I know this is old news by now, but I was not sure how to activate vertical tabs on all of my browsers. It certainly is not obvious, so I wanted to include the instructions here in case anyone else wants to try it out.
Type about:config
into the address bar of Firefox. You’ll be greeted with a warning that you are accessing advanced settings - click “Accept the Risk and Continue.” Search for the boolean preference sidebar.verticalTabs
and set to true
. That’s it! Enjoy your vertical Tabs!
Edit: You may also need to set sidebar.revamp
to true
if it is not already/automatically set.
For anyone interested, Firefox-based browser Floorp (terrible name) has had tab groups and vertical tabs for a while now.
I’ve been using it for a while now and it’s nice and stable.
I did use it for a while, but it lags in updates and is missing a feature or two that I needed.
Overall it’s great and underrated (or under-represented).
They take too much screen space, and my muscle memory is built on horizontal tabs, 2500 of them
On my 1080p display it’s taking up too much space, but on an ultrawide it’s perfect use of the additional real estate.
I have four 40" cheap 4k tvs, I split them in roughly 6 sections
Useless without tree and bookmarking/opening as tree.
They really should have a browser that can have side by side sites so I don’t have to keep doing that in the OS. Maybe I should just invent one. I don’t know about anyone else but almost all of my workflows at this point are one side reference material and the other side what I’m working on.
There is a very good addon that does this. Tiles WE It toggles splitting your browser in 2/3/4/6 windows tiled, or custom layouts. Also fancyzone and altsnap are great tiling manager https://addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/tile-tabs-we/
Also what is this https://addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/tiled-tab-groups/
I’ll have to give that a look, thanks.
There is a learning curve, but if that’s something you use often enough to remembers all tge capabilities and quirks then it’s great. Especially combined with a screen zone manager like altsnap and fancyzone
Opera can do this, but it’s chromium
Wow, I had no idea this was already built in! Thank you!
I wonder why this feature is “Obscured” like this, maybe it’s still in beta?
Yeah, pretty sure, it hasn’t been officially announced yet, because it is still under development.
Oh neat!!
Nice! I’ve been running the nightly for this, looking forward to switching back to regular Firefox.
I personally prefer Sidebery, but glad they’re finally putting this feature in as a standard feature