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This is NOT the "Go Forward One Page" command you can use after backing up to a prior page. This one would take you to a page you may never have visited before. It is the next page in the logical sense.
Many web sites post blogs, news articles, search results and other information that is broken
up into multiple pages, logically sequenced. A Google search is a good example: "Result page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next" near the bottom. News articles are another example. These almost always appear at the bottom, and nowhere else.
Having become thoroughly spoiled by mouse gestures, I'd like a gesture that lets me jump to the next logical page without having to scroll to the bottom and mouse-click the Next label.
Might require an HTML tag just for this purpose.
Link Toolbar for Firefox
http://extensionroo...re-info/linktoolbar This huge page has a link to the extension, and describes the keyboard shortcuts in the user comments. [caspian, Jan 12 2005]
halfbakery search
http://neilphillips.com/halfbakery.zip search plugin for halfbakery (stick in C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\searchplugins ) [neilp, Jan 13 2005]
[link]
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Opera discovers links like that,
and Firefox can with an
extension (Link Toolbar, not in
the default list of extensions),
so that part of it has been
done. |
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I don't know if either can be
used with mouse gestures. They
both use a standard HTML tag if
it's in the page, and I believe
they guess based on link titles
otherwise. |
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The Firefox one, which I just
tried out today, has keyboard
shortcuts (which I prefer over
my old mouse on its tiny space
of messy desk) but I only found
these by searching the web. |
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[later] Oh yeah, lynx has a
little support for the standard
HTML "next" link, but I'd be
really really surprised if it
had mouse gestures. |
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millionthMonkey congrats on having the widest profile page on record. |
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Thanks, [2fsoahm], from me and my 999,999 buddies.
Two fries, or not two fries, that is indigestion... |
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Hmmm... [Caspian] I did a Google search, looked at the html code to see how they implemented the Next function. Don't see the <next> tag anywhere. |
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There is already a standard HTML tag for this purpose. It looks like this: |
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<LINK rel="prev" href="chapter4.html"> |
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Unfortunately, very few pages include this tag. Probably many authors of HTML aren't even aware of it. |
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[krelnik] described what the standard one looks like (but next instead of prev). Since Google doesn't use that I think the browser has to notice that the link has the text "Next" or some other likely looking word displayed to the user. |
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AutoPager is the best way of doing this. |
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Harking back to the early days of the web, does anyone else remember "web rings"? |
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Yep. You can cure them with ointment. |
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