Macro Systems Blog
Highlighting Some Chrome Built-In Features
Google Chrome is by far the most popular browser in the world; that fact makes it that much more improbable that many people don’t know a lot about its built-in features. We certainly can’t go through all of them in a single blog, but we can provide a few tips describing the best of them.
The Omnibox
While this area had usually been called the address bar, Google calls theirs the Omnibox. The Omnibox has many capabilities, but since Chrome is Google’s browser, it is only fitting that the Omnibox has some of its biggest strengths where searching for content is related.
Search in a New Tab
Most people know that you can perform a Google search simply by typing a query into the Omnibox, but fewer may be aware that they can open this search in a new tab by pressing Alt + Enter. Even fewer likely know about how they can actually search within a website itself, although this does take some management.
Search in a Specific Website
Say that you have a specific website that you frequently use as a resource. If you utilize it enough that you want to narrow your searches to that site in particular, Chrome permits you to do so. Once your IT team has given you the go-ahead to play with your Chrome Settings, access them and navigate to Search engine and from there, manage search engines. There, you’ll see the list of websites that you can potentially search directly from the Omnibox.
To search directly from the Omnibox, type the URL of the website that you want to search within. On the far right of the Omnibar, you should see a prompt, urging you to press Tab to search that website. Do so, type in your query, and press Enter. You should then be brought directly to the results page of the website you entered, showing the results of the query you typed.
Search for an Open Tab
We’re all also guilty of opening tab after tab after tab, only to lose the one we were trying to work on or reference. Chrome provides a convenient way to get it back. If you start typing the URL into the Omnibox, supported sites will offer a Switch to this tab option, allowing you to do so quickly.
Tab Management Functions
Chrome offers many capabilities that a user can leverage to simplify their use of tabs, including general browsing.
Jumping Between Tabs
For example, while we’re on the topic of working with multiple tabs, Chrome permits a user to quickly jump to another one with a simple command. Holding CTRL while pressing the number of the tab (1 through 9) will open that tab, allowing your work to go on with minimal interruption.
Moving Multiple Tabs
It can also be helpful to divide a mass of tabs into different windows, making it easier to reference one while working on another. To drag and drop multiple tabs, just hold the Control Key as you select your pages and you will be able to maneuver them as one.
Reopening Closed Tabs
Show me someone who hasn’t mistakenly closed a tab in Chrome, and I’ll show you someone who’s probably fibbing. We’ve all done it, and we can all undo it by pressing Control + Shift + T. Alternatively, you can open a new tab, right-click it, and select “Reopen closed tab”.
There are many, many more Chrome features to be shared that we didn’t mention here. What are some of your most-used Chrome functions? Tell us in the comments!
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