On 04 Oct 2014, at 09:20, Tudor Girba <[email protected]> wrote: > If I understand correctly, you would want a way to close panes. Correct?
Yes, I want to be able to go from the right window back to the left window: Sven > Doru > > On Sat, Oct 4, 2014 at 9:07 AM, Esteban Lorenzano <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On 04 Oct 2014, at 09:06, Sven Van Caekenberghe <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > On 04 Oct 2014, at 07:45, Tudor Girba <[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> From the feedback so far, I could not the following issues: > >> > >> - menus for copy/paste/cut (which I still wonder why they need to exist > >> for a developer, but we will add them) > >> - possibility of save/open > >> - Cmd+g instead of Cmd+o (already fixed) > >> - position of the cursor is sometimes messed up > >> - possibility to change the title of the Playground > >> - possibility to group the windows (this will likely not be fixed in the > >> same way) > >> (did I miss any?) > >> - icons and text background are not ready for the dark theme > >> > >> Did I miss anything? Could the people that want to see any of these issues > >> done open tickets for them? > > > > I know you can resize with the widget at the bottom, but I would like an > > option to go back to the original playground view, without one inspector > > open at the right. This is the third time I ask, and I noticed there were > > others asking it as well. It could be something hidden like shift/option > > click on the first circle, but a simple X on the column would be better. > > > > Why ? Because a playground/workspace is used as a notebook to remember > > things, I want it to be 'clean'. The same is true for an inspector. > > Sometimes it is my reference to say a server that remains open a long time. > > I want it to be clean and as small as possible. > > > > Please, please, please ;-) > > +1 > > > > >> Cheers, > >> Doru > >> > >> -- > >> www.tudorgirba.com > >> > >> "Every thing has its own flow" > > > > > > > > > > -- > www.tudorgirba.com > > "Every thing has its own flow"
