This is an interesting example.  Let's get back a few seconds on the
first mail of this thread.  The topic was about how to integrate the
nested concept into LT.  If I paraphrase what I understand: how to
display the complete path to a document in a LT (list of all spaces from
ROOT to the document).  But in this example (LT of extensions), the path
is not an interesting information.  I don't really care where this page
is stored into the wiki (and I guess, you don't too, right?).  What's
important is the name of the extension, the category and a few other
information.

So maybe the real question is: do we care about displaying "path" of a
document in a LT? (and not, do we care to keep LT like I first said).
It's still a bit fuzzy in my head but this is how I think about that at
the moment:  path is a technical information (therefore, useless for the
end-user), but title of the page, category, author, etc. are meaningful
information to the end-user.  Does it make any sense to you?

Trying to imagine some use cases where this path is useful to the
end-user (and not just technical), I got some (see below) but as you'll
see, I'm not sure it should be the way to implement them:

1) Using Task Manager Application with Project Management Application,
you could store all tasks of a project into a subspace (therefore the
name of the subspace could be the name of the project
1.problem) Title of the project is probably already a field into the
Project Management AWM and what you really want in the LT is this title,
not the name of the sub-space (sub-space is only a technical solution to
store tasks without colliding between projects)

2) With Blog Application, you store articles in a hierarchy of
year/month/day.
2.problem) Indeed, the date is useful information but here again, I
guess that you can already get the date from the document itself and
therefore, it's only a technical solution for storage which is not very
useful to the end-user.

Can you think about a real use case where you need this path?  (I guess
my brain is already to biased on the topic so help me!!!).

On 02/07/2015 14:08, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> 
> On 2 Jul 2015 at 13:49:01, Jean SIMARD
> ([email protected](mailto:[email protected])) wrote:
> 
>> As an end-user, I mainly used LT to *find* elements (usually a document)
>> and therefore, as a developer, I always used LT to provide a tool for
>> end-users to access elements. In order for them to find these elements,
>> either you display the data and then the end-user try to find what he's
>> looking for (the way LT works today) or you provide a search engine
>> (these filters we talked about).
> 
> So for example how would you imagine http://extensions.xwiki.org ?
> 
> Right now it has a LT that can be used both for navigating to extensions
> and for searching. If you need searching in the content then you use the
> search page.
> 
> I find that quite convenient.
> 
> Thanks
> -Vincent
> 
>> What do you think? LT is more a *find* tool or a *display* tool?
>>
>> On 02/07/2015 11:41, [email protected] wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> > On 2 Jul 2015 at 11:37:49, Jean SIMARD
>> > ([email protected](mailto:[email protected])) wrote:
>> >
>> >> Filters seems a good idea.
>> >>
>> >> For example, I'm pretty sure I've almost never used this livetable
>> >> without typing something into the search fields of one of the columns.
>> >> It means that first I'm filtering, and then I'm browsing. Therefore,
>> >> filtering the tree view first and then browse as a tree would be pretty
>> >> in line with this workflow. It indeed means that you don't display data
>> >> (author and date mainly) but you filter on them.
>> >
>> > But the main point of LT in general is to display these data! :)
>> >
>> > Ok maybe you were talking about a tree *only* for this page, while I’m
>> > talking about LT in general for all use cases.
>> >
>> > If you don’t display them you loose the rationale and you loose the
>> > ability to decide on what to filter too…
>> >
>> >> But of course, I'm aware that the work on trees may be more complex,
>> >> more difficult to do. So livetable could be considered as a viable
>> >> temporary solution (let's choose one of the solution that doesn't imply
>> >> a lot of work in this case ^^).
>> >
>> > I don’t see it as temporary, at least not till someone proposes
>> > something better :)
>> >
>> > Thanks
>> > -Vincent
>> >
>> >> On 02/07/2015 11:17, [email protected] wrote:
>> >> >
>> >> > On 2 Jul 2015 at 11:06:42, Jean SIMARD
>> >> > ([email protected](mailto:[email protected])) wrote:
>> >> >
>> >> >> Nice work.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> However, something stroke me when reading that, why do we still want
>> >> >> livetable with nested? The tree seems the best way to represent
>> >> >> hierarchical structure of documents (as you say in sol4) so I'm not
>> > sure
>> >> >> to understand the real reason to try to keep a livetable and not
>> >> >> completely drop it and focus on tree view. OK, that is my opinion.
>> >> >
>> >> > That’s an interesting idea but how do you present data (the other
>> >> > columns) in a tree view, with filters?
>> >> >
>> >> > Thanks
>> >> > -Vincent
>> >> >
>> >> >> Now, to talk about your proposition, I guess sol2 or sol3 are
> fine (I
>> >> >> would go more for sol3).
>> >> >>
>> >> >> For another solution, maybe you could mixin sol3 with a bit of sol1.
>> >> >> Let me explain. Use Sol3 but instead of displaying only parent,
> display
>> >> >> the minify breadcrumb. And fall back to "only parent" on mobile
> with a
>> >> >> small icon next to it to display the complete path in a popup or
>> >> >> something similar (or use this icon on every device and forget about
>> >> >> minify breadcrumb). Don't know if it makes sense.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Hope this helps.
>> >> >>
>> >> >>
>> >> >> On 02/07/2015 00:04, Ecaterina Moraru (Valica) wrote:
>> >> >> > Hi,
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > I've added some ideas on how to display 'Space' column in the
>> >> > AllDocs page:
>> >> >> > http://design.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Proposal/NestedLivetable
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > Let me know what you think and if there are other ideas.
>> >> >> >
>> >> >> > Thanks,
>> >> >> > Caty
>>
>> --
>> Jean Simard
>> [email protected]
>> Research engineer at XWiki SAS
>> http://www.xwiki.com
>> Committer on the XWiki.org project
>> http://www.xwiki.org
>> _______________________________________________
>> devs mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> http://lists.xwiki.org/mailman/listinfo/devs

-- 
Jean Simard
[email protected]
Research engineer at XWiki SAS
http://www.xwiki.com
Committer on the XWiki.org project
http://www.xwiki.org
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