https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=133836
--- Comment #25 from ady <[email protected]> --- (In reply to Sahil Gautam from comment #24) > We can have these both together. You cannot have the current behavior and a different behavior simultaneously. The details (such as what the [ENTER] key does, or where exactly the default focus is located when opening the autofilter) are key factors, especially for experienced users. The only way to provide such dual behavior would be to offer some kind of UX artifact for users to choose, or alternatively the effect of the [ENTER] key on the search box should have a specific (but clear) effect. There are different advantages in each of the behaviors (current vs. suggested), depending on the scenario / usage. As examples of the potential conflict, see comments 14, 15, 16. So, let's see if I got this correctly: when typing within the search box, if [ENTER] is pressed then the current (auto-selection) behavior is used; but if [ENTER] is not pressed then the selection of check boxes would be manual (and not automatically overridden by changing the content of the search box)? What would happen with the current behavior during the typing-in? Currently, the resulting items are auto-selected (or deselected) according to the evolution of the content of the search box, so the resulting list is modified while typing; it is not clear to me what would happen during the typing-in in the suggested "best of both worlds" behavior. I am just trying to make the desired result clear before introducing "surprising" changes. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the assignee for the bug.
