TrackPad/TouchPad Gestures for History Navigation
-
@r7xf Decision-making Process
Please watch Jón’s Response to my Question on this topic. -
same issue
so annoying -
Yeah, it's a pretty die hard habit, coming from other browsers, which all have this shortcut in common.
So I feel at a loss without this in Vivaldi -
2024 and still nothing...
-
I'm finally making the switch off of Firefox. Vivaldi has lured me in. But no two finger back gesture on Linux makes me sad.
-
It’s been in "pipeline" for a year. Any news about this feature request ? It’s a dealbreaker on laptop.
-
I use this one in the meantime:
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/swipe-back/mkkcgajcpakpfjgikmekgnihlbhliodo -
This feature is a no brainer. Especially since macOS version of Vivaldi and all other browsers have this ability.
-
HOW is this STILL a missing feature?
Not having this seriously handicaps the useability of the browser when using a trackpad for me. -
@Artex Still a missing feature because the Chromium/Chrome code cannot be used since touchscreen, touchpad and trackpad navigation are mediated through the Web-Based Vivaldi UI, and programming it from scratch to work for all devices is wicked hard.
-
HEY NEW HIRE!! HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO MAKE AN IMPACT!!
- DESIGN A REPORT THAT DEMONSTRATES HOW MANY LAPTOP USERS STOP USING VIVALDI WITHIN 60 DAYS.
- COMPARE RESULTS TO DESKTOP USERS.
I understand this enhancement requires substantial dev time, but the Vivaldi team should take a step back and realize what is happening:
- Power users have laptops too.
- Because users have come to expect touchpad gestures (as dozens of other users mentioned above), it is now psychologically ingrained the same way that vertical scrolling is.
- The result is Vivaldi brands itself by the amount of available features, but their team refuses to integrate a SCROLL function that works by default on every other application because "it's hard".
The issue isn't that it's hard, your team just doesn't see the glaring barrier to entry this creates for new users.
There's so much goodness inside this browser, but I can't recommend it to anyone because this single missing feature would telegraph that I'm out of touch with basic user necessities.
-
@timowen09 This would require harvesting user data, which Vivaldi does not and will not do.
I'm a Desktop, laptop, phone and tablet user. I don't use touchpads because I hate them. I use a mouse for everything but my phone.
-
This is now the third time I will be stopping using vivaldi because I always forget this basic feature is not implemented.
Since the time this was requested, the Arc browser went from being a gleam in someone's eye to being released while this top requested feature has still not be implemented.
I know what these kinds of feature requests entail. I understand it is not a trivial task. But it is also not a multi-year process. Make it make sense. Back to brave for now.
-
You may not use a touchpad but you're the in the minority here. I don't understand how so many other browsers have this basic functionality and Vivaldi, with all of its customizations, doesn't out of the box. Firefox, Brave, Edge, Chrome, and Internet freaking Explorer can do this but Vivaldi can't?
-
@Slownicofish said in TrackPad/TouchPad Gestures for History Navigation:
I use this one in the meantime:
https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/swipe-back/mkkcgajcpakpfjgikmekgnihlbhliodoThanks for this. Nice to see what one man can do that an entire team cannot
Here's his github.
https://github.com/golopot/swipe-back -
@hinchyman As explained above in this thread, other browsers have it built into their UI from the beginning, and have dozens of developers to maintain and update it. In the case of every Chromium-based browser but Vivaldi, they are using Chromium's (modified) UI. They don't have to build or maintain it. Chromium already did it for them. And Chromium has limitless resources to develop for hundreds of different kinds of hardware using tens of different kinds of drivers for touchpad, with a wide variety of touchpad default kinds of touch and motion interpretations.
Vivaldi does not and cannot use Chromium UI (and browser-specific touchpad interaction beyond the basics are mediated through the UI for the browser), and so has to write this code, covering all different kinds of touch pads, from scratch.
-
@fuller1754 Yes, with two-finger swiping to the left. This is a single most annoying feature in Vivaldi that I could not figure out how to turn it off. Unchecking the mouse gestures in Settings did nothing to it. It's always on and would always inadvertently go back in history when trying to pan an inner panel during horizontal browsing. It would go back in history causing countless loss in unsaved work. It's the single poorly implemented feature of Vivaldi that prevented me from using Vivaldi as default browser.
-
@hinchyman Thank you so much. I appreciate it. Baffling to me that in 2024 Vivaldi can't include such basic features. And they assume that because this specific topic doesn't have many upvotes, it means it isn't a desired feature. They won't even do something as basic as collecting telemetry to clearly see that laptop users quit using Vivaldi early because of the poor touchpad support.
-
Yeah, I'd love to see 2 finger support. Just started using Vivaldi and a couple of things are pet peeves:
- 2 finger back
- Better integration with Apple autofilled passwords
Other than these 2, Vivaldi seems better in almost every way over Safari and Brave
Keep up the great work guys/girls
R
-
hi there,
this is such a popular subject, that it even get discussed in reddit. however, I am using vivaldi for 2 years know and it performs in many aspects. using a touchpad for navigating back and forth is a one handed action. i have configured a shortcut for it, but when it comes to usability, swipe left and right on the trackpad is inrivaled. since navigating key when browsing the internet it is hard to understand, why the function is not available for vivaldi. please, explain and tell us how we can support the devs in implementing it.
peace