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1994-08-27
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5KB
Date: Tue, 05 Jul 94 23:32:00 +0200
Message-Id: <2e19eb44@daggskim.ct.se>
From: bo.leuf@daggskim.ct.se (Bo Leuf)
Subject: Re: thoughts and conjectures
To: gem-list@world.std.com
Precedence: bulk
> From Annius.Groenink@cwi.nl (Annius Groenink)
> [...]
> I agree with Rick Flashman that the right approach to mouse clicks
> in background windows when MTOS or WINX are NOT installed is to require
> the user to hold the right mouse button and use left clicks.
This is a good approach, unless the OS (or app) supports a "floating" window
for the toolbox. Normal behaviour on left-click-background should remain as TOP
window.
> From Timothy Miller <millert@undergrad.csee.usf.edu>
> One recurring theme I see coming from some of you is that you seem to
> want to make drastic changes to the way the GEM interface operates on a
> fundamental level. Putting dialogs into windows is great, IMO. But
> making other changes like (For things other than tool boxes) not topping
> windows when they're clicked in not only confuse and frustrate people
> (myself included), but they often make simple things (like topping
> windows when you WANT to) difficult.
> [...GEM GUI...]
> Adding good features is one thing, but let's not go crazy with this.
> Demanding that people start going against the basic design of the
> operating system is not reasonable... at least not until these features
> become part of the real OS.
Well said! I find myself at times losing sight of what the purpose of this list
is and find the occasional restatement by "Ogal" of his original aim with the
proposal for keyboad shortcuts needful. I'm not happy about the insistence that
we all follow the established German standard, but hey, I can live with that
since the differences are minimal. Especially with a global (editable) SYS
file, which could be varied for different language groups (say all US
developers want to use ^W instead of ^U: they modify their SYS file and German
programs supporting this will show ^W, and Germans using US programs will find
^U in their menus).
The main thrust here must be to gain a broad acceptance of compliance for this
sort of global shortcut. Once the compliance is there, it does not matter that
user A wants different shortcuts from user B, the point is that _all_ compliant
programs show the _same_ shortcuts consistently on _any_ user's system,
referring to that user's SYS-file. I don't really _care_ if the default SYS is
the German one or not, as long as programs handle this in a consistant manner
and let _me_ redefine anything which collides or is awkward for _me_ on _my_
system.
> From Annius.Groenink@cwi.nl (Annius Groenink)
> -----
>
> CONJECTURE. The only Control + ASCII key combinations and Control
> + shift + ASCII key combinations which are the same on all
> international keyboards are letters.
Slight reconjecture: ... which are the same [character] are English (ASCII-7)
A-Z (That keyboard position might vary for some letters is not a problem here,
e.g. A, Z, Y, Q).
It must be remembered for shortcut use that shifted number and shifted symbol
keys have different assignments on different language keyboards.
> From Mark.Baker@mettav.exnet.com (Mark Baker)
> > Where do you get the UP arrow from without pressing SHIFT? I
> > thought it was SHIFT-=.
> It's shift-6 on English and I guess American keyboards. The unshifted
> chars on a normal UK keyboard are \,./;'#[]-=` The only ones on both
> these lists are ',.- which is fairly restrictive.
Exactly. So they should be avoided.
[...]
> From g02o@zfn.uni-bremen.de (Mark-Oliver Wolter)
> >If you put your dialog in a window, the "closer" should be the same as
> >CANCEL or ABORT. The "mover" should allow moving the dialog. [...]
> ...or qed, which is a very good example. Closing the window doesn't delete
> anything, and when you double-click the icon of that text, you'll be at > the
same cursor position as when closing.
But this is "minimize" or "iconify" window, not "close". Not same.
> BTW, qed uses the block cursor concept... but with the well working UNDO >
key, you'll not lose anything.
BTW, this is wishful thinking! You'll recover with UNDO _only_ if you realize
immediately that something was marked and subsequently deleted. I have had the
following happen in Windows big-block handling: accidental select block (click)
or selected block scrolled off-screen and forgotten, type something looking at
manuscript, and only much later realize that what I had typed had come at the
wrong position, deleting a chunk of earlier text. (Ever wonder at the ubiquious
occurance of mangled
paragraphs in newspaper columns?)
Anyway, I agree with a previous poster saying that choice of block handling
should be left to the application (since GEM doesn't impose global big-block in
system dialogs), even though I originally brought up block handling in a
question whether we needed to consider big/small blocks with regards to how
certain shortcuts were chosen.
(illegible signature) Bo Leuf
- Email: bo.leuf@daggskim.ct.se