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Tree Style Tab (aka TST)

Build Status

This extension to Firefox provides the ability to work with tabs as "trees".

New tabs opened from the current tab are automatically organized as "children" of the current tab. Such "branches" are easily folded (collapsed) by clicking on the arrow shown in the "parent" tab, so you no longer need to suffer from too many visible tabs. If you want, you can restructure the tree via drag and drop.

  • Such a tree of tabs will behave like a visual browsing history for you. For example, if you see a list of search results for a topic, each search result link will open in new child tab. New tabs opened from these "child" tabs will appear as descendants of their originating tabs. You'll easily dig and dig deeply, without losing your browsing trail - if you want to go back to the original search result, you just have to switch to the "root" tab.
  • Moreover, each tree will reflect a group of tabs on a similar topic.

Please enjoy as you like!

Release builds

Development builds

There is an automated build based on the latest source code. Builds for each commit are avilable at "Artifacts" of the CI/CD action.

It is not signed, so you need to load it by an atypical method. (Please click this section to see instructions.)

There are two methods to try them in your environment:

  • Go to about:debugging and click "Load Temporary Add-on" button, then choose the downloaded file. The development build will be loaded and active until you restart Firefox.
  • If you want to try it as a regular addon instead of a temporary addon, you need to use Nightly instead of the stable Firefox or Firefox beta. On Nightly, go to about:config and set xpinstall.signatures.required to false. Then you will be able to install such an unsigned addon.

Also, you can build a custom development build locally. For example, here are the steps to build an XPI on Ubuntu (native, or WSL on Windows 10):

$ sudo apt install git nodejs npm
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/piroor/treestyletab.git
$ cd treestyletab/webextensions
$ make

Steps to build a specific revision (for example bb467286d58b3da90fd1b2e6ee8a8016e3377b97):

$ cd treestyletab/webextensions
$ git checkout bb467286d58b3da90fd1b2e6ee8a8016e3377b97
$ git submodule update
$ make

Then you will see new .xpi files in the current directory. You can install such a development build via about:debugging. Click the Load Temporary Add-on button and choose treestyletab/manifest.json or a built .xpi file.

Extensions that extend TST

TST provides an API for other extensions. Some extend the behavior of TST's sidebar panel:

Similar projects

There are some similar project by someone not me providing similar features:

Vertical tab bar with tree (and more features)
Vertical tab bar with grouping
Vertical tab bar without tree or grouping
Listing tabs with a search field

Some extensions provide a pop-up list of tabs with a search field that complements TST:

for Google Chrome and Chromium
for Vivaldi

Requests, proposals, or unexpected trouble from bugs

All feedback is handled as GitHub issues.
Please read FAQ below, before you post any new feature request.

Basics

  • TST is basically designed to be used as a permanently-shown tab management UI, an alternative of Firefox's native tab bar.
    • To avoid users' confusion, TST respects Firefox's built-in behavior and features regarding the tab bar: tab context menu, gestures, etc.
  • TST is designed to work with "tree of tabs".
    • TST's tree is designed to work as an extended memory for your brain. To satisfy this concept, TST is designed to guess the relationship between tabs automatically, from the context.
    • Better usability for ungrouped flat tabs in a vertical tab bar is an added benefit.

Any feature request unrelated to these points may be rejected, even if many people love it. For example: session management, search field, detailed focus control of tabs, and so on.

Instead of adding more features, I hope to make TST compatible with other tab-related extensions. If it is required for better compatibility, I have added public APIs for other extensions, and there are many implementations using this API.

If you need any new APIs, please file API proposals in the issue tracker.

FAQ / frequently rejected requests/proposals

Other browsers support

Appearance

  • How to hide the top tab bar (horizontal tab strip)?

    As a workaround, you can create a userChrome.css file. But please remind that I - the original author of TST - never recommend such an usage, because TST doesn't cover full features of the native tabs due to restrictions of WebExtensions API so some tab features become inaccessible, and I also believe that TST is not enough stable to replace Firefox's tab bar completely. Thus I usually use TST together with horizontal tab bar for safety.

    If I hid the tab bar on my environment in my daily use, I might maintain the userChrome.css hack by myself, but actually I don't do that. So guidance to hide the tab bar need to be maintained by people who really use. I think it is a nightmare for regular people who don't know how to research and find out solutions with debugger. I intentionally don't describe details how to hide the horizontal tab bar, to save people from critical troubles.

