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  2. Wikipedia : Tools/Navigation popups

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tools/Navigation...

    When you hover the mouse over a link with a shortcut, the shortcut key appears at the end of the popup hint. For example, in Firefox or Opera, to quickly edit an article in a new tab you can type 'e Control-Enter'. Pressing escape should hide the popup, too. popupHistoricalLinks: true, false

  3. Click path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_path

    A click path or clickstream is the sequence of hyperlinks one or more website visitors follows on a given site, presented in the order viewed. [citation needed] A visitor's click path may start within the website or at a separate third party website, often a search engine results page, and it continues as a sequence of successive webpages visited by the user.

  4. Selenium (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selenium_(software)

    Selenium was originally developed by Jason Huggins in 2004 as an internal tool at ThoughtWorks. [5] Huggins was later joined by other programmers and testers at ThoughtWorks, before Paul Hammant joined the team and steered the development of the second mode of operation that would later become "Selenium Remote Control" (RC).

  5. Headless browser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headless_browser

    Jasmine uses Selenium by default, but can use WebKit or Headless Chrome, to run browser tests. [16] Cypress, a frontend testing framework; QF-Test, a software tool for automated testing of programs via the graphical user interface where a headless browser can also be used for testing.

  6. Inline linking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inline_linking

    Inline linking (also known as hotlinking, piggy-backing, direct linking, offsite image grabs, bandwidth theft, [1] and leeching) is the use of a linked object, often an image, on one site by a web page belonging to a second site.

  7. Hyperlink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperlink

    An example of a hyperlink as commonly seen in a web browser, with a computer mouse pointer hovering above it Visual abstraction of several documents being connected by hyperlinks. In computing, a hyperlink, or simply a link, is a digital reference to data that the user can follow or be guided to by clicking or tapping. [1]

  8. Help:Link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Link

    If the link should be to another section with the title or a title that differs only in capitalization (Example vs. EXAMPLE), append to the linked title _2, _3, and so on, without a space (or 2, 3, and so on with a space), counting from the top of the destination page and without regard to whether a section is a section or a subsection. For ...

  9. Deep linking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_linking

    This can cause usability problems for visitors to those sites. For example, they may be unable to save bookmarks to individual pages or states of the site, use the web browser forward and back buttons—and clicking the browser refresh button may return the user to the initial page. However, this is not a fundamental limitation of these ...