Remember zoom factor per website.
Google Chrome does it now so please Opera it is a really
simple task.
Best regards
Asger-P
> Remember zoom factor per website.
> Google Chrome does it now so please Opera it is a really
> simple task.
Whether another browser implemented it has nothing to do with it being
easy/simple or not. The browser infrastructure is likely to be very
different, so simple for one does not translate 1-on-1 to simple to
another. In this case Opera does zooming (and probably has done since
zooming was released in Dec. 09, 1996) per tab and not per site.
Depending on your point of view, both ways make sense. Opera comes from a
full MDI background, where things are more likely to be tied to tabs (or
pages, or sub-windows, whatever you want to call them). Chrome does not
have any of the MDI features Opera has for tabs, making the work flow
quite different.
--
Remco Lanting
[Unofficial Opera bug tracker links]
http://opera.r3m.co/bugs |
http://my.opera.com/community/forums/topic.dml?id=217364 |
remco.lanting...@gmail.com
On the: 18. of februar-2011 At: 19:57 Remco Lanting wrote:
> On Fri, 18 Feb 2011 10:22:58 +0100, Asger Jørgensen <ju...@asger-p.dk>
> wrote:
>
>> Remember zoom factor per website.
>> Google Chrome does it now so please Opera it is a really
>> simple task.
>
> Whether another browser implemented it has nothing to do with it being
> easy/simple or not.
Being a programmer my self I would find it an easy task.
It could easily be combined with each entry in the history list.
> The browser infrastructure is likely to be very
> different, so simple for one does not translate 1-on-1 to simple to
> another. In this case Opera does zooming (and probably has done since
> zooming was released in Dec. 09, 1996) per tab and not per site.
>
> Depending on your point of view, both ways make sense. Opera comes from a
> full MDI background, where things are more likely to be tied to tabs (or
> pages, or sub-windows, whatever you want to call them). Chrome does not
> have any of the MDI features Opera has for tabs, making the work flow
> quite different.
And Your point is ??
P.s. People who argument for limitations will
certainly be allowed to keep them.
Best regards
Asger-P
> On Fri, 18 Feb 2011 10:22:58 +0100, Asger Jørgensen <ju...@asger-p.dk>
> wrote:
>
>> Remember zoom factor per website.
>> Google Chrome does it now so please Opera it is a really
>> simple task.
>
> Whether another browser implemented it has nothing to do with it being
> easy/simple or not. The browser infrastructure is likely to be very
> different, so simple for one does not translate 1-on-1 to simple to
> another. In this case Opera does zooming (and probably has done since
> zooming was released in Dec. 09, 1996) per tab and not per site.
>
> Depending on your point of view, both ways make sense. Opera comes from
> a full MDI background, where things are more likely to be tied to tabs
> (or pages, or sub-windows, whatever you want to call them). Chrome does
> not have any of the MDI features Opera has for tabs, making the work
> flow quite different.
>
I'm pretty sure that it all ends up in struct/type vector/array and all
it's needed is to consider a new struct field/var.
But it's a damn useful feature, this request. I subscribe it.
--
"Knowledge is not power. It's wisdom and truth. Power comes and goes,
while wisdom stays and grows."
> Remember zoom factor per website.
> Google Chrome does it now so please Opera it is a really
> simple task.
...but Opera can already do that, in fact, I'm using it right now and it
remembers the zoom factor per website. Are you using the most recent
version?
ver 11,01
I have just tested and it certainly dont remember what zoom to
use on a site.
I go to site A Ctrl + + to 110%
I go to site B Ctrl + + to 120%
I go to site C Ctrl 0 to 100 %
I go to site A Opera stays 100%
I go to site B Opera stays 100%
Just like always
Best regards
Asger-P