If you’re a web developer or user of Microsoft Edge, then you know that tabs are a great way to organize your content. You can create tabbed browsing windows by opening the browser and clicking on the three lines in the top left corner of the window. Then, you can drag and drop items into these windows. But what if you want to use vertical tabs in Microsoft Edge? This is a great way to keep your content organized and easily accessible. To enable vertical tabs in Microsoft Edge, follow these steps:
- Open Microsoft Edge and click on the three lines in the top left corner of the window.
- Then, select “tabs.”
- In the “tabs” section, click on “new tab.”
- Type “vertical” into the text field and press enter. The browser will add a vertical tab to your current window.
Microsoft Edge now has vertical tabs, which can be a great tool on modern widescreen displays. Here’s how to get a vertical tab sidebar in the Chromium-based version of Microsoft Edge.
As of October 27, 2020, this feature was not yet available in the stable version of Microsoft Edge. It was available in the unstable Dev and Canary versions of Microsoft Edge. Vertical tabs will likely make it to the stable version of Edge later in 2020 or in early 2021, perhaps when Edge 88 launches to the stable channel around January 19, 2021.
How to Turn on Vertical Tabs in Edge
If you’re using a version of Microsoft Edge that has this feature, you can enable or disable the vertical tab sidebar from Settings. To access it, click menu > Settings in Edge.
On the Settings screen, click “Appearance” in the left sidebar. Under Customize toolbar, ensure the “Show vertical tabs button” option is activated.
If you don’t like the vertical tabs feature, you can disable this option to hide the vertical tabs button on your toolbar.
How to Hide and Show the Tab Sidebar in Edge
To access the vertical tab sidebar, click the “Turn on vertical tabs” button at the left side of Edge’s tab bar.
You’ll see a tab sidebar at the left side of your screen. By default, it will show small icons representing each tab you have open, using the favicon or each web page you have open.
To access the tabs, mouse over the left sidebar and it will appear over the current page you have open, showing you the title of each page. It works just like the normal horizontal tab bar, letting you switch between tabs, close open tabs, and open new tabs.
If you like this view and have the spare screen space, you can click the “Pin pane” button at the top right corner of the tab panel. It will appear always on screen until you unpin it.
To switch back to the horizontal tab bar at any point in time, click the “Turn off vertical tabs” button at the top left corner of the tab sidebar.
This is just one more new feature in the new Microsoft Edge that distinguishes it from Google Chrome. The browsers may be the same under the hood, but Microsoft is adding features that Chrome doesn’t have.