Izimpendulo zakamuva ze-keyboard shortcut for duplicating tabhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/11309942016-07-14T13:04:51-07:00On Windows, pressing Alt+Enter in the address bar loads the address in a new tab. It doesn't seem to2016-07-14T13:04:51-07:00jscher2000https://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1130994#answer-897369<p>On Windows, pressing Alt+Enter in the address bar loads the address in a new tab. It doesn't seem to matter whether the text is selected or not. I think cor-el is referring to the same feature with option/alt+Return key combination on MacOS.
</p><p>Now... that is NOT the same as duplicating the current tab because it is a fresh load of the URL without the current tab's history and doesn't reflect any modified state of the page (e.g., data entered into a form wouldn't be duplicated).
</p><p>I don't know which result you are trying to accomplish...
</p><p><em>Edit: The way I know to truly duplicate the tab is to hold down Ctrl and then click and drag the tab to a new position on the tab bar where you want the duplicate to be. Probably on MacOS you would hold down Command while dragging.</em>
</p>You can middle-click the Reload button (or hold Ctrl and left-click) to duplicate the current tab.
T2016-07-14T12:50:28-07:00cor-elhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1130994#answer-897362<p>You can middle-click the Reload button (or hold Ctrl and left-click) to duplicate the current tab.
The only way to do this with the keyboard would be to use some shortcuts and first set the focus to the location/address bar (command + L) &lt;strike&gt;and select current URL (command + A )&lt;/strike&gt; and open the selected text in a new tab (option + return).
</p><p><em>(edited to remove select all)</em>
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<ul><li><a href="https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Keyboard+shortcuts" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Keyboard+shortcuts</a>
</li><li><a href="https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Mouse+shortcuts" rel="nofollow">https://support.mozilla.org/kb/Mouse+shortcuts</a>
</li></ul>You didn't mention that in your initial posting and since I have never used Chrome, I was unaware th2016-07-13T21:57:42-07:00the-edmeisterhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1130994#answer-897015<p>You didn't mention that in your initial posting and since I have never used Chrome, I was unaware that is was available there. It is a feature in Firefox to stop the inadvertent opening of a duplicate tab, a feature that was added to Firefox in 2011, iirc.
</p>Thank you :) ... but i found this feature useful in chrome ... below is the screenshot added...2016-07-13T20:50:11-07:00thangagirihttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1130994#answer-897012<p>Thank you&nbsp;:) ... but i found this feature useful in chrome ... below is the screenshot added....
</p>Not allowing the user to accidentally open a duplicate page in a new tab is a feature in Firefox. Co2016-07-13T20:44:35-07:00the-edmeisterhttps://support.mozilla.org/zu/questions/1130994#answer-897010<p>Not allowing the user to accidentally open a duplicate page in a new tab is a feature in Firefox. Copy and paste is the only way that I am aware of, without using an extension.
</p><p><a href="https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/duplicatetab/" rel="nofollow">https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/duplicatetab/</a>
or
<a href="https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/duplicate-tab-228106/" rel="nofollow">https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/duplicate-tab-228106/</a>
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