Add a nickname "xyz" to your bookmark.
Shortcut command would then be
Go to page,"xyz"
Do more on the web, with a fast and secure browser!
Download Opera browser with:
Add a nickname "xyz" to your bookmark.
Shortcut command would then be
Go to page,"xyz"
http://www.techterms.com/definition/metadata
Originally posted by Operetta:
Is there anyway to change it so that it's at the top of the document?
No. Anyway it's exactly what you asked for:
Originally posted by Operetta:
Still hoping it's feasible to have the URL automatically appended to the source code
Appended means adding data to the end, not the top :whistle:
Why don't you save as "HTML file with images"? This will add source information to the end of the page. When I save this page the tail of the HTML file looks like this:
</body>
</html>
< !-- 1392775729.myo.cDoyNzowNTowMA== -->
< !-- This document saved from http://my.opera.com/community/forums/topic.dml?id=1817132&page=1 -->
OK, it's not metadata, but better than nothing...
Originally posted by krusade99:
Opera might create a new autosave.win if I move the file, but it still uses the one in the Windows folder
Now this would be completely incomprehensible and - if true - would mean that Opera saves sessions automatically into 2 different locations. If by "uses the one in the Windows folder" you mean that upon startup your Linux Opera opens the last tabs you had open in Windows, well this is is relatively easy. Probably this is what you did:
1) Preferences > General > Startup > "Continue saved session"
2) opera:config > User Prefs > Windows Storage File > ""path/to/Opera Windows/sessions/autosave.win"
Thanks, but we should talk about your problems, not mine. What puzzles me: What exactly is your problem? If the setting mysteriously works for you (maybe the power of 64bit?), then everything should be OK. If your Linux Opera really uses the session files of your Windows Opera (and not merely points to them), then both systems must start with the same open tabs.
What happens when you temporarily move the files in your current Linux /profile/sessions folder to another location and then start Linux Opera? If Opera creates no new autosave.win I will be impressed
Originally posted by krusade99:
So apparently you can point Opera to a different "autosave.win" file.
I can't. Just tried with latest version and fresh profile. Even the bogus "autopera.win" in the default setting instead the correct "autosave.win" is still listed in opera:config, which alone is a strong indication that Opera ignores the settings.
I also tried to symlink my Linux session file to autosave.win of the Windows installation. Doesn't work either. In Linux Opera overwrites the symlink with its "real" autosave.win.
Originally posted by krusade99:
What you are saying seems a bit weird to me, though. Because I was able to do just that in the past, even recently.
You did just what?
It's not clear to me what you try to do. From your description I figure that you keep 2 different profile folders for Win and Linux, but that you point all folders that opera:config allows you to configure to common locations, e.g. bookmarks, wand etc.
I do not intend to change the autosaved session to a file with a different name. All I ask Opera is to keep saving to "autosave.win", but one placed in a different location.
Understood. But you can't change neither the name nor the location. The location can't be outside of the the profile folder.
The only solution would be to let the different operating systems share a single common profile (using the -pd command line switch), but this is bound to create conflicts with the different naming schemes of the file systems.
An old bug. You can't change the location of your session files, even if the Preferences Editor suggests otherwise
Sounds familiar :
http://my.opera.com/community/forums/topic.dml?id=1591932
Originally posted by Pesala:
As long as the menu bar is organised correctly, and doesn't change when moved from displayed at the top to hidden at the side, then it won't take any longer to access the menu items.
Only when you use the keyboard, not when you use the mouse!
You may like to have the menu bar at the top, but you're in the minority.
You really know where the majority of users like to have their menu bar? At least this thread gives a different impression.
Originally posted by Pesala:
Wasting space with a menu toolbar doesn't make it any faster. In IE you just touch the Alt key to show the menu bar.
I was talking about toolbar vs. O-button, not hidden toolbar vs. visible toolbar. And of course, a "space wasting" toolbar is faster than a hidden toolbar. Saves you at least one click to unhide it.
Originally posted by Pesala:
I am not sure why anyone needs to waste space with a menu bar.
Speed? Menu bar: Never more than 1 submenu. O-button: One additional mouse click and often sub-submenus (at least in Opera classic). Crusading through a 3 level menu structure can be a pain when you use a trackpad or trackball. Using the keyboard wouldn't make much difference, but then you probably wouldn't use the menu at all and use shortcuts instead.