I'm not sure if it was added deliberately, it may have come along as part of 
the "click board to start playing at the start" type changes (which are fine).

It probably needs a bit more thinking about, especially that if  the warning is 
turned off it stops without asking.  Maybe it should be the case that if an 
animation is going on a click on the board stops the animation without a prompt 
and if the computer is thinking the message box comes up?  This way a user can 
skip an animation if they want and also get the message if they just aren't 
sure what is happening (thinking in tutor mode for example).  The stop button 
is fine, but users will just click things, hour glass or not and some response 
is helpful I think.

Jon


To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bug-gnubg] Another gui issue
From: [email protected]
Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2009 17:06:22 +0200



Jonathan Kinsey <[email protected]> wrote
on 17/07/2009 16:47:08:





> Max, I'm not sure how you can accidentally click on the board often
(when the

> computer is thinking)?

> 

> In general a user might not be sure what is happening and clicking


> the board and

> nothing happening isn't the best answer. Maybe the message could be


> improved to

> something like, "The computer is thinking, interrupt the current
process?".

> 

> Jon



I would say that most of the time is when gnubg is
moving (chequers are

moving) and I click too early. Not a big deal but
since interrupting

could lead to strange situations (you have to force
gnubg to play his

roll) it looks kinda messy for a non-expert user.



I wouldn't expect gnubg to react while he's thinking/moving,
except

to the stop button. The spinning hourglass indicates
gnubg is thinking

(btw, there's no hourglass while chequers are being
moved around by gnubg),

even a naive user knows gnubg is working.



My point is only that, as it is today, it is way too
easy to stop gnubg

compared to the number of cases where yuo really need
to do it (close to

never ?). Stop button is fine: it's small and almost
hidden. If you need

to stop gnubg, you're smart enough to loko around
for the button.



I have no idea when this feature came in, but I'm
positive that it

wasn't there in the past.



MaX.




_________________________________________________________________
Get the best of MSN on your mobile
http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/147991039/direct/01/
_______________________________________________
Bug-gnubg mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-gnubg

Reply via email to