Text Wrap / Text Reflow
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@dmitrik - totally the thing that keeps me using opera on my phone over any other browser - and totally understand how it is a column or cell edge detection thing so non-trivial. It makes the difference between usable and not.
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Without this feature i can't use Vivaldi or other browsers. Critically useful feature. Also this feature exist in UC
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@Ayespy Can't they just use the same method as Opera? Opera Software always touted itself as an anti-copyrights company specially in comemorative anniversary posts it was always "look at all the features we invented over the years and never worked to prevent other browsers from adopting them". I remember the sentiment against Apple patenting stuff that made it difficult to implement modern UI/touch interactions on web standards, the whole case of H.264 vs Ogg Theora (later WebM) for HTML5 video, and so on...
No text wrap in a browser is a deal breaker to me.
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@rluik Opera owns its text wrap - just because they never enforced such a right doesn't make it legal to steal. But then, Opera and Vivaldi are based on totally different architecture and building blocks, so I could not say if the pilfered code would even work in Vivaldi. I suspect not.
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@Ayespy I'm not saying to steal the code
(it may not be so different though, the also Chromium-based Opera and Yandex mobile browsers have it). I'm saying that apparently there's no copyright on the method as I've never seen any news reporting of "Opera sues other browser company over text wrap patent" yet many continue to provide and implement the feature. It was removed from Android's AOSP browser without any legal justification AFAIK.
Unless you have more information on the contracts than the general public/journalist, I can't see that as a reason. -
The most important feature I missing! Opera won't be exchanged until implementing this text fitting.
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I've gotta put myself in this camp as well. I go on a browser hunt a couple of times a year, and no one else seems to be able to pull it off. In my mind it's an essential part of the zoom feature and I can't understand how that doesn't seem obvious to everyone.
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I agree. Its critical feature for content consumption on mobile devices. We need to zoom in text very often and scrolling left to right on each line is pain in..
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@areynaldos UC Browser is the master of Text Wrap function, perfect font zooming when doing text wrap, better than Opera, where unfortunately sometimes there are very small fonts right next to bigger fonts.
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@zavalita2002 I tried UC once and it seemed like malware to me. As far as I remember it was adding its own Ads into webpages.
However, the text wrap feature is very important to me and it is one of the best features that Opera Mobile has. So after switching to Vivaldi I really miss it.
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Whenever I must have text wrap, I usually just enter reader mode. That way, I have my favorite browser on Android, and I get text wrapping on the vast majority of pages that don't implement responsive code like modern webpages should. Setting the flag "Reader mode triggering" to "always" will ensure that you have the ability to access it even on pages for which the engine doesn't decide to offer it.
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@BoneTone I know what you're saying, but unfortunately, I have found out that the pages where I do need the text wrap are exactly the ones that don't offer the "Reader Mode" (Simplified view in Vivaldi).
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@BoneTone said in Text Wrap option:
Setting the flag "Reader mode triggering" to "always" will ensure that you have the ability to access it even on pages for which the engine doesn't decide to offer it.
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Any progress around here?
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@Ayespy It's a bad joke. The Users want this important feature since 2018? And NOTHING happend yet. Sorry, but Vivaldi now should make text wrap possible quickly.
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@Bubbel33 Well, I don't work for Vivaldi, so it's not for me to say.
I do notice however that there are 400 mobile feature requests and nearly 3000 mobile bugs, and a mobile team of only 5 to look at these, while text wrap is one of the more involved issues to address. Mobile has been released just over a year ago (this thread was opened nearly a year before release) and still doesn't even have all of the features the team had planned for it before requests began coming in. So a little perspective never hurts...
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Text should fit the screen automatically without having to scroll side-to-side, regardless of size.
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This single missed feature prevents me from switching to Vivaldi from Opera.
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@dmitrik Agreed. When I first tried Android in the 4.0 ICS days, I tried every browser I could find, and there was only one that came close, and that was Opera (Presto). It was as close to a perfect browser as I have ever seen in mobile... but even then it was apparently getting sort of long in the tooth, and it didn't want to finish loading any pages, and it would partially hang while waiting.
Firefox had text reflow then, but it was really buggy, often taking you to random points in the page after you zoomed (and zoomed in that far it was hard to see where in the page you had been before), and rather than fix it, they opted to remove it until such time that it could be reimplemented correctly. It's been the better part of a decade, and they still haven't done it.
Boat browser had reflow back then, but it was buggy too, like Firefox's, and the person who said UC seems like malware is right-- it's doing just as s/he said, and that's not acceptable.
Text reflow is one of those must-have features for mobile, and it's a real shame that it's so rare. That and a single-bar UI at the top that didn't disappear (I was using a tablet at the time) were my main requirements, and only Opera (later Opera Classic) fit. Even the newer Chropera didn't tick all the boxes.
I am not sure why this seems to be so difficult to do well. Is it really any different than the initial text flow at page load? But maybe it is, given how only Opera seems to have done it well. I hope Vivaldi can do it eventually (or at least for Google to do so, and then it could find its way into Vivaldi by way of Chromium).
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@Ayespy Just to make sure, when you are talking about "copyright" do you mean Opera's patent on text wrapping? https://patents.google.com/patent/US9378188