On 13 Jun, 2014, at 13:12, Schneider <[email protected]> wrote:

> Christiaan:
> 
>> It is not an option. First of all, the PDF display, including the
>> scroll view, is implemented by Apple, not by us.
> 
> But it exists in Skim under continuous mode and the jump version exists
> with Adobe.
> 
>> Second, it is not a
>> good idea, as it goes against the general way scroll views work, and
>> consistency is a very bug deal in Mac OSX.
> 
> Since Apple dropped Expose and Spaces (well designed functions) and
> replaced them with the impossible to use Mission Control, I don't have
> much respect for Apple design capabilities anymore.  (Steve Jobs is
> gone and they don't know what they are doing anymore.)  The function
> exists in Adobe, it would be highly useful in Skim.
> 
> Compare:  currently if I have a 200 page document, to get to the end I
> have to enter a number in the little box.  That's very awkward.

If you hit alt-cmd-g you can go to any page without lifting your hands from the 
keyboard. That is the very opposite of awkward.

>  The
> alternatives are worse - page down for a minute or two or switch to
> continuous mode and then back again.  A sliding bar with discrete
> intervals at page boundaries solves this simply and elegantly.

I must confess I don’t fully understand the problem. To the left of the page 
down button on a normal keyboard is the end button, which will take you to the 
end of a document. Hitting fn and the right arrow achieves the same result. 
Furthermore, you can enable the thumbnails content pane for Skim via the 
menubar (View-Thumbnails). Scrolling through a 211 pages document takes me less 
than five seconds that way. I also didn’t have any trouble stopping the 
scrolling for any arbitary page (I timed myself seeing how long it would take 
me to get to random pre-selected pages that way)

Jan Jakob


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