While maybe 5 seconds might be a little quick, conceptually I agree that
it should not last very long.
Please consider then, in particolar on Windows OS messages are often hidden
behind the image windows.
So a 5, 10, 0r even 15 second message will likely never be seen, and user will
simply
Liam R E Quin wrote:
So I press save, and go for a coffee, and come back confident my
file was saved, knowing that I'd get huge alarm bells ringing if
the operation failed. And your elevated status message would be
as long gone as Sven's much less irritating but basically invisible
status
Hi,
On Mon, 2009-08-03 at 22:25 -0400, Liam R E Quin wrote:
So I press save, and go for a coffee, and come back confident my
file was saved, knowing that I'd get huge alarm bells ringing if
the operation failed. And your elevated status message would be
as long gone as Sven's much less
Hi,
On Mon, 2009-08-03 at 23:04 +0200, gg wrote:
I stress, the reason I knew something was wrong was that the save was
too quick , not that the message caught my eye.
10s may help but IMHO this method of notification is far too unobtrusive.
The STATUS bar should be for relaying status
On Tuesday 04 August 2009 21:12:27 Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, 2009-08-03 at 22:25 -0400, Liam R E Quin wrote:
So I press save, and go for a coffee, and come back confident my
file was saved, knowing that I'd get huge alarm bells ringing if
the operation failed. And your elevated
On 08/04/2009 08:27 PM, Sven Neumann wrote:
Well, there have been some good arguments brought up in this thread why
saving a clean image may make sense. So perhaps we should change the
default for 'trust-dirty-flag' back to 'no' and always save the image?
I was about to propose changing the
On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 2:12 PM, Sven Neumanns...@gimp.org wrote:
We are not talking about a save failure here. An image w/o changes does
not need to be saved. So there is no failure here.
I believe this has been thoroughly contradicted in this thread already.
On 08/04/2009 11:12 AM, Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, 2009-08-03 at 22:25 -0400, Liam R E Quin wrote:
So I press save, and go for a coffee, and come back confident my
file was saved, knowing that I'd get huge alarm bells ringing if
the operation failed. And your elevated status message
Hi,
On Tue, 2009-08-04 at 12:17 -0700, bgw wrote:
This thread is confusing me a bit. I have an xcf that I use to
generate png images for
a website. If I open the xcf, modify it, then save as png, and then
quit, the change to
the xcf is lost with no warning or, as far as I can see, any
Just checking to see if this is a gimp bug or whether I should look
somewhere else.
I'm using 2.6.6 on Ubuntu Ibex Linux dell 2.6.28-14-generic #47-Ubuntu
SMP Sat Jul 25 00:28:35 UTC 2009 i686 GNU/Linux
I switched from having the wacom device set up in xorg.conf to having a
configuration in
Martin Nordholts wrote:
On 08/04/2009 08:27 PM, Sven Neumann wrote:
Well, there have been some good arguments brought up in this thread why
saving a clean image may make sense. So perhaps we should change the
default for 'trust-dirty-flag' back to 'no' and always save the image?
I was about
On Mon, Aug 03, 2009 at 09:46:34PM +0200, Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
On Fri, 2009-07-31 at 15:12 +1000, Roman Joost wrote:
I could and the patch provided by that bug adds a custom
'property-changed' signal. Sven and Mitch thought, if I inherit from
XMPModel, I wouldn't really need the
On Wed, 2009-08-05 at 00:06 +0200, gg wrote:
Martin Nordholts wrote:
[...]
I think not saving has merit for large files (especially long png
compression) on condition this is clearly put to the user.
As Sven said, there are separate issues -
(1) gimp doesn't always know the user's intention.
On 08/04/2009 01:29 AM, Christopher Howard wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=164774
Hi - I was going to look into this enhancement. It was a request to make
it possible for the user to change the zero-point of the image rulers.
Martin Nordholts wrote:
There hasn't been any further discussion, but we should have one. The
first step would be to figure out a UI for the feature that helps
fulfill the product vision [1].
As left clicking and dragging with the mouse creates new freely movable
guides (left click-drag
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