Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> posted [EMAIL PROTECTED], excerpted below, on Thu, 17 Jul 2008 14:46:49 +1000:
> (1) be easier to turn on/off (say, by clicking on the quoted text block, > but beware of interfering with selecting text); Some might say it's too easy now... thus the problem! =8^) Honestly, what can be easier than hitting "q"? It's so easy folks do it accidentally, which as I said is the problem. A two-key sequence, alt-q (ctrl-q being commonly used for quit, I've remapped my accels here so can't say for sure if pan sets it up that way by default without checking the accels.txt file) or something, would probably be better. Ideally, however, there'd be some sort of indicator, maybe a toolbar button or the like, that depressed when it was on. Burying the action multi-levels deep in the menu does help keep too many things from appearing on each menu (preventing that according to the experts bad thing), but makes it obscure enough it's hard to find, particularly when you just hit q accidentally, and don't know what you did or how to undo it. As already suggested, if one could select that action (and see the check as well, when toggled on) from the body pane context menu, it'd make it MUCH better. That combined with making it a two-key sequence would pretty much solve the problem. But I do like a couple of your "smarter" ideas as well. If it muted all but a single line of the first level quotes (perhaps changing its quote indicator to >quoted> or some such, helping out the folks who can't see and use screen readers, as was the case with one guy that I know used it, otherwise he had trouble distinguishing quote from original text), that's the , that would be even more useful. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users
