Hi, Let me explain why this feature can be very useful. Suppose that you are viewing some pdf at page A, but there is a link from page A to page B and you want to view both pages. If evince has split view, then users can click the split view bar, which leads to two views of A, then the users can jump to page B by clicking the link. Now, the users finishes reading B, then he can unsplit the view and continue to read A. Users don't have to layout views. (This feature is available in acrobat, I feel it very useful.)
If it is as Juanjo suggested, then I have to find the same pdf file, open it a second time, scroll it to A from the initial page and jump to B, then layout the two evince windows (but I may have to resize the original windows and the view for A may have changed and I have to scroll it to make sure I see the same part of page A. Note on Mac OS X, I don't think there is an easy way to layout two evince windows side-by-side easily). After I finished reading B, I close the window for B. Now, I need to maximize the window for A to make sure I have the maximum viewport for A. Now you can see that I wasted a lot more time in scrolling views and resizing windows in the second approach. What is worse is that references are very common in academic articles. Doing this kind of scrolling and resizing really disrupt thoughts hence is very counterproductive. I think that this use case justifies the importance of this feature. On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 5:14 AM, Juanjo Marín <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Peng ! > > It is quite easy to put two Evince windows side by side with GNOME > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ip9Bgjaspjs > > > IMHO, splitting in Evince only adds complexity to the code and I think it > is better to use our scarce resources in other features. -- Regards, Peng _______________________________________________ evince-list mailing list [email protected] https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evince-list
