Day Eighteen: Opera does windows, better
Even long-time internet explorers will find that words fail to express how Opera’s windowing system excels past other browsers
Remember those tests in school which asked questions like: apples are to pie as oranges are to... ?? Well here’s an easy one for you:
Q: Links are to the web
as ______ are to the web browsers.
A: windows.
Now that’s not “Windows” as in the operating system from Microsoft but “windows” (lowercase w) such as the one that is displaying this page.
Chances are you don’t think about browser windows all that often, but then again you probably don’t think about links all that often either. Doesn’t make them any less important.
Multi-Windows
Read and/or Review: Day 3: Choose Your Interface for more about MDI and SDI. I will need to use MDI for this exercise. Also, see Day Seven: Seek and ye shall find for more information on Opera’s quick searches, and Day Four: The Bar Scene for information about Opera’s Window Bar.
Scenario: Imagine yourself Googling along, looking for the next big thing when suddenly you find a veritable plethora of interesting links. So what do you do? Sure, you could follow the first one that catches your eye, follow the trail wherever it leads... but then what happens when the trail fizzles out? Hit the ‘back’ button 72 times? Or what if you accidentally close the window and lose the page of search results?
Here’s a better way to go:
- F2 + g + search words
- Browse through window with the search results
- control + shift + click each interesting link. As you browse the rest of the results on the window, the link will load quietly in a new window in the background. (This is amazingly useful on a slow connection, but equally handy at any speed.) In fact, you can watch the panel on the Window Bar change color when the page finishes loading.
- Repeat as often as you want for as many links as you find that look interesting
- When you have completed your search, press control + w to close the Google results window
- The next window will show the contents of the first link that you selected (which will be the combination of the results which Google considered to be the most relevant and which seemed most interesting to you). Follow links in that window as far as you want. If the trail doesn’t lead anywhere, press control + w to close that window and move on to the next.[see keyboard power user tip below]
- When you are done, you can close all the windows by pressing control + shift + w which will close all open windows (after prompting to make sure you want to do so). [see keyboard power user tip below]
Power User Tips
- Power User Tip: Say you follow a series of links in one window, and all of a sudden you think to yourself, “You know, that page I saw a few links back seemed more relevant” you do not have to press the ‘Back’ button over and over. Just press control + alt + H to pull up Opera’s History window and you can quickly scan for the Title of the page that you want to revisit. (Go back to note about following links above)
- Power User Tip: If you would like to run the same search again or modify it slightly, just press F2 and you will see your old search term already there, assuming you have not used F2 in the meantime. You can scroll through your past Google searches by pressing F2 + g + SPACEBAR + down arrow which will show you all the recent Google searches performed via the F2 key. (Go back to note about closing all windows above)
More Tips:
- Menu item “Window” and then “List All” will give you a panel with a listing of all open windows.
- control + j will give you a list of all links on a given page (Note to web designers: this feature lets you quickly check how well you have named your links. Do they make sense out of context? If no, consider rewording for increased accessibility and usability.)
- Want to make a quick group of bookmarks of all the links on a page? Copy All (which in Windows is shown in the control + j window) will let you “Copy All” links as Text, HTML, or Hotlist.
Linked Windows
You can do roughly the same thing as above with Mozilla (except for the two power tips). But what you cannot do in Mozilla is link windows.
Now lean in close, dear friends, because Opera’s Linked Windows is like nothing you have ever seen before, and even long-time Opera users are not always familiar with this feature.
Have you ever wanted to be able to keep one window open but also wanted to be able to check-out the links on that page in another window?
Possible Uses:
- A window with results from a search engine. You could do what we did above, and open a bunch of windows at once. But what if you are looking for one particular page and you can’t remember the address but you know that once you see it, you’ll remember it.
- A page which serves as a table of contents (TOC), and you would like to reach each of the items mentioned in that TOC without having to keep switching back and forth.
- A page of image thumbnails that link to full-size images, and you want to be able to search through them visually.
Opera’s Linked Windows will let you keep one “master” window open containing the list of links, and each time one of those links is selected, the contents will be shown in the Linked Window, rather than in the “master” window.
Let’s look at a real example of this. Below I have a screen shot from the archive of The Daily Digital at Beagles-On-The-Web.com. (My apologies if the image below seems too wide for the screen. I was trying to make it still visible):
![[screen shot of Opera's linked windows]](operalin.jpg)
In the left window you can see various thumbnail images. When I clicked one of the thumbnails on the left, the target page opened in the window on the right.
Then I selected a different thumbnail image:
![[screen shot of Opera's linked windows]](operalio.jpg)
You can see that the left window has not changed, but the right window now has entirely new content in it. For every link I select in the left window, the right window will update.
The usefulness of this feature grows the more you become familiar with it. News sites with a list of headlines... blogs with a list of archived entries.... and on, and on...
How to make a linked window
The process has several steps, but they are fairly straightforward.
- Go to a page which has a list of links (this is the primary or “master” window).
- Select the menu option “Window” and the sub-menu for “Create Linked Window”
- A new blank window will be created. This is the linked window.
- Decide how you want to manage the windows:
- control + tab = switch back and forth between open windows
- f6 = tile all open windows horizontally
- shift + f6 = tile all open windows vertically
- Select links in the primary window. If you tiled the windows in Step 4, you will see the results instantly, otherwise use control + tab to switch back and forth between the two windows.
Linked windows are one of Opera’s more esoteric features, but it also just another example of Opera’s going beyond the expected... This, this, is true innovation.
NEW!: Uber-Geek tip! If you have a dual monitor setup, stretch Opera across both monitors and choose Tile Windows Vertically (Shift + F6) and you can fill one monitor with the main window and the other with the linked window.
One last tip (from reader John Galt): use Ctrl + F4 to close MDI windows.
(If today’s entry left you a bit overwhelmed, don’t worry... tomorrow we come back to some more mainstream functionality. See you then!)