Dov Feldstern wrote:
Dov Feldstern wrote:
Miki Dovrat wrote:
I was going to say, let the cursor always stay where it is, and the
user will learn to press END (end of line) to move it to continue
typing. It is logical, (not in the "logical" direction sense),
expected and easily adapted to by t
Dov Feldstern wrote:
Dov Feldstern wrote:
Miki Dovrat wrote:
I was going to say, let the cursor always stay where it is, and the
user will learn to press END (end of line) to move it to continue
typing. It is logical, (not in the "logical" direction sense),
expected and easily adapted to by t
Dov Feldstern wrote:
Miki Dovrat wrote:
I was going to say, let the cursor always stay where it is, and the
user will learn to press END (end of line) to move it to continue
typing. It is logical, (not in the "logical" direction sense),
expected and easily adapted to by the user, as there are
Miki Dovrat wrote:
I was going to say, let the cursor always stay where it is, and the user
will learn to press END (end of line) to move it to continue typing. It is
logical, (not in the "logical" direction sense), expected and easily adapted
to by the user, as there are no surprises there.
I was going to say, let the cursor always stay where it is, and the user
will learn to press END (end of line) to move it to continue typing. It is
logical, (not in the "logical" direction sense), expected and easily adapted
to by the user, as there are no surprises there.
Abdel's idea is even
Dov Feldstern wrote:
, unless the user explicitly changes it with F12 (\language hebrew),
the cursor will NOT MOVE, and the text will be added where it was,
whether it was English or Hebrew.
Again, this doesn't make sense when typing. It means after every
insertion of an english word, you'll
Separating this into different issues, it's getting long...
Miki Dovrat wrote:
3. If I have a Hebrew paragraph with an English word like
? English ? ?
and I type continuously, the spaces are Hebrew. Now if I try to
continue the Hebrew to the right of the English word, but after the