    I say again, I don't recommend you to hide the horizontal tab bar if you cannot write any suitable userChrome.css hack by yourself. I have no motivation to investigate how to hide the horizontal tab bar, because I'll never do that and it may lead people to troubles.

  • How to apply GTK+ theme color on Linux?

    Due to restrictions within Firefox, TST can not apply GTK+ theme color to its appearance by default. If you want TST's UI with colors to match other parts of Firefox, you need to configure Firefox and TST as:

    • Firefox's about:config
      • widget.content.allow-gtk-dark-theme=true (not default)
      • widget.content.gtk-theme-override=unset (default)
    • TST's options (pattern 1, using "Proton" theme)
      • "Appearance" => "Theme" => "Proton" (default)
      • "Development" => "Color scheme" => "System Color" (default)
    • TST's options (pattern 1b, using "Photon" theme)
      • "Appearance" => "Theme" => "Photon" (default)
      • "Advanced" => "Extra style rules..." => paste these lines (not default)
      • "Development" => "Color scheme" => "System Color" (default)
    • TST's options (pattern 2, using less extra style rules)
      • "Appearance" => "Theme" => "High Contrast" (not default)
      • "Advanced" => "Extra style rules..." => no active style rule (default)
      • "Development" => "Color scheme" => "System Color" (default)

    For more details, please see also the discussions in the issue #2667.

  • How to apply colors customized via Firefox Color?

    In short, there is a workaround:

    1. Go to TST's options.
    2. Choose "Development" => "Color scheme" => "Photon".
    3. Add a CSS declaration applying Firefox's native tab colors to "Advanced" => "Extra style rules for contents provided by Tree Style Tab".

    For more detailed background, please see also my comment in the issue #2780.

  • I cannot find out suitable code snippet satisfying my demand. Is there any reference document?

    Sadly there is no stable reference document due to unstableness of TST's DOM structure. The code snippets are just examples for the time they were written, and they may be broken by changes on TST itself, thus they need to be updated by users through investigation with the debugger.

Feature requests

  • Horizontal tab bar

    It is not possible for Tree Style Tab to support horizontal tabs. TST 2.0 and later is implemented as a Firefox sidebar, there is no chance to provide a horizontal version of the extension.

  • Better support for non-indented tabs

    This is beyond the scope of "Tree" Style Tab. There exist complementary extensions that can provide vertical tabs without a tree.

  • Better tab context menu

    Full-featured, expanded outside of the sidebar, access keys, and so on: available with Firefox 64 and later.

    WebExtensions API restrictions prevent implementation of some features. See for example Mozilla bug 1417183 - Provide a web extensions API-based way to send pages between devices (WONTFIX).

  • I don't need an automatically organized tree, I want to organize trees myself

    You can switch off this behavior:

    1. Go to TST's configuration.
    2. "Development" section.
    3. Expand the section "All Configs". Then all internal configurations are listed.
    4. Clear the ☐ autoAttach checkbox.
    5. Clear the ☐ syncParentTabAndOpenerTab checkbox.

    With those preferences unset, TST will no longer automatically attach new tabs to a tree.

    To select multiple tabs, for drag-and-drop: Shift/Ctrl-click. Multiple Tab Handler has additional features.

  • Endlessly adding minor/trivial options

    Please see the list of helper extensions. For the appearance of tabs in the sidebar, custom user styles may help.

    The variety of configurations for TST will not increase infinitely. Instead, I hope to reduce the variety. High customizability is out of scope. I want to limit options to those that are truly essential. Too many options would kill this project, because they would cloud the main concept of TST and would attract people who don't share my core vision.

  • Controlling where new tabs are opened from links or bookmarks

    Available with TST 3.7.0 and later, as an expert option: "Tabs from any other trigger" under the "New Tabs Behavior" section. We cannot control the behavior for each detailed case, due to limitations of the WebExtensions API.

  • Context menu to reach Tree Style Tab options

    If you use the TST toolbar button, you can open the options page directly from the context menu of the button. Globally, Firefox provides a "Manage Extension" command in the context menus of toolbar buttons that are provided by extensions. TST provides additional commands, such as the options dialog at the menu for a shortcut.

