This site will have limited functionality while we undergo maintenance to improve your experience. If an article doesn't solve your issue and you want to ask a question, we have our support community waiting to help you at @FirefoxSupport on Twitter and/r/firefox on Reddit.

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

always open link from history library in new tab

  • 9 odgovori
  • 2 ima ovaj problem
  • 120 views
  • Posljednji odgovor poslao the-edmeister

more options

I like to open all urls and links in a new tab because then I don't loose the original tab's contents. So I have set browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInTabs to true. Alas if I click on a link in the history library it still replaces the actual tab. I know that I can do a middle click or a right click to get a new tab but I would appreciate if I could set the standard behavior to open a new tab. Is there a setting for this?

I like to open all urls and links in a new tab because then I don't loose the original tab's contents. So I have set browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInTabs to true. Alas if I click on a link in the history library it still replaces the actual tab. I know that I can do a middle click or a right click to get a new tab but I would appreciate if I could set the standard behavior to open a new tab. Is there a setting for this?

Izabrano rješenje

There is no setting for opening Browsing History in Tab automatically with just a left-click. browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInTabs works for Bookmarks, but not for Browsing History even though both appear in the Library.

Pročitajte ovaj odgovor sa objašnjenjem 👍 1

All Replies (9)

more options

Opening in a new tab is only available for a bookmark like you see from the name of the browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInTabs pref. For history items you need to middle-click or any other way that forces a new tab (right-click context menu or Ctrl + left-click).

more options

Odabrano rješenje

There is no setting for opening Browsing History in Tab automatically with just a left-click. browser.tabs.loadBookmarksInTabs works for Bookmarks, but not for Browsing History even though both appear in the Library.

more options

It's a pity that it isn't possible and I hope the developers will add a setting for this. To be consistent with opening links and urls in a new tab it should be possible to change the default behavior for history links too.

more options

I have sort of the same issue. I had FireFox set to open links in a new tab when I clicked on them. All of a sudden it stopped working. Did they change something? How can I get it back?

more options

The setting in "Options/Preferences -> General -> Browsing" to open links in a new tab only applies to links that specify a target window. The setting specifies whether to open the link in a new window or in a new tab. You can middle-click a link to force the link to open in a new tab. Only with bookmarks and with search results you can force to open a new tab via prefs on the about:config page.

more options

It's been a few years since I noticed that Firefox behaves this way. This is infuriating! I usually open History using Ctrl+Shift+H (Windows) and then History opens in a sesparate window so I cannot see what is below. Then I double click something to open it... and it uses the open tab to load the link I clicked. Totally counter-intuitive!

more options

It is frustrating but you can get around it by right clicking on the link and select open in new tab.

more options

If you have a mouse with a clickable mouse wheel then you can middle-click the link to force it to open in a new tab. You can also use the history sidebar (Ctrl+H).

more options

cha_ers said

It's been a few years since I noticed that Firefox behaves this way. This is infuriating! I usually open History using Ctrl+Shift+H (Windows) and then History opens in a separate window so I cannot see what is below. Then I double click something to open it... and it uses the open tab to load the link I clicked. Totally counter-intuitive!

IMO, that separate window will be changed in the future. Mozilla is slowly rebuilding Firefox and has already eliminated some "separate windows" as part of the "stages rebuild process" that has going on for a few years already.