I want to increase the screen real estate for my Chrome app. The Address Bar is useless in a Chrome App and I was wondering if there was a way to disable it.
13 Answers
You can run Chrome in application mode.
Windows:
Chrome.exe --app=https://google.com
Mac:
/Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --app=https://google.com
Linux:
google-chrome --app=https://google.com
This removes all toolbars, not just the address bar, but it will definitely increase your real estate without having to use Kiosk mode.
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1You suggested the same thing that Stead did :) Unfortunately using F11 or "Full Screen" mode limits you to just that being in full screen mode. Application mode allows you to use the browser as normal without all of the (in this case) unnecessary toolbars and drop down menus.– ForceJul 16, 2014 at 20:12
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1i think your solution is more of a permanent fix for specific sites, where mine is more of a situational fix :) Jul 16, 2014 at 22:40
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5For mac, you have to run /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --app=<url> Oct 29, 2014 at 15:34
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1While using --app how to tell Chrome.exe to run as a single process (not making too many processes in alt+ctrl+del list? so that the CPU and Memory is used but cleaned up)– user285594Mar 26, 2015 at 11:09
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5
Visit the site you want in Chrome. Click the Chrome menu in your browser toolbar.
- Select "More Tools" > "Create shortcut…"
- Check "Open as window", press "Add"
Once you launch from that shortcut it will be a window without toolbar.
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14This should be the accepted answer. No need to fiddle with shortcuts. This is a built-in Chrome feature.– ADTCFeb 3, 2015 at 3:41
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2on the current version of chrome on windows this is in menu > more tools > add to task bar + check open in window– jopfreNov 8, 2015 at 15:33
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3The new way (late 2015) on ChromeOS is "More Tools", "Add to shelf...", "Open as window" (checkbox). For Chrome browser, it is ... "Add to Applications..."– MarkHuJan 14, 2016 at 21:52
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5I can't find this feature for the Chrome browser on Mac OS. Anyone know if this is supported?– JacobMar 14, 2016 at 14:10
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8
Mac
- CMDControlF goes fullscreen
- CMDShiftF hides the navbar
- also worth noting
...
→More Tools
→Create Shortcut...
creates a standalone Application, just make sure you're logged into the Chrome Profile you want to be active
Windows
- F11 (possibly AltEnter too)
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17Uh, it's possible the user simply wants to have the web page in a window with nothing but the page and the window frame (no address bar or tab bar). Entering full screen is not the answer then.– ADTCFeb 3, 2015 at 3:40
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This shortcut appears to be broken in Chrome 46 (dev channel). Anyone have any ideas?– advaitAug 17, 2015 at 3:06
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2
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3
Uncheck Always Show Toolbar in Full Screen
in View
menu:
and go to fullscreen then:
Alt+Cmd+F - on Mac
F11 - on Windows
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1Super ! I just did some tutorial screencasts (using ScreenFlow on Mac) and it worked brilliantly using this Always Show Toolbar in Full Screen mode option. I disabled the toolbar as shown, and it displayed a Java web application perfectly for screen capture. Thanks ! Sep 22, 2017 at 10:43
In the latest version of Chrome (Version 50.0.2661.94 m) you can accomplish this by going to the menu and then clicking -> More Tools -> Add to Desktop. You will then want to check off "Open as Window" in the popup that appears and then click "Add". Screen shots below:
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Is there a way to be able to open new tab links in full screen mode automatically too?– RhysE96Feb 28, 2017 at 9:46
Hitting F11 may work for you.(Full-screen mode)
It appears that the hiding the address bar without going full screen is no longer an option:http://productforums.google.com/forum/#!topic/chrome/d7LfleRNX7M
On macs chrome browser:
1st toggle on Full screen:
cmd-ctrl-f
2nd toggle on hide address bar, tabs and all
Just repeat to undo or hover above top
cmd-shift-f
Undo by repeating backwards:
cmd-shift-f
undo hidecmd-ctrl-f
undo full screen
2016-05-04-03:59A - Windows 7 - Google Chrome [Version 50.0.2661.94]
wanted this done for a 'YouTube Pop-out Player' without Chrome Address / Toolbar or Bookmarks Bar; solution ended up being a small edit of MarkHu's answer (because of new updates, i guess?)
Go to the page you want altered, select Chrome Toolbar's 'Hamburger button' (3 horizontal lines).
From there: More tools > Add to desktop... > Open as window (tick box) > Add (button).
... and, simply open your page from the new desktop shortcut, adjust as needed, and enjoy!
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If you would like to know how to hide the YouTube search bar that appears at the top of the pop-out: Right-click and choose "Inspect element" to open the developer tools. Locate "masthead-positioner" and press Delete twice. Now you can size the screen so that only the video is visible! May 4, 2016 at 18:23
Even though the question is about gaining some space removing the address bar, you can also gain some space by toggling the bookmark bar on and off, using Ctrl + Shift + B, or ⌘ Cmd + Shift + B, in Mac OS.
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4Just commenting, since nobody actually cared to point why this is wrong: the OP was referring to the URL bar, not the favorites bar. May 2, 2014 at 14:21
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3I believe this low rated answer was trying to help without giving the answer requested. Dec 18, 2014 at 3:04
Instructions as of Dec 2018:
- Visit the site you want in Chrome
- From menu select "More tools" > "Create shortcut..."
- From apps (can visit chrome://apps/), right click site then enable "Open as window"
Now when you open the shortcut it will open in a window without toolbar.
Vivaldi Chromium-based Browser can hide the address bar for my Home Theather PC. Using that app you can show/hide a floating bar with F8 key. Other answers are unrelated to what was asked!
CMD+Shift+F
(not cmd+ctrl+f)