    I'm against providing a command such as "TST Options" in the tab context menu, for these reasons:

    • The command is fundamentally unrelated to the context: "what command do you want to invoke for the tab?"
    • If you need to change options too frequently during daily use, something is wrong. For example, failure of auto-detection of TST for your action's context. Instead of working around, I believe that such problems should be fixed through improved auto-detection by TST.

    If you do frequently open TST options, you can bookmark this address: ext+treestyletab:options – your bookmark will open the options page in a tab.

  • How to customize tab context menu?

    You can do this with userChrome.css. There's advice for activation of userChrome.css and style rules to hide specific context menu items.

    I have no plan to add a configuration UI for items that are native to the tab context menu of Firefox. Here are some comments describing my reasons for this decision.

  • Automatically hide the sidebar

    Due to limitations of the WebExtensions API, this is impossible. There exists a workaround with userChrome.css.

    The WebExtensions API allows us to toggle visibility of the sidebar with keyboard shortcuts and the toolbar button. Other arbitrary timings are disallowed, including mouseover and long-press of a key.

  • I want the "Bookmarks" sidebar to appear alongside the sidebar of Tree Style Tab

    This is currently impossible due to Mozilla bug 1328776 - Provide ability to show multiple sidebar contents parallelly). Workarounds include:

    • TST Bookmarks Subpanel, which places a collapsible "Bookmarks" panel below Tree Style Tabs.
    • Aggregate Tabs to Main Window, through which multiple windows can help your workflow – "one window for a sidebar", "another window for browsing tabs". You can treat such windows as virtual multiple sidebars.
  • High-power management of tree, like sorting child tabs, auto-modification of tree, renaming tabs, and so on

    Please see the list of helper extensions. TST More Tree Commands's issue tracker may be a good place to track your request.

    Please note that "useful" features won't be implemented to TST itself as a built-in feature.

    I believe that generally "tree of tabs should be a visualized history of web browsing", because they are built on relations where you came from. Possibly such a tree is facially chaotic, but it just mirrors your actual footmarks, so you'll easily find out where is the target tab based on a map in your mind. Moreover, those relations themselves may let you recall forgotten idea you thought while you were browsing those tabs.

    On the other hand, sorted tabs based on URLs or something will be beautiful - but that's all. Such sorted tabs won't help me - I'm very forgetful. In other words, I just need something which memorizes my chaotic mind as-is.

    By the way, my another addon Multiple Tab Handler will help you if you frequently modify tree by drag and drop. It provides ability to select multiple tabs by Ctrl-Click or Shift-Click and you can drag selected tabs at once.

  • Configuration UI to change appearance of tabs in the vertical tab bar, for example, color, height, visibility of the scrollbar, transparency of tabs, and so on

    There is a plan to implement an input field to write custom CSS rules, so it will work like as userChrome.css. See the code snippets and details of inspection for the sidebar contents.

Troubles, unexpected behaviors

  • TST suddenly became not working! No reaction on the sidebar!
    1. Please try closing the sidebar and reopen it again, to reload the sidebar presentation module of TST. TST may work again if the trouble is due to a disconnection between TST's internal modules.
    2. If reopening the sidebar doesn't solve the problem, try disabling and re-enabling TST on the add-ons manager, to reload TST completely. TST may work again if the trouble is due to something broken internal status of TST itself.
    3. If both reopening and reloading don't solve the problem, restart Firefox please. If the trouble is due to something problems happening in a deeply low layer, we cannot recover the normal status without restarting of Firefox.
  • I cannot drop tabs to the bookmarks toolbar to create bookmarks. (#2033)

    In short: shift-dragging of tabs will allow you to drop tabs to the bookmarks toolbar. Otherwise TST Bookmarks Subpanel possibly helps you.

    From a change introduced at the bug 1453153 (affects on Firefox 63 and later), now Firefox doesn't allow extensions to provide ability to do "creating bookmarks (or links) by drag and drop of tabs" and "detach a tab to a new window by dropping it outside of the window" in same time - those functionailities are quite exclusive. (For more technical details, see my comment at the issue #2033.)

    Thus, now TST provides two different effects to gestures:

    • Dragging tabs to out of the tab bar: detach dropped tabs to a new window. You cannot drop tabs to the bookmark toolbar.
    • Shift-dragging tabs to out of the tab bar: create links to the desktop from dropped tabs. You can drop tabs to the bookmark toolbar to create bookmarks.

