Sry for not announcing sooner.

  • DessalinesOPMA
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    11
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    That would break accessibility, and is an unpredictable UI anti-pattern. We prefer to be consistent and predictable: if you want a new tab, use middle click or click-and-hold.

    • liwott
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      fedilink
      22 years ago

      This is an argument to not have that a the default behavior, but -as I just find is mentioned in the linked issue- it could be a opt-in feature set in user preferences

    • @Zerush
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      -22 years ago

      Yes, this they say also in this thread, but why? Any other sites I know open the link in a new tab without any problem. I know that I can use middle click, right click or Ctrl click, but this isn’t the problem. For example in Lemmy are a lot of images in the post title, most open right here but some others are from extern links and kick me out of Lemmy, after this sometimes I get an error when I go back, when the message was from my inbox in Lemmy. This, apart of annoying THIS breaks the accesibility and isn’t all, but not predictable… It isn’t a important issue, but very annoying. At least it would be desirable to add some indicator, whether it is an external or local link or simply a title to know before if I can use a simple or a middle click, without it kick me out several times in Lemmy in every visit or open every time several tabs with Lemmy.

      • @TheConquestOfBed
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        52 years ago

        You know by “accessibility” they mean making the site easier to use for blind and differently abled people, right? You can set firefox to automatically open all links in a new tab if it’s that important.

        • @Zerush
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          2
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          Exiting Lemmy by clicking on a link doesn’t seem to me to improve handling for the blind, rather the opposite. As I said, it’s not such an important thing, it’s just annoying sometimes and at least one indicator about it, whether a link is local or external would improve accessibility. I add that I am a fairly old person with visual deficiencies due to my age.

          • @TheConquestOfBed
            link
            42 years ago

            Sorry if I offended you, but I think we’re talking about different things. Fully blind people use screen readers which are designed to read web elements that conform to a certain standard, and going against that standard makes the screenreader behave unexpectedly, which can be confusing for someone reading the page in a linear audio or braille format.

            For your situation I’d recommend something like Link Alert on Firefox. This sort of thing should be standard browser behavior, tbh. Putting it on webdevs is bad practice.

            • @Zerush
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              22 years ago

              No, I’m not offended, I was just pointing to something that didn’t seem right to me. I don’t know how a screenreader works and what complications can exist in its use, I’m not blind yet, only sometimes I leave the imprint of my nose on the screen. Age does not forgive.

        • @suspended
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          12 years ago

          You can set firefox to automatically open all links in a new tab if it’s that important.

          I believe you are referring to the following setting in Firefox preferences:

          Open links in tabs instead of new windows

          I have this checked and it doesn’t work (i.e. doesn’t open links in new tabs).

      • @Thann
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        12 years ago

        IIRC reddit has an option for “open in new tab”