Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-10 Thread Terry Brown
On Wed, 10 May 2017 08:47:00 -0700 (PDT) john lunzer wrote: > As an extension to "arrange the panes how you want and save the > layout", there could be multiple saved (and custom named) layouts and > Leo could ship with "vertical" and "horizontal" default layouts and > the

Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-10 Thread john lunzer
As an extension to "arrange the panes how you want and save the layout", there could be multiple saved (and custom named) layouts and Leo could ship with "vertical" and "horizontal" default layouts and the binding to "toggle-split-direction" could be replaced with a binding to "cycle-layouts".

Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-09 Thread Edward K. Ream
On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 2:30 PM, Terry Brown wrote: ​...​ > I wonder if we should > ​ ​ > be thinking about obsoleting these settings (and the split ratio one, > ​ ​ > too). As long as it works, and it already exists in free_layout, it > ​ ​ > seems the "arrange the panes

Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-09 Thread Terry Brown
On Tue, 9 May 2017 12:21:30 -0700 (PDT) "Edward K. Ream" wrote: > On Tuesday, May 9, 2017 at 2:09:25 PM UTC-5, Edward K. Ream wrote: > > > I have just updated #483: Remember toggle-split-direction > . I want to > repeat

Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-09 Thread Edward K. Ream
On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 2:22 PM, Terry Brown wrote: ​> ​ > Imo, the simplest and best approach is to do nothing. ​...​ ​> ​ Implementation wise this will all need revisiting for the QtDocks ​ ​ interface ​.​ All the more reason to do nothing now. In fact, I'll reject

Re: Unexected difficulties "remembering" toggle-split-direction

2017-05-09 Thread Edward K. Ream
On Tuesday, May 9, 2017 at 2:09:25 PM UTC-5, Edward K. Ream wrote: > I have just updated #483: Remember toggle-split-direction . I want to repeat the discussion here, so as to reach the widest audience. ... > Imo, the simplest and best