How to create new tab when I click on a Note?

In Notes, say I have my bible open, go to a verse with a Note, click on the Note Icon and it creates a new tab. Great. Fine and good so far.
But then I go to another verse with Note #2 and I click on that Note Icon and this is where it gets inconsistent. Sometimes it will create a new tab and sometimes will overwrite the tab with Note #1. Sometimes it will create a tab on other panes where I have to hunt for it. I would like to have it so that when I click on any Note Icon, that Note Icon will always create a new tab in the pane with my bible or at least in the same pane as the other Note is in. Is there something I am missing in all this?
I would also like to "always" be able to click and hold on a Note in my bible and drag it to a position of a new tab. Sometimes this works and sometime it doesn't.
The reason I would like it this way is because I chain all my Notes so that I can go from one Note to the next Note quickly. And setting that up, I will have 2 different Notes open in 2 different tabs. That way I can work back and forth in chaining the Notes. I do this so as to create study chains through my bible. But the way Notes sometimes overwrites the already Note makes all this difficult and labor intensity.
And there is the chance that I am overlooking something and making things harder for me. If so, I hope someone can point it all out for me.
Thanks. 😎
xn = Christan man=man -- Acts 11:26 "....and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch".
Barney Fife is my hero! He only uses an abacus with 14 rows!
Comments
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Perhaps have you noticed that a new tab is spawned when the next note opened is in a different notebook than the previous note? Not a solution, but my current theory on why the software does what it does.
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@Daniel A. Peterson Yes, I noticed. Thanks for mentioning it. I wish when Notes do create a tab that the process would be more consistent. Thanks.
xn = Christan man=man -- Acts 11:26 "....and the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch".
Barney Fife is my hero! He only uses an abacus with 14 rows!
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