When you’re surfing the web or researching a subject, avoid cluttering your desktop with multiple windows. You can instead view multiple webpages in a single Safari window by using tabs.
Safari User Guide
Like all modern web browsers, Apple’s Safari for Mac can reopen a closed tab or window—as long as you weren’t browsing privately. Tabbed browsing is perhaps the best thing to come to the internet since Keyboard Cat, and if you’re anything like us you probably have more tabs open than you can ever remember looking at. Eons ago, I wrote an article about viewing recently closed tabs on the iPad. Well, you can do this on the iPhone, too, but the steps are just a bit different on both devices than they used to be.
How To Open All Recently Closed Apps On MacbookPreview a tab
Open a new tab![]()
Open a page or PDF in a new tab
In the Safari app on your Mac, do any of the following:
How To Open All Recently Closed Apps On Mac Os
Tip: To use these Command-key shortcuts to open pages in new windows instead of new tabs, choose Safari > Preferences, click Tabs, then deselect “⌘-click opens a link in a new tab.” See Change Tabs preferences.
Open a page in a new tab from the bookmarks sidebar
In the Safari app on your Mac, do any of the following:
To open the bookmarks sidebar, click the Sidebar button in the toolbar, then click the Bookmarks button .
Open a tab in another window
Note: Tabs in Private Browsing windows can only be moved to other Private Browsing windows. Non-Private Browsing tabs can only be moved to non-Private Browsing windows.
Automatically open pages in tabs
Reopen a recently closed tab![]()
See alsoArrange tabs in Safari on MacLimit or duplicate a website tab in Safari on MacClose tabs in Safari on MacPin frequently visited websites in Safari on MacKeyboard shortcuts and gestures in Safari on Mac
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