Day 14: Panels

Originally posted on Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Panels allow you to view reference material, websites, or other information while browsing. Opera uses certain features in “panels” (or at least allows you to use them there if you want), making it an easy place to do several different things at once.

Panels are not new in Opera8, but there are some new features present since Opera7 was introduced. Today we will look at what panels come with Opera, as well as some other customized panels made just for you *.

Panels were previously called “Sidebars” which is the name I still find more descriptive. But “panels” is the official name, so I have acquiesced.

Start by pressing F4 or goto View → Toolbars → Show Panels if you loathe the keyboard... (you know who you are). Actually there’s an easier way to open it with the mouse, which we’ll get to in a minute (or longer, depending on how quickly you read and how soon I remember to include it).

Once they are open, right click and choose “Customize” and you will see a window like the one below.

We will briefly go through the various built-in panels and describe what they do.

[Screenshot of Opera's Panels window] Go ahead and turn on all the available panels to see what they have to offer. You can remove them later by right clicking on them and selecting “Remove Panel”

Search (ctrl + 1)
A quick interface to several search engines. Personally, I find myself using shortcuts such as F2 and then type “g foo” to search Google, but for those who are really into panels, this is another way to use them. See also the search dropdown on the Addressbar.
Bookmarks (ctrl + 2)
By contrast, the Bookmarks panel is extremely useful for managing bookmarks. Click on the “View” dropdown to change the display and sort order. Type into the Quick Find to quickly locate matching bookmarks, including descriptions, nicknames, and so forth.
Mail (ctrl + 3)
Note: this panel cannot be enabled unless you have setup an Opera Mail (M2) account. This is perhaps the best use for a panel yet. RSS/Atom feeds are also shown in that panel as well.
Contacts (ctrl + 4)
Opera’s addressbook, for use with Opera Mail and Opera Chat. Easily search/edit entries here. (see also Tools → Contacts)
Chat (ctrl + 5)
Manage Opera Chat rooms and servers
Notes (ctrl + 6)
Notes are important enough to get their own day later in the series, but here is where you can find them and search for notes you’ve saved. (see also Tools → Notes)
Transfers (ctrl + 7)
Manage downloaded files (see also Tools → Transfers)
History (ctrl + 8)
View/search previously viewed pages (see also Tools → History)
Links (ctrl + 9)
A list of all the links on a given page, which can be clicked or saved. ((see also Tools → Links)
Windows (ctrl + 0)
Manage all your Opera windows and pages in one panel.
Info (no quick key, we ran out of numbers!)
Technical information about the page/image that you are viewing. Especially helpful for web designers who are trying to debug pages.

Custom Panels

You can find many more panels at http://my.opera.com/community/customize/panel/ and several at http://tntluoma.com/sidebars/.

Any webpage can be put into a panel by bookmarking it (ctrl + T for Windows/Un*x or command + T for Mac) and check the box next to “Show in panel”. Of course not every page works well in the space of a panel, so you may need to click View → Small Screen to see it properly (see Day 8: Fit to Window Width for more information on Small Screen Rendering). Unfortunately this setting is not retained so you have to select it every time. Feel free to consider that a bug. OOps. Turns out that I was wrong, and Small Screen Rendering is saved (See comments below).

If you know of other good panels, please add a comment below!

p.s. Aha! Several readers pointed out that I had neglected to explain the other way of opening panels. Look along the far left edge of the browser window and you will see a small triangle. The good news is that you do not have to click on the arrow itself. You have the full height of the edge, about 10 pixels wide.

This is what is called the “panel toggle” (see image above). Clicking on it will open/close the panels. If you do not want to have that there, uncheck the option. (Another reader points out that if you have moved the panels to the right side of the browser window, the panel toggle will be on the far right not the far left.)

One final tip: shift + F4 will open/close the panels but leave the panel buttons visible. Try it, you’ll see what I mean.

(*) Ok, so these Sidebars aren’t made just for you, but I wanted you to feel special. Because you are. To me, at least. Ok, so really I don’t know who you are, but I’m sure someone thinks you’re special. (return to above)

Comments

On May 19, 2005 at 03:49 AM, Helmut wrote:

Hi!

