

In the left pane, on the Library dialog box, you can access your browsing history by time periods and then double-click on a site in the right pane to open it on the current tab. You can also access your browsing history on a dialog box by click “Show All History” on the History menu. The History sidebar stays open until you close it using the “X” button in the upper-right corner of the pane. You can also view lists of webpages you visited in previous months and older than six months. Click on a site to view it in the current tab. In the History sidebar, click “Last 7 days” to see all the webpages you visited in the last week. To do this, click the Firefox menu button and select “View History Sidebar” from the History drop-down menu. You can view your browsing history in Firefox by time periods in a sidebar. You can also click on “Restore Closed Tabs” to restore all the tabs listed under that heading onto new tabs in the current browser window.Īgain, maybe you forgot the name or URL for a webpage you visited last week. Notice that recently closed tabs are also listed under Restore Closed Tabs. Click on a webpage to open it in the current tab. To reopen a specific tab or webpage you closed, click the Firefox menu button (three horizontal bars) in the upper-right corner of the browser window. Repeatedly selecting “Undo Close Tab”, or pressing Ctrl+Shift+T will open previously closed tabs in the order they were closed.Īgain, the option is in a different place on the menu depending on whether you right-clicked on a tab or on an empty part of the tab bar. You can also press Ctrl+Shift+T on your keyboard to open the last closed tab. To reopen the last closed tab in Firefox, right-click on the tab bar and select “Undo Close Tab” from the popup menu. To open the webpage from today, yesterday, or from a specific date before that, simply click the link for the page you want. Your browsing history displays on a new tab, grouped into time periods. Under “Recently closed”, on the submenu, selecting the option that says “X tabs” (for example, “2 tabs”) will open that many recently closed tabs in a new browser window.
