On Apr 20, 2007, at 17:32 , Marco Pesenti Gritti wrote: > On Fri, 2007-04-20 at 10:22 -0400, Eben Eliason wrote: >> >> Absolutely. Ideal behaviors: >> >> 1) The scrolling region directly visible beneath the mouse gets >> grab focus. >> 2) If two scrolling regions overlap, the top one should take the >> grab focus. >> 3) If a scrolling region is embedded in another (such as an iframe in >> a web page), then the innermost region should get grab focus, unless >> it reaches its min or max scroll and can no longer move, at which >> point the next region in the hierarchy gets it. >> > > Hmm I'm not convinced about this. Usually keyboard actions apply > either > globally (to the system or to the active window) or to the focused > element. I feel pretty strange, interaction wise, to have a keyboard > button depend on the position of the mouse.
It's not an actual keystroke but a modifier. Pressing the key alone does not do anything. It just enables scrolling. You'ld want the same behavior with a scrolling mouse attached. - Bert - _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.laptop.org/mailman/listinfo/devel
