• schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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    1 day ago

    I can see myself using it occasionally for the same reason I do in the IDE, i.e. to easily look at two pages at the same time.

      • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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        1 day ago

        yes, but that requires opening them, then resizing them and moving them to be beside each other; it’s possible, but not convenient

        By that logic we wouldn’t need tabbed browsing at all, I remember browsing without it on IE6. :P

            • paraphrand@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              Well, it seems like splitting a tab into two is just two tabs: read: we can already have two or more tabs in all modern browsers. But “side by side tabs” describes what is actually happening.

              Honestly, this is a difficult one to name. Even though splitting a tab into two isn’t what’s going on, “split tabs” might be the best they can do. It’s just more evidence that this feature is a bit weird, and why it hasn’t been a feature in Firefox, Chrome and Safari yet. Difficult to name succinctly and correctly, and it basically starts doing window management inside of a browser window.

              Also, why stop at splitting the tab in half? Lets stack them too and have a quad view with a tab in each quadrant of the main tab.

              Edit: ohh, call them Subtabs. And put them in a tab next to normal tabs.