    You can switch these behaviors. Please go to the "Drag and Drop" section of TST's options page. (By the way, TST Bookmarks Subpanel's small Bookmarks panel always accept drag and drop of TST's tree without such modifier keys.)

    For more preference, you can use a small drag handles with a helper addon: they will appear when the cursor is hovering on left edge (or right edge for inverted appearance) of a tab for a while. You can start dragging of the tab from one of handles, with specified effect for each without any modifier key.

  • New tab is not opened with expected position and container, when it is opened as a blank tab instead of the default new tab page. (#2176)

    This is a known issue and hard (or impossible) to be fixed on TST, due to restrictions of WebExtensions API. TST cannot detect "a new blank tab is intentionally opened by the user with the keyboard shortcut Ctrl-T", because all new tabs are initially opened with the about:blank URL even if you open a new tab from a link. Sadly there is no more hint to detect the context how a new tab is opened by you.

    For a workaround, you can define a custom shortcut to open a new blank tab with TST's settings: assigning something shortcut for the command "Open a new tab: Child Tab" at the add-ons manager. Go to about:addons => click the gear button => "Manage Extension Shortcuts" => "Tree Style Tab" => "Show 40 More" => "Open a new tab: Child Tab" => set something shortcut like Ctrl+Alt+T, then you'll get a child tab as expected with the shortcut instead of the default Ctrl-T.

  • New tab is not opened with expected position and container, when it is opened with a custom URL instead of the default new tab page. (#2485)

    You need to change the TST's option New Tabs Behavior => Basic control for New Blank Tab => Guess a newly opened tab as opened by "New Blank Tab" action, when it is opened with the URL to detect new tabs opened with any custom URL. It is about:newtab by default for Firefox's native new tabs.

    • If you use any addon providing a fixed custom new tab page (ex. Momentum), open a new tab and show the developer tool with the keyboard shortcut Ctrl-Shift-K, then type location.href in the console. You'll see the actual URL of the new tab page like moz-extension://XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX/dashboard.html. The UUID part is random due to security reasons.
    • If you use New Tab Override to set a custom URL for new tabs, you cannot get the actual internal URL of new tabs with the method above, because it is immediately redirected. It is moz-extension://XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX/html/newtab.html, the UUID part can be found at about:debugging#/runtime/this-firefox => Extensions => New Tab Override => Internal UUID.
  • Tabs become flatten suddenly / tree structure is lost accidentally

    Such a problem may happen sometimes regardless I'm continuously struggling to solve them. Sadly on most cases there is no way to get back lost tree structure. (Sometimes, closing the window and restoring it via Ctrl-Shift-N may restore the window with correct tree structure, but it is effective only on very limited cases.) There are some workarounds to save your tree of tabs before you encounter such a situation:

    • Tab Session Manager supports saving sessions with tree information. Please remind that you need to activate compatibility option manually.
    • TST allows you to take a snapshot of tabs tree to a bookmark folder. Select all tabs (via shift-click, ctrl-click, or "Select All Tabs"), and bookmark selected tabs via the "Bookmark Tabs..." command in tabs context menu on the sidebar panel. Created bookmarks will have > marks in their title, it means their tree level. Right click on the bookmark folder and choose the command "Open All as a Tree", then TST will open tabs from the bookmark folder with tree structure constructed from the > marks of their title.

Other topics

  • How to donate to this project?

    Thanks, but sorry, I have no plans to accept any dontations for these reasons:

    • The biggest reason is: because I want to keep me as the prime user of this project. I want to keep having a privilege to say "no" about requests that do not match my vision. My hands are already full with maintenance of Tree Style Tab for my use case. (Of course I know that donation is not payment, but I'm afraid that I would think about voices from people who did donation more seriously and it would unconsciously conflict with my policies.)
    • Also, I'm afraid of social undermining.
    • I'm an employee of the ClearCode Inc. My employer allows me to develop my extensions during business hours, because my job is technical support to customers (enterprise users of Firefox and Thunderbird) and the development increases my skills with Firefox and Thunderbird. In other words, my addon projects already have monetary support enoughly. Stagnation of my addon projects are mostly caused from technical reasons or lowering of motivation, not monetary reasons.

    Any other contribution to this project is welcome - translation, debugging, triaging of issues, and more. If you have fixed a bug you met, please send a pull request - I'll merge it. If you have different plans about TST, please fork this project freely for your purpose, if needed.

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Tree Style Tab, Show tabs like a tree.

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