Yeah, me too. I’ve got out of the habit of closing my “new” window, and finding I’m not on the net anymore. Now I click on the “previous window” arrow. That’s IE7. I’m grateful for the knowledge that shift-click will do it, though.
I use that anyway, and I dare say Flying Cursor does too. It’s the business of closing your “new” window (which is no longer an additional window) and finding that’s closed your brower - that takes some getting used to. For us hidebound stick-in-the-muds, of course.
Speaking as a fellow hidebound stick-in-the-mud, I’ve also closed my browser inadvertently when closing a window. I’m inclined to believe that the failure to open a link in a new window is a site issue rather than an IE7 issue. The issue seems to have begun with the forum software upgrade, for one. Secondly, other sites that I visit continue to open new windows when other links are opened. I would expect the failure to automatically open new windows to be a global phenonmenon if it was caused by some IE7 update.
I’ll try to remember the shift key trick, although I’ve already managed to break myself of automatically closing the window.
I’ve had the same problem! Glad we have a solution, but I enjoy being able to keep the linked website open while going back to C&F. Now I can’t do that.
No, not really agreed. You can simply (center-)click a link and have a new window.
The behavior is by design.
I agree it’s annoying when a convenient (mis)behavior you’ve gotten used to is outlawed for what seems like an esoteric reason. But we’re not going to start hacking the Chiffboard templates anytime soon. And I understand the rationale for imposing a consistent standard on the board software, and leaving it up to the individual user to set how one’s own browser behaves if you want something different. Cheers!
What? Yes, you can. Middle clicking, or Control-clicking,
will open a new window or tab, and then you can keep
it open while going back to the C&F tab or window.
But if I have to do anything besides just click, not holding down any other keys, just clicking then it’s not a simple click. It’s a compound click. So we cannot simply click a link and get a new window. What is “center” click? Is that some kind of Mac talk?
The behavior is by design.
I agree it’s annoying when a convenient (mis)behavior you’ve gotten used to is outlawed for what seems like an esoteric reason. But we’re not going to start hacking the Chiffboard templates anytime soon. And I understand the rationale for imposing a consistent standard on the board software, and leaving it up to the individual user to set how one’s own browser behaves if you want something different. Cheers![/quote]
I agree with the the desire to comply to a standard, heaven knows I have to deal with that every day. I wouldn’t call previous behavior misbehavior if it was designed that way even if it were not in strict compliance.
In any case, it’s obvious I need to learn new habits.
Quite the opposite – Mac mice tend to only have one button.
Mice for PCs have for years come with at least two buttons.
So, in the PC world, we have “left click” and “right click”. What
do you suppose they call it when they added a button in the
center? Brace yourself – they called it “middle click” (I don’t
know where anyone got “center click”. That’s apostasy.)
At some point, scroll wheels were added in lieu of a middle
button, but you can usually still click them by pressing them
straight down without turning the wheel. Or if you have a
mouse with only two buttons and no scroll wheel, sometimes
you can click both buttons at the same time to get the
middle-click behavior.
Three-button mouse. If you click a link with the button in
the middle, you open a new window or tab.
Two-button Mouse with Scroll Wheel. If you click a link
using the scroll wheel, you open a new window or tab.
Old-school 2-button mouse. Might be time for a trip to
Best Buy. Seriously.
One of a zillion thoughtful features in Opera is that closing the last open window does not close the browser. Not only that, but if you do close a window by mistake, you can immediately reopen the most recent window with a keystroke combination, or see a list of closed windows in the “trashcan”.
Firefox is similar. Closing all tabs does not necessarily close the browser. History | Recently closed tabs gives you a “trashcan” list, or just type Ctrl-Shift-T to restore closed tabs in reverse order.