I posted this on the wiki, but I thought I'd mention it here. I think the journal should track inter-file dependencies.
Many files we create depend on other files. The most common example is probably documents that contain pictures. In some document formats, these pictures are copied into the document, and in others they are referenced by location. To avoid wasting storage space, we would like to insert pictures by reference (like in .html or .dvi) rather than include them (like in a .pdf). There are two major problems with inter-file dependencies: deletion and transmission. Without dependency awareness, it is easy to accidentally delete a file (such as a picture) on which another file depends. This is true whether the deletion is automated or requested by the user. Without dependency awareness, it is easy to transmit a document that the recipient cannot use. Anyone who has been e-mailed an html file without the embedded pictures has experienced this. To avoid breaking dependencies, the metadata for each file should note the files on which it depends. A dependency should never be suggested for deletion unless all files that depend on it will also be deleted, and users should be warned if they explicitly attempt to delete a dependency of another file. Also, when a student sends an item to another student (or to a teacher), all of its dependencies should be sent with it automatically. This scenario does not apply only to text with embedded pictures. Other examples might include a vector graphic with an embedded photograph, or a video editing project that strings together a number of source clips. I just thought I'd throw that out before all the APIs get finalized. --Ben _______________________________________________ Sugar mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.laptop.org/mailman/listinfo/sugar
