Jaron, I have only a couple trvial macros (that I wrote) and gDocs_2,3.1 extension which has a custom toolbar. the "ghost" buttons do not appear anywhere on the tools-customize menu, so I can't tell you what commands they are associated with. I just noticed that they are momentarily enabled when I load a document, but that little "flash" is too brief to allow me to see any of their detail. They're really mysterious, those buttons.
No doubt, disabling the "Save" button provides the kind of "feed-back" you describe, but what's the point of that? It seems to me that it's good to encourage users to save more often (even if the save is sometimes unnecessary). Penalizing the user for doing that sort of thing makes no sense at all. I am surprised you don't see the "close document" button on your Mac, but if you don't, you don't. James On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 2:41 PM, Jaron Kuppers <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi James, > > > On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 4:54 AM, James A. Schulz <[email protected] > >wrote: > > > Christoph, > > > > No, I don't see anything in the "new features" that addresses the > problems > > I > > listed. Let me try again: > > > > 1. The "ghost" icons I described in my original post can be see at: > > http://www.wiseware.com/LibreOffice/GhostIcons.jpg > > > The picture is helpful. My PC is dead at the moment but I tried to find > the > same issues with the Mac version of LibO. Unfortunately, I can't duplicate > that problem. Additionally, I can't even find those icons in the standard > toolbar icon set. Three questions: > 1) Do you have any Macros installed? > 2) Do you have custom toolbars? > 3) What commands are the buttons associated with? (Go to > toolbars-customize...) > > > > > 2. Create a new text document, type something, save it. No press the > > ALT-F(ile) key combination. Notice that the "Save" item on the File Menu > > is > > disabled. This means that if you are a user habituated to ALT-F-S, you > end > > up "stuck" in the File Menu and you have to press ESC to return to your > > document. (Yes, I know that users habituated to CTRL-S don't have this > > problem, but that's not the point.) Why penalize users by requiring this > > extra key-stroke just because they tried to save the current document > when > > it didn't need saving. Don't we want to encourage even such > > over-conscientious users to save whenever they happen to think of it. > Real > > writing is an on-again-off-again sort of thing. One spends a good deal > of > > time just staring at whatever paragraph happens to be on the screen at > the > > moment. So the phone right, and you come out of that chance and before > you > > answer the call, you press ALF-F-S just in case you hadn't thought to > save > > before you went into your trance. And when you do that (i.e. press > > ALT-F-S) > > you end up stuck in the menu (and you are annoyed). MS Word does not do > > this. WordPerfect never did it. Why must writer do it. The right thing > > is > > never to disable the "Save" item. The system can avoid wasting its time > by > > simply ignoring the unnecessary save command without "punishing" the user > > for issuing it. > > > I believe the reason LibO disables save is to provide a means of feedback > to > the user that indeed their document is saved. I agree that it is unfair > that the users that use ALT-F-S get "stuck" when they go to save since the > command is disabled when a document is saved. > > > > > 3. Open a new writer document. Notice that the window has the usual "X" > > window close button, but below that, in an otherwise empty bar that runs > > across the screen, there is another, smaller "x' that closes only the > > document. Now open a second document. In this new window, there is only > > the "X" window close button (i.e. the document close button is not where > to > > be seen). True, using the window close button in this second window > > returns > > you to the first document, but why show this inconsistent interface, i.e. > > why not make all document windows identical?. Of course, if LO would > > switch > > to (in my opinion) the vastly preferable Multiple Document Interface, > that > > redesign would likely solve this problem. > > > Once again with my PC on the fritz I cannot duplicate this issue. I > believe > I understand what you are talking about though. I agree that there should > be consistency: > 1) No documents have "close" buttons > 2) All documents have "close" buttons > > Hopefully someone with a PC can duplicate the toolbar problem but please in > the interim let me know what those buttons are. > > Cheers, > Jaron > > > > > > > > > -- > Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to > [email protected]<design%[email protected]> > List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/design/ > *** All posts to this list are publicly archived for eternity *** > > -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/www/design/ *** All posts to this list are publicly archived for eternity ***
