disagreeing with without considering that there are those out there that use their browsers differently than yourself. Even if I used Firefox as my primary browser for the last 3 years I’m still able to be honest about my experience.