I can't set where the results open anymore on mobile devices. On desktop I've set to open them in a new tab but on my iPhone they open in the same tab. I am logged in with the same account where I have that setting. I cannot access the particular setting on my phone though. It happens in all browsers so it must be a setting in the Google site, rather than in my browser.
I've been pulling my hair out since it happened in IOS 9 or so. Searched endlessly to no avail. I don't even know if it happens to others. It seems so rare that I can't even select an appropriate tag in this post so I had to choose google-chrome.
I have been facing the same issue on Android and BlackBerry and this helps:
Navigate to google.com
In Menu check the Desktop site (or Request Desktop version)
Navigate bottom down on the re-rendered page and choose Settings -> Search Settings
Touch the Open each selected result in a new browser window in the Where results open group
Hit Save
Switch off the Desktop Version mode
Hope this helps.
Related
I suspect this must be intentional on Apples part but I will ask anyway because it works from both mobile and desktop safari.
I create a simple .vcf contact from inside my web app and try to download (aka export) it.
This creates a .vcf file in desktop Safari that is actually downloaded where the user actually has to click that to get it into contacts. And in the mobile safari version (without saving to home screen), the exact same code will pop up a warning screen mobile .vcf warning which at least gives the user the opportunity to import the .vcf into contacts.
Admittedly neither the desktop or mobile safari use case it a good user experience but at least they work.
Whereas, the exact same code saved as a homescreen mobile app simply fails without error on an iphone (i.e
)
I have tried multiple ways to export from the app (most of which work from safari mobile or desktop browsers if NOT web app capable)
as a blob from base64 text/vcard
as base64 text/vcard
using window.open(vcftxt); // where vcftext is base64 text/vcard
using location.href = vcftxt; // where vcftext is base64 text/vcard
using an a tag with download= and href= vcftxt url
All the above work..just not in a homescreen app that appears native
code example (run on iphone safari...not tested on android)
https://www.airbridgelabs.com/s/0/app3.html?sd=100 - Click on contacts logo at the bottom when this page opens in safari and you will see the warning which still allows the user to open the .vcf in contacts
https://www.airbridgelabs.com/s/0/app3.html?sd=100&tm2=100 - This will walk you thru saving to home screen or you can simply save to home screen manually without the tm2 parm. click on the contacts logo at the bottom when this page opens in safari and you will see nothing. Safari developer remote console shows no errors or warnings...simply does not work.
I figure I can probably pass the created .vcf to a page on my server which in turn opens the .vcf which will likely then export it to mobile contacts..but that is a lame solution which still requires the user to be online to save an embedded contact.
And please don't use the argument that this is about security. If it was about security then you wouldn't be allowed to do the exact same thing from a desktop page, or mobile safari page or hybrid native app...and you can. This looks like Apple simply reducing the value of mobile web apps that look native.
What I am looking for is an offline work around to simply save a mobile contact already coded into the mobile web app capable content the user intentionally created.
I started developing Android apps using Eclipse IDE with Windows 7. In the course of developing I would be constantly consulting SO via Google Chrome and navigating back to Eclipse IDE to try out a solution that I found; and then back to SO if the solution didn't work.
Recently, I bought a computer with Windows 8, and each time I navigate back to Eclipse (which is on a taskbar on desktop) I lose the SO page that I was on and can't return to it.When I navigate to Google Chrome I just get a new page.I know it sounds so simple, but how do I navigate back to the page I was on previously? ....(I have the same problem with Gmail)
(I would like to be able to continue working in the way I did with Windows 7; if that is possible.)
I think I found the answer to my dilemma: Whenever I navigated back to desktop, I did so by "grabbing" the current page from the top and "dragging" it down; thereby destroying it. I should rather, have navigated via the pop-up window in the top left corner of the screen, thereby conserving the present page..(elementary, my dear Watson)
I would like to use apple-mobile-web-app-capable to allow a user to browse a website like a kiosk, without the navigation bar and the page fullscreen.
This works well until a link is clicked, then it opens Safari.
Is there any way to use this fullscreen mode and allow clicking of links without being taken to Safari?
I asked a similar question over on AskDifferent - Hiding URL Bar on iPad.
The answer I received there suggested distributing the web app's configuration file, which allows you to configure many more options. The end-user must agree to the profile installation, but having a controlled device will limit any frustration with this fact. The details of this were linked to in the above answer, but it appears to be broken now.
Alternatively, Chrome has a full screen browser mode that can be taken advantage of. Given a controlled device you could simply use the alternative browser.
I followed the approach mentioned in how to emulate a mobile (android) browser on desktop
to project the mobile webpage's properties on desktop chrome browser. I was successfully able to do that but now I have some queries as mentioned below, please let me know your inputs on that
a) How to use the "Select element option" of chrome developer toolbar to view an element's property for a mobile webpage. In normal desktop chrome browser we have the web page displayed and below that the developer toolbar is displayed and we can easily spot the element using a pointer but with mobile webpage displayed on desktop chrome browser i am not able to use this option as the webpage is not displayed.
b) I tried to copy the xpath and other things from the displayed HTML (HTML of mobile webpage on desktop chrome browser) but it gave me an error that "You need to install a Chrome extension that grants clipboard access to Developer tools". I installed one such extension named: "Auto Copy" but then also I was not able to copy. Please let me know how to go about it.
Thanks a lot in advance,
Namit
For (B) – Judging from the discussion when that message was introduced, it sounds like you need to roll your own simple custom extension to enable clipboard access. Here's a sample manifest.json – I haven't tested it out myself, but it looks pretty straightforward. The extension development Getting Started guide explains how to turn a file like this into a working extension and install it locally.
I've got site that is correctly displayed on desktop version but has few bugs on iPad. What's the simplest way to detect problems if my OS is Windows?
Option 1 - Free, local machine debugging
You may use Safari browser for Windows (download Safari 5.1.7).
Steps
Enabling Develop menu in menu bar (Press 'Alt' key to open menu bar. Then follow to Edit menu > Preferences > Advanced tab. Find this option at the bottom.)
Then, follow through Develop menu > User Agent. Select iPad, iPhone etc.
There are more options in the Develop menu (e.g. Show Web Inspector) to help with your JavaScript etc debugging.
Credits to How to debug iPhone and iPad web applications, using Safari.
Option 2 - Paid, browser-based access to target browser/OS/machine
I've personally used http://www.browserstack.com/ and it lets you test the functionality on a wide combination. However debugging may not be as convenient here as it would be on a local machine.
There may be more companies providing similar services.
Beware of basic online emulators
As mentioned in a comment, be wary of 'emulator' websites. Example: A website I ran into claimed to emulate iPhone, with a picture of iPhone, and inside it was an iframe, being dutifully rendered by the browser I opened that website in (Firefox).
The best way I can think of(depending of your implementation) is to use the firefox plugin
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/user-agent-switcher/
It allows you to switch to all sort of devices and see how they would appear on another device.
Here http://www.ampercent.com/test-website-design-iphone-ipad-mobile-devices/7075/ is a quick guide on getting you started.
There are also user-agent switchers for other browsers than FF like Chrome. Do a google search and try for yourself which one you like.