13 February 21, 18:17
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When Google Chrome launched, Google decided to do away with the option to scroll the tab bar. The company picked a different tab bar model, one that would shrink the width of the tab further and further, until only icons were shown. Users who still added more tabs to the browser would notice that the icons would vanish eventually, and that new sites would not be added to the tab bar seemingly anymore; this is one of my main annoyances with the browser.
While you can keep tabs in check by using extensions or by making sure that you only open that much, it is not really as comfortable as having options to scroll instead.
Google launched a series of new features in Google Chrome, all experimental at the time of writing, to address this. Tab Groups and the option to collapse these groups landed last year. Late last year, Google launched an experiment to make the tab strip scrollable and introduce a tab search button in the browser.
Google added another experiment to Chrome Canary recently that gives users options to change the tab shrinking behavior in the browser. Besides keeping the status quo, it is now possible to select one of four different tab widths in the browser; this ranges from tabs the size of favicons to not changing the width of tabs at all.
How to configure the options
Here is how you configure the experiment right now:
Here is a screenshot of all four shrinking tab widths that the Google Chrome browser supports in this experiment (from don't shrink to favicon-size shrinking).
- Load chrome://flags/ in the browser's address bar.
- Search for tab scrolling.
- The first option, Tab Scrolling, lists seven states in total. Most interesting from a user perspective are:
- Shrink tabs to pinned tab width.
- Shrink tabs to medium width.
- Shrink tabs to large width.
- Don't shrink tabs.
- You may want to enable "Tab Scrolling Buttons" as well, as you end up without visible controls to scroll the tab bar otherwise.
- Restart Chrome after you make a change.
Caveat is that this is an experiment right now; it is possible that this will never land in Google Chrome Stable, or not in this form. On the other hand, Google testing this suggests that the company considers adding it to the Chrome web browser.
It would certainly be appreciated by Chrome users, and users of other Chromium-based browsers, that open a lot of tabs in the web browser at the same time.
Now You: What is your take on this experiment? Will Google Chrome get stable support for tab scrolling?
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