The current scenario goes like this:
1. Select a page in the tree and click "Edit". > The page opens in the editor.
2. Select the same page and click "Edit". > A window pops up informing that the page has already been opened: OK to open a copy, Cancel to abort.
How about this?
When you try to open a page already opened, a window pops up, too. But here you have more options:
1 - [old] Abort
2 - [old] Open another copy of the page
3 - [new] Switch to the already opened page
Option 3 means that no copy will be opened but the page will be activated / focused on / switch to, in the C1 Console.
This could be implemented via a check box on the popup window, which - when checked - will lead to switching to the edited page, and when is unchecked (default) - will do the old thing: opening another copy of the same page.
Besides, it would be great if the selection in this check box will be "remembered" and reused until changed otherwise.
When you have a lot of tabs opened, one can try and open a page again by mistake rather than intentionally.
1. Select a page in the tree and click "Edit". > The page opens in the editor.
2. Select the same page and click "Edit". > A window pops up informing that the page has already been opened: OK to open a copy, Cancel to abort.
How about this?
When you try to open a page already opened, a window pops up, too. But here you have more options:
1 - [old] Abort
2 - [old] Open another copy of the page
3 - [new] Switch to the already opened page
Option 3 means that no copy will be opened but the page will be activated / focused on / switch to, in the C1 Console.
This could be implemented via a check box on the popup window, which - when checked - will lead to switching to the edited page, and when is unchecked (default) - will do the old thing: opening another copy of the same page.
Besides, it would be great if the selection in this check box will be "remembered" and reused until changed otherwise.
When you have a lot of tabs opened, one can try and open a page again by mistake rather than intentionally.