How does one rearrange the panel buttons, e.g. move "Mail" in front of "History"? It was drag'n'drop in Opera 7, but I don't seem to be able to do it anymore in Opera 8 (using both Windows and Linux). I've tried clicking a panel button with left, middle or right mouse button and dragging, does not work. And I can't find anything in the Customize menu.

Thanks.

On May 19, 2005 at 06:32 AM, non-troppo wrote:

Just a slight correction: Small-screen state is retained across sessions (bookmarks file contains "SMALL SCREEN=YES" to record this info).

Panels I can't live without: Rijk's wonderful panelizer (which you link to on your panels page) contains essential panels such as:


  1. HTML V4.01

  2. CSS V2.1

  3. Andrew's Javascript console panel

  4. Frenzie's Calendar Panel


Also:

  1. http://aleto.ch/webTools/unicodeChartsPanel.html — An amazing unicode panel

  2. http://home.no.net/polynar/opera/panel/chatcommands.html — IRC commands panel

  3. http://vvs.post.lg.ua/?fl=0&i=9 — VVSite's great Opera cache explorer

The wiki allows ANY page to be converted into a panel. On each page there is a "Add to sidebar" link (currently must set it to small-screen mode as we are accommodating a Opera V7.23 bug...)

Also, panels can be converted to full pages using the Panel header expand button. I find this clunky (it results in two interfaces to the same functions simultaneously on screen!), so I have a tip to allow panels to become "spring-loaded":

http://nontroppo.org/wiki/OperaTips#T54

On May 19, 2005 at 11:15 AM, TjL (tntluoma.com) [TypeKey Profile Page] wrote:

Ah, good point.

To move them, you must right click → Customize and then you can move them around.

This was done to prevent people from accidentally moving them around when they did not intend to do so.

On May 19, 2005 at 11:18 AM, Christopher wrote:

You can move buttons around by holding the shift key whilst you click and drag - the customization dialog isn't required.

On May 19, 2005 at 11:35 AM, TjL (tntluoma.com) [TypeKey Profile Page] wrote:

Christopher and non-troppo are right.... See, I learn new things about Opera from you too :-)

I had tried a page with SSR last night and it didn't seem to stick, but it does now, so I must have done something weird in my too-limited testing.

I blame it on jetlag ;-)

On May 20, 2005 at 09:51 PM, kerrang wrote:

Hi!
I really love Opera.
But since version 8 I can't have book mark panel without having an extra panel with a bookmark icon on it.

All I need is a stand alone bookmark panel
with all my bookmark populated.
How shold I do ?

On May 20, 2005 at 10:39 PM, TjL (tntluoma.com) [TypeKey Profile Page] wrote:

kerrang - I'm really not sure what the problem is that you're having.

Perhaps someone else will be able to help.

On May 22, 2005 at 03:57 PM, Winfred wrote:

I really have some problem in dealing with the sorting in the Mail Panel. Currently I'm using v7.23 build 3227, and the news accounts are sorted in the way as I input them. I've found a long time but I still cannot find a way to sort them in abc order...

anyone can help?

On May 30, 2005 at 09:01 PM, eks wrote:

kerrang, I think you might be looking for a single-column bookmark pane similar to the old Opera hotlist? I found some toolbar.ini changes for this in (I think) the Opera community forums. It replaces the same section in your active toolbar.ini file (whichever one you are using). You can also try to find it via a forum search if you wish. Here's the code, it's worked great for me. Sorry it doesn't format in the post... I inserted (LINEx - ) at the front of each line so you can break them up.

LINE1 - [Hotlist Panel Header.content]
LINE2 - Button0, , 135="Show popup menu, "Internal panels""
LINE3 - Spacer1, 1
LINE4 - Button2="Manage,,,, "Caption Restore" & Set collapse, "hotlist""
LINE5 - Button3=Set collapse, "hotlist", 0,,"Panel Collapse Small" > Set alignment, "hotlist", 0,,"Panel Collapse Small" & Focus page

On July 05, 2005 at 10:49 AM, TjL wrote:

http://home.no.net/polynar/opera/panel/chatcommands.html is a page you can use for a Panel with IRC commands in it.

On August 05, 2005 at 02:23 PM, kirin wrote:

If you keep the panel buttons visible, the best way to add a new one is to drag the tab of the page you want to the panel bar.

The problem is that it saves the bookmark in the root. Is there any way we can define a default folder for those bookmarks to be saved?

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