The Raw view is a tree :)

Doru

On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 10:44 PM, Ben Coman <[email protected]> wrote:

> Sven Van Caekenberghe wrote:
>
>> On 23 Dec 2014, at 19:13, Tudor Girba <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> What does a basic inspector mean for you? It's not a rhetorical
>>> question. I am actually interested in what you miss.
>>>
>>
>> What took you so long, Doru ? Haha ;-)
>>
>> Seriously, I think that the 'Raw' tab of GT-Inspector actually covers the
>> key old inspector *and* inspector behaviour quite well. I guess that was/is
>> also the design goal.
>>
>> The rest is mostly a reaction to something new and unfamiliar. GT takes
>> some getting used  to.
>>
>> But we need concrete use cases that give people trouble to be able to
>> improve.
>>
>
> I miss the Tree View - being able to drill down in a _compact_ way. Could
> that be a tab of its own?  I actually think this "might" have great
> potential - being able to navigate in both a vertical and horizontal
> direction - allowing you to skip some levels between opening a new pane
> horizontally.
>
> cheers -ben
>
>
>
>>  Doru
>>>
>>> On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 6:06 PM, Clément Bera <[email protected]>
>>> wrote:
>>> Yes.
>>>
>>> World Menu >> Settings >> Glamourous toolkit
>>> then you can uncheck GTInspector and GTPlayground.
>>>
>>> I also need to do that very often as GTInspector does not have a basic
>>> inspector.
>>>
>>> 2014-12-23 11:50 GMT+01:00 Norbert Hartl <[email protected]>:
>>> Is there a way to get the old tools via shortcut?
>>>
>>> I started something new with pharo 4.0 today. I discovered a bug in
>>> Nautilus where every rename or deletion of a method raises a debugger. I
>>> tried finding the bug but struggled because to me the new inspector is
>>> really confusing. If I "just" want to unfold a few levels of references to
>>> get a glimpse of the structure the new tool prevents me from doing that.
>>> There is just to much information in this window and too much happening to
>>> me.
>>> To me it looks like a power tool you need to get used to. So it is
>>> probably not the best tool for simple tasks and people new to this
>>> environment might be overwhelmed. At least I would like to be able to use
>>> the old tools.
>>>
>>> Norbert
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> www.tudorgirba.com
>>>
>>> "Every thing has its own flow"
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>


-- 
www.tudorgirba.com

"Every thing has its own flow"

Reply via email to