I've been using @privacybrowser for PC and I have to admit that I find it really hard to get used to its Lynx-inspired style of page navigation. I hate jumping from link to link when using the cursor keys. (Or falling off of a textarea element when editing a post, like it happened to me just now.)
Other than that it's pretty cool.
@privacybrowser Hi, I was trying to read the content, so a regular scroll would be the way to go, I think. Instead, every time I pushed the down arrow, I moved from one link to the next. On Mastodon's web UI that gets frustrating fast. Same result if you try to use the space bar, by the way.
For moving through links exclusively I use the tab key in my own developments. I don't know how other people do it.
The textarea thing was also very frustrating, because there's no easy way to return to where you were. If you try to move back up, it just selects the whole element and you have to use the mouse if you want to keep editing.
@josemanuel I can see trying to scroll through a lot of links being annoying. I personally use page up and page down to scroll so I have never encountered that problem.
@privacybrowser Why does the focus move out of the form anyway? I'm supposed to be editing, not navigating. If I wanted to move out of it (to fill another form element, for instance), I'd use the TAB key. I thought that was The Natural Way™.
@josemanuel I added some links to https://redmine.stoutner.com/issues/1002 explaining spatial navigation.
@privacybrowser
> The question now is, which should be the default state, enabled or disabled?
Set your own preference as default. After all, it's your program. As long as I'll have the option to change it, I'll be happy.
@josemanuel If you move out of a text area, you can move back (which selects all the text) and then press the right-arrow key which deselects the text and places the cursor after the last character.