Peter Alcibiades wrote:
OK, this is how to reproduce it.

Fire up Rev, start a new stack, put a button on it.

Now open the script editor, the property inspector, the dictionary.

Send the dictionary to desktop A, the property inspector to desktop B.

Now use either the dictionary, property inspector or the editor.  What
should happen is that all the windows reassemble themselves on just one
desktop, one over the other.

If you do the same thing in Open Office, you'll find that the help stays
open, stays in the same desktop, and you can move to and fro.  I no longer
write big complicated spreadsheets, thank heaven, but if you ever do, this
is invaluable.  You can have the full help application on one desktop and
what you're working on, on another, and so all the syntax of all those
functions is instantly available.

What happens with Rev is that the functionality to move windows around is
there and working fine, what goes wrong is the next step, the ability to use
those windows where they are, and have them stay put.

But if  you've found a way, or a configuration, which allows this, that
would be truly wonderful!

Yes, I was able to both reproduce it and found a limited way to get success - this is from my post at <http://mail.runrev.com/pipermail/use-revolution/2010-July/143074.html>:

   > How exactly has Rev implemented the IDE so that you can't
   > put the property inspector on one desktop and the editor
   > on another?

   That one I think is an engine issue and not governed by the
   IDE stacks per se.

   I verified this hunch using (you guessed it) MC:  moving a
   window to another desktop seems to move it okay at first, but
   going to that desktop puts the window back among the others.

   Interestingly, I find that if