Hard Light Productions Forums
Off-Topic Discussion => General Discussion => Topic started by: jr2 on September 11, 2016, 07:49:27 am
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Official Chrome extension here (https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/go-back-with-backspace/eekailopagacbcdloonjhbiecobagjci).
Discussion as to why this is policy and not a bug (TLDR: too many people losing form data on loss of focus + backspace) here (https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=608016).
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Thanks jr2, that was a real nostalgic trip down memory lane to several months ago to when this was actually news.
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Wait you could go back using Backspace? Either I forgot it or never knew I could.
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Thanks jr2, that was a real nostalgic trip down memory lane to several months ago to when this was actually news.
Quoted for extra sauce. :rolleyes:
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Are you suggesting that his comment frustrated you to the point of adding unnecessary sauce to a dish of pasta? I'm not sure what you're trying to say otherwise
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If you meant putting extra mayo on a hamburger then that is a great warcrime. Mayo on burgers is objectively and morally wrong.
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Personally, I say who cares? Backspace to go back to the previous page has long been a thorn in my side. It still won't make me switch back to Chrome, though.
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Good riddance. All it takes is a careless click unfocusing the text field you're currently editing. You keep typing, hit backspace, BAM. A hour of carefully thought-out arguments, well-researched opinions and witty comments down the drain. I've quit a few discussions on this very forum just because of this (discussions that involve post this long also tend to progress surprisingly quickly and are easy to lose track of. And I don't have patience to write two such replies in quick succession). Now, if they implemented a feature to keep the browser from losing text for any reason, then I might consider Chromium and all related browsers not to be pieces of crap anymore.
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Good riddance. All it takes is a careless click unfocusing the text field you're currently editing. You keep typing, hit backspace, BAM. A hour of carefully thought-out arguments, well-researched opinions and witty comments down the drain. I've quit a few discussions on this very forum just because of this (discussions that involve post this long also tend to progress surprisingly quickly and are easy to lose track of. And I don't have patience to write two such replies in quick succession). Now, if they implemented a feature to keep the browser from losing text for any reason, then I might consider Chromium and all related browsers not to be pieces of crap anymore.
Hmm... let's test this.
/me presses backspace after clicking outside of the reply area
/me clicks the forward button.
Yup. Just as I thought. No data loss.
Which means that there's something missing for some sites (not sure if it's the browser's fault or the site's fault; I know what you mean; sometimes your input gets lost in electronic purgatory somewhere. (I noticed this a lot more with IE if / when I used it [like at work]).
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I don't use Chrome (I'm one of those weirds who uses Firefox), but this reminded me that backspace for back is a nuisance in Firefox sometimes too. So I decided to look and, sure enough, there's an about:config setting to disable it. Nice!
You may have just saved me hours at work -- I have definitely lost huge, detailed replies I composed to clients because of a last-second keyboard screwup + the ticketing system not autosaving drafts regularly enough to catch everything (or anything, when you are really unlucky).
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You're not that weird, man. I still use Firefox, too. I had been using Waterfox, but most plugins are not 64-bit and there doesn't seem to be a wrapper to let Waterfox use the 32-bit versions.
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Hmm... let's test this.
/me presses backspace after clicking outside of the reply area
/me clicks the forward button.
Yup. Just as I thought. No data loss.
Which means that there's something missing for some sites (not sure if it's the browser's fault or the site's fault; I know what you mean; sometimes your input gets lost in electronic purgatory somewhere. (I noticed this a lot more with IE if / when I used it [like at work]).
Well, this sometimes works like that and is invariably a huge relief. Sometimes it doesn't, even on this very site. It's hit or miss on other ones. I know it did happen to me on HLP when using Chrome. I'm still using it on my laptop (instead of Opera 12 I have on my stationary computer), but that's only because I don't want to use an outdated browser on a computer routinely exposed to public Wi-Fi networks.
Either way, it's gone now. One way to wipe your data less. Good riddance.