On Tue, Mar 13, 2012 at 05:39, todd rme <toddrme2...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I think there are two issues: identifying the bookmark, and deleting it. > Issue for whom? The user?
> 1. When you put your mouse over the bookmark, the okular window > temporarily jumps to the location of the bookmark. When your mouse > moves off, it returns to its previous location. Would be the most > clear, but probably also has the largest performance penalty. I really liked the idea but I don't think it fits this task. > 4. Always list the bookmarks in order of their position in the > document, so bookmarks in a given page will be listed (for LTR text > documents) top to bottom then left to right. This is not mutually > exclusive with the others. I agree on that bookmark order and already reimplemented the next and previous bookmark action using this approach. > > In order to remove bookmarks, I would say there are two approaches > (not mutually exclusive): > > 2. Have the "remove bookmark" option visible after clicking on a > bookmark. So you click on a bookmark in the menu or panel, it takes > you to that bookmark, and you have the option to remove the bookmark > as long as you don't move your current view (or it disappears after a > fixed amount of time). I just tested here with bookmarks on different levels of zoom and it worked pretty well. When you click on a bookmark, you'll be at the right position, so the remove bookmark option could be shown on menubar (or popup menu). This could be a way to prevent the user from adding duplicate bookmarks on the same position. > > > == Case 2 - Ctrl+B shortcut == > > ... > > > I don't see much alternative here: ctrl-b always adds a shortcut. Yeah, but i'm worried that will piss off users who are used to Ctrl+B to remove a bookmark. > > == Case 3 - Save only one bookmark per page == > > > > The bookmark will remember the position on the page but will still allow > > only one bookmark per page. That will not change the behavior of okular but > > IMHO doesn't make much sense. > > This is no good, especially for documents with long or very dense > pages. I think it defeats the purpose of remembering you location on > the page. I agree. PS: I also created a new thread[1] on kde forum asking this to the users but I nobody replied yet :( [1] http://forum.kde.org/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=100729 -- Mailson Lira _______________________________________________ Okular-devel mailing list Okular-devel@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/okular-devel