On Fri, 2013-07-05 at 22:04 +0100, David Woodhouse wrote: > Focus-follows-mouse makes it worse (especially when it's a trackpad, and > a large screen, and a small application like empathy which happens to be > on the *other* side of the screen for where its bizarrely detached menu > now lives.
I don't think the app menu is well thought-out enough (footnote: it seems that the new MacOS puts a menu bar in all monitors, which sounds like a good idea). Regardless of that... I used to be a firm believer in focus-follows-mouse, and I switched to click-to-focus recently after about 18 years of FFM. About the only two things that bothered me about FFM were that muggles would get massively confused when borrowing my computer, and that the Gimp's layers dialog didn't work quite right (it shows the layers for the focused image window). Then the app menu appeared, and since Empathy and Totem pretty much forced me to use it, I switched to click-to-focus. It took me about a month to get used to CTF. I don't mind it now so much. The scrollwheel thankfully works on unfocused windows. About the only things that became clunkier are debugging GUI apps (for which I should really have been using a second computer, anyway, but focus-follows-mouse kind of made it possible), and bgo#687850 (two monitors, wrong focus when switching workspaces). Oddly enough, even before the transition period, using my wife's Mac and being forced to use click-to-focus there didn't seem uncomfortable. Expectations, or not being used to using that system as fluidly, I guess. TL;DR Switching from focus-follows-mouse to click-to-focus was painful, worth it, and I don't have a good reason to defend either these days. YMMV. Also, there are real bugs in either mode that seem to get little attention because they are in Mutter rather than in Gnome-shell. Federico _______________________________________________ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list