The C++ class that acts as a wrapper for the QSortFilterProxyModel is
called 'QSortFilterProxyModelQML', which seems fine to me. However,
the QML class is also called 'QSortFilterProxyModelQML' and that seems
a bit ugly.
So in the QML we have this:
QSortFilterProxyModelQML {
id:
Hi Richard, nice to see you there :)
On 07/04/2011 11:15, Richard Dale wrote:
The C++ class that acts as a wrapper for the QSortFilterProxyModel is
called 'QSortFilterProxyModelQML', which seems fine to me. However,
the QML class is also called 'QSortFilterProxyModelQML' and that seems
a bit
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Kévin PEIGNOT wrote on 05/04/11 14:04:
...
I still don't see why using a global menu on non-maximised windows.
Even for consistency it's useless : if the menu bar is in the panel
*just for maximised* windows, every windows will have it's menu
Hi mpt,
On Thu, Apr 7, 2011 at 10:45, Matthew Paul Thomas m...@canonical.com wrote:
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Kévin PEIGNOT wrote on 05/04/11 14:04:
...
I still don't see why using a global menu on non-maximised windows.
Even for consistency it's useless : if the
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giff gill wrote on 05/04/11 18:32:
...
But I have to say, that's interesting. Unity was initially designed
with netbook formfactor and user case in mind and later extended to
the desktop. Still the fundamental design was kept 1:1, the same
design
Hi All,
I gave a lightning talk at the Flourish Open Source Conference this past
weekend about how Gnome is using the documentation syntax Mallard for user
help in Gnome 3. The talk was recorded by Carl Karsten, hero video recorder
of PyCon and various Linux-y events. (We are lucky to have him in
There is. They fade out.
2011/4/6 Ian Santopietro isan...@gmail.com
Ah, I see that now. There isn't a default close animation though, at least
not for normal windows.
On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 07:22, Mikkel Kamstrup Erlandsen
mikkel.kamst...@canonical.com wrote:
On Wed, 2011-04-06 at
I think that proves their too fast then.
Cheers,
James Gifford
http://jamesrgifford.com
On Apr 7, 2011, at 18:08, Carl Simpson cwd.simp...@gmail.com wrote:
There is. They fade out.
2011/4/6 Ian Santopietro isan...@gmail.com
Ah, I see that now. There isn't a default close animation
I can only agree.
Some of the animations in the recent GNOME 3.0 release are spectacular,
particularly those of their various panel menus. That sort of speed is more
like it.
___
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ayatana
Post to :
The issue is that you have to strike the happy middle ground where its fast
enough to be usable, but slow enough to be noticeable.
Cheers,
James Gifford
http://jamesrgifford.com
On Apr 7, 2011, at 18:28, Carl Simpson cwd.simp...@gmail.com wrote:
I can only agree.
Some of the animations
(for faster access: window switching starts about 12:30 and seems to use Alt +
Tab)
Seems to be a Alt + Tab Variation of the how to distinguish/select windows by
their smaller representation without windowtitles bug:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/unity/+bug/734253
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Michael Terry has proposed merging
lp:~mterry/indicator-datetime/switch-tz-from-menu into lp:indicator-datetime.
Requested reviews:
Indicator Applet Developers (indicator-applet-developers)
For more details, see:
The proposal to merge lp:~mterry/indicator-datetime/switch-tz-from-menu into
lp:indicator-datetime has been updated.
Status: Needs review = Merged
For more details, see:
https://code.launchpad.net/~mterry/indicator-datetime/switch-tz-from-menu/+merge/56791
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