![]() ![]() To configure that, right- or Control-click on the folder and pick “Automatically Replace Tabs” from the contextual menu. You can set your folders to automatically replace existing ones with just a click, too. If you hold down Command and click on any toolbar bookmarks folder, it’ll open the sites within in new tabs hold down Option and click one, and Safari will replace your existing tabs like we just discussed. Neat! And for an even faster way to do either of those things, use the Command key or the Option key. If, however, you hold down Option before you click there, “Open in New Tabs” will switch to “Replace Tabs.” This’ll mean that any tabs you had in your existing Safari window will vanish and be replaced by the ones in the folder you chose. First, if you click on one, you’ll note the “Open in New Tabs” option.Ĭhoose that, and obviously the bookmarks within that folder will open in their own tabs, which is a fast way to launch a whole bunch of sites at once. In my screenshot below, everything except the “TMO” bookmark all the way to the left is a folder you can tell because of those tiny downward-caret-arrow things to the right of each one.Īnd yes, by the way, “tiny downward-caret-arrow things” is the technical term.Īnyway, if you’ve got folders set up for your bookmarks the way I do, then you should know that you can do a couple of cool things with them. If you’re using Safari’s Favorites Bar (which can be revealed by choosing View > Show Favorites Bar from the program’s menus at the top), there are a few neat things you can do with folders full of bookmarks. ![]()
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