Opera 101 Stable
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jbgay last edited by
@leocg you are right : I use a Windows version.
I have juste checked Windows Opera One on dev Channel and this bug seems to be resolved. -
nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
Reported as bug:
Context menu items for pages and images and menu items in the Bookmark bar get cut when they shouldn’t, because there is enough space for them.
This looks like a combination of improperly reserved space, where the presence of accelerators in some menu items prevents other items without accelerators to write in that area, and excessive space between the icon and the text, which gets subtracted from the other side of the menu.
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alexs last edited by alexs
Changelog: DNA-110244 Translations for O101
Where in Linux is a translation? On Linux you can not set the browser language in the settings. Why? The language setting in the browser has been missing on Linux (Debian).
The default language of my OS is German, Opera's UI language is English.
My workaround of the Opera One isopera --lang=de
, but this is retro for a modern browser. -
nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
Reported as bug:
Disabling “Show tabs from the same domain in tab tooltip” also disables the menu for collapsed tab islands, so it’s not possible to see what they contain without expanding them.
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stolis last edited by stolis
Yo! What about that little stupid face on top of SD? You had so many requests to get rid of it and it's still there. Why?
If you don't intend to do so, can't you at least put it somewhere else? Like a sidebar tool for example. This indifference you keep showing on users requests, has become very annoying and want get you anywhere.
You're destroying opera. And for what? Just to play it design pioneers and promote this new fancy islands feature? If we wanted bubble style looking or any kind of UI changes we would ask for it. None did. You show how many dislike posts had been written from the beginning of developing this "great" UI, but you insisted. Why?
Even now, that you've been asked at least to bring back some elements you took away or minor changes we'd like to see, you keep ignoring us.
And first of all stop the auto updating function and just send a notice like all other browsers. You have no right to interfere on our pc's. Especially when most of the updates contain nothing new except bugs. Period -
nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
@stolis I like the tab islands feature. Give it time until they squash all the bugs.
The smiley face above the Speed Dial is for giving feedback. Have you tried clicking on it and send negative feedback? It's better than complaining.
Autoupdate is here to stay. It's what everybody else does these days. I don't like it either, but I understand it from a development standpoint. Addressing issues with dozens of different live versions of a browser would be a nightmare. All development would stall because people would be addressing old bugs all day.
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stolis last edited by
@nadie-nada-nunca First of all, no one (including myself) requested to remove islands and since there's an option to disable them, that's ok. Problem is that the hole UI has been changed to something no one likes which had been noted by users since developing.
So what I'm simply saying, is that they had all the time to try something different and pay more attention on users opinion. I don't know about programming but I believe that they should first try to add islands in previous UI to see how people would take it and then try to change it. When your own users tells you that they don't like this new look and you continue developing it... I really can't understand it.
I know what smiley face does and of course I've send feedback. The point is that they've been many a lot of complains about it since it's first appearance and requests to be removed but it's still there, without offering nothing useful.
As for auto updating beside it exists for a long time now and actually is a standard opera's politic, almost everybody has requested through this hole time at least to add an option in settings for disabling it, also didn't do anything. And allow me to say that not everybody does it. -
andrew84 last edited by andrew84
@stolis said in Opera 101 Stable:
since there's an option to disable them, that's ok.
Afaik there's no option to disable tab islands completely, there's only option to disable automated islands creation.
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nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
@stolis said in Opera 101 Stable:
Problem is that the hole UI has been changed to something no one likes
I do like it, it's my point.
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daunlouded last edited by
@nadie-nada-nunca I must hop in here. Because I must ask; do you like it more than previous UI?
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nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
@daunlouded In some respects, yes. It's still buggy, give it time to stabilize. I don't like what they did to the Opera button, I don't like that the scrollbar is now not at the edge, and I don't like having all the sidebar buttons at the bottom. But the new interface is clean and pleasant to me.
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andrew84 last edited by
@nadie-nada-nunca said in Opera 101 Stable:
But the new interface is clean and pleasant to me.
How it's cleaner comparing to the previous one?
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nadie-nada-nunca last edited by
@andrew84 I didn't say it's cleaner than the previous one. I said it's clean, and I said I like it.
I guess you may find one or the other "cleaner" depending on how you use it. I, for example, ditched my previous workspace-based scheme, and replaced it with islands. Now I can see all my tab groups at any time, no need to switch between workspaces. That, in itself, is "cleaner" than what I was previously doing. But that's because of the way I'm using the browser.
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andrew84 last edited by
@nadie-nada-nunca I understand.
But the 'islands' refer more to features. To implement the islands there was no need for so radical changes to the rest of the UI with its borders and wasted space everywhere. -
thelittlebrowserthatcould last edited by
@andrew84 I suppose it was thought that the "bling" would attract new users. If the modular design is important, then perhaps one day an option will be provided that doesn't distract from the browser's primary function i.e. a return to the look of 99.
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andrew84 last edited by
@thelittlebrowserthatcould Maybe it really will attract some portion of new users (temporarily most probably), but will keep the old users away.
Personally, I'm not going to tolerate the absurd borders everywhere.If they really had to change smth, according to 2023 chrome UI refresh it should be less significant.
For example if there was a wish to make rounded tabs, tabs should look more elegant with tiny top and bottom borders.
Something like this
And I'm sure this wouldn't hurt the tab islands implementation.