How to go back to Logos 9 with hidden close "x" on tabs

Ross Durham
Ross Durham Member Posts: 22
edited November 21 in English Forum

Sorry if I missed the discussion on this; I didn't find it on a quick search.  With a lot of tabs open, I find the "x" (for closing a tab) to be visually unpleasant.  How do I switch it to the Logos 9 style of it being hidden until a hover?  If this does not exist, please add this as an option. 

Ross

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Comments

  • Mike Binks
    Mike Binks MVP Posts: 7,431

    Sorry if I missed the discussion on this; I didn't find it on a quick search.  With a lot of tabs open, I find the "x" (for closing a tab) to be visually unpleasant.  How do I switch it to the Logos 9 style of it being hidden until a hover?  If this does not exist, please add this as an option. 

    Ross

    I think the only way to get a Logos 9 experience is to revert to Logos 9. The 'x' may not strike you as the best look but does it affect the usability of the software?

    tootle pip

    Mike

    How to get logs and post them.(now tagging post-apocalyptic fiction as current affairs) Latest Logos, MacOS, iOS and iPadOS

  • DMB
    DMB Member Posts: 3,087

    As Mike indicates, (reminds me of the country western song, 'All my X's live in Texas), you'd have to re-patriate back to L9.  The UI designer loves X's.

    In a heavily tabbed world, the book icons are often little black squares, then the barely viewable link letters, and then those beautiful, gorgeously big X's. Joking.

    I use Accordance too ... they hide them until you mouse them.  Then, they leave X's behind, after you mouse them.  I wonder why?  Just in case, you forgot?

  • Don Awalt
    Don Awalt Member Posts: 3,521 ✭✭✭

    In the Mac world, Apple seems to like hiding the 'x' until you mouse over the tab - Finder, and Safari does it. But Chrome does not. So there is no universal standard that I see.

  • SineNomine
    SineNomine Member Posts: 7,043

    You can request this functionality here: https://feedback.faithlife.com/

    “The trouble is that everyone talks about reforming others and no one thinks about reforming himself.” St. Peter of Alcántara