Wikipedia:Snap Links tutorial
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[ Snap Links] is a mass tab loader add-on for the Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome browsers. It auto loads links into tabs when the user holds down the right mouse button and drags a selection rectangle over those links. Create the rectangle, then release the right mouse button, and the tabs open up. Tabs are especially useful for browsing and editing multiple Wikipedia pages.
A "tab" is a window opened within a web-browser. Each tab independently displays a web page (such as a Wikipedia article).
Then what?
Well, after you have the desired web-pages displayed in tabs, you can take full advantage of your browswer's tabbing features, which let you batch browse (that is, look at) or batch edit lots of pages fast.
In Firefox, the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+Tab ↹ is used to switch between tabs. Use Ctrl+W to close the current tab as you make the switch to the next tab.
Firefox tab controls
These controls are built-in to Firefox:
- Rapid page viewing:
- Middle-click to load pages into tabs one-by-one (or you can use Link Ninja to load them all at once)
- To skim through lots of random articles, middle-click on "Random article" multiple times
- Read or work on one
- When done, press Ctrl-F4 or Ctrl-w to close tab and instantly go to the next one
- Great for skimming sets of articles, where you are checking for a missing element, or looking for a particular kind of page or element. Just keep pressing Ctrl-F4 to instantly get rid of the current tab and go onto the next one, cycling through them fast until you find one you are looking for. Blam, blam, blam, blam, blam!
- Middle-click to load pages into tabs one-by-one (or you can use Link Ninja to load them all at once)
- Middle-click on link - create new tab with linked page as its contents
- Ctrl-T - Create new (employ) tab
- Ctrl-Tab - Switch to next tab
- Shift-Ctrl-Tab - Switch to previous tab
- Ctrl-(drag tab) - Clone a tab
- Ctrl-Shift-T - un-close a tab (this will even remember contents entered in text boxes like Wikipedia's text editor)
- Or go to the History menu and choose Recently Closed Tabs
Optimize your speed using customized link lists
To maximize the power of multi-page processing with Link Ninja, use it on customized lists of links to pages you wish to work on. WikiProject subpages and user subpages are convenient for holding such lists. One advantage of this approach is that you can easily ensure that unrelated links are not included.
But the real power here is that you can use search/replace on such a list to modify the links and thereby create your next list to work on. For example, Politics of x (where x is a country name) could easily be changed to Culture of x.
Search/replace is also useful for changing wiki-links to URL-links, so that you can open each page in edit mode, etc.
Here's an example of a URL-link that opens a Wikipedia page in edit mode (in fact, it opens this page in edit mode):
How does Link Ninja compare with AWB?
Firefox's tabbing features (especially when combined with the use of Link Ninja and macros) is one of the most powerful tools you can use to work on Wikipedia. It beats AWB in many operations, though AWB beats it in many others.
WP:AWB is an auto-page-loader, and a semi-automatic editor with powerful search/replace features. It works on lists of pages which you specify, opening one-at-a-time, executing your pre-specified search/replaces, and then loading each page in AWB's own edit mode so you can edit it. When you are done and save the page, AWB saves it, automatically closes it, and then opens the next page on the list in the same way. But, if you need to see what you are doing, that is, actually look at each page you are working on, AWB's view feature is rather cludgy and time-consuming. Pages are not initially loaded in view mode, so you have to click on "view" and wait each time for the server to respond, which can be very time-consuming, especially when you are working on a lot of pages and have to repeat this operation.
"Tabbing" is task-switching technology. You are basically working in windows, directly on Wikipedia pages using Wikipedia's interface. So if you need to inspect pages (that is, actually look at them), you simply open their links in Link Ninja and each page is in display mode by default. You switch between pages (in subwindows called "tabs") with Ctrl-tab
or with Ctlr-w
(which closes the current window as you make the switch). Once in tabs, you can switch back and forth between pages very rapidly.
In AWB, once you've processed a page, you can't go back to it. But in Firefox you can, even if you've already closed the tab! Link Ninja simply loads pages into those Firefox tabs for you, allowing you to bring the power of Firefox to dozens of pages at a time. Subtle, but very effective.
Notes
See also
External links
- Official website (includes instructions)
- Mozilla keyboard shortcuts (includes keyboard shortcuts for tabbing)