How can I see blog posts stricly "newest to oldest"?
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The button "latest blogs" doesn't do the trick...there is still a blog entry from mid-August on top, and newer entries are hidden somewhere below.
"Most popular" and "Hot" are also not what I am looking for...just "newest"
Suggestions? -
@asperamanca said in How can I see blog posts stricly "newest to oldest"?:
The button "latest blogs" doesn't do the trick...there is still a blog entry from mid-August on top, and newer entries are hidden somewhere below.
"Most popular" and "Hot" are also not what I am looking for...just "newest"
Suggestions?Try the "Select Month" combobox.
Also try https://www.qt.io/blog/archive/2019 and similar.
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@jksh
Thanks. Not exactly what I was looking for (because it's not a page suitable for a permanent bookmark), but better than anything I've seen so far.Do you know a way to hide blog entries so I do no longer see them? My mouse wheel is glowing when I search for a specific post...
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@asperamanca said in How can I see blog posts stricly "newest to oldest"?:
@jksh
Thanks. Not exactly what I was looking for (because it's not a page suitable for a permanent bookmark), but better than anything I've seen so far.Yeah, I'm not a fan of the current layout. I didn't really notice the change because I use the RSS feed.
Anyway, everything below the "featured posts" ("Qt for MCUS", "Most Popular", and "Hot Topics") are listed newest-to-oldest, albeit they're now left-to-right as well as top-to-bottom. The "featured posts" also disappear from the 2nd page onwards: https://www.qt.io/blog/page/2
Do you know a way to hide blog entries so I do no longer see them?
Hide how? I don't think I've seen any blog or news site provide such a feature.
I mainly use my RSS feed reader to monitor https://www.qt.io/blog/rss.xml. It gives me a nice compact list of posts in chronological order. It also lets me delete the entries that I'll never read again.
My mouse wheel is glowing when I search for a specific post...
Go to Google (or your preferred search engine) and type in "site:blog.qt.io MyTopicHere" (Example: https://www.google.com/search?&q=site%3Ablog.qt.io+released ) This is much faster than any manual browsing/scrolling.
This is the same principle behind the Qt Doc Search browser extension: https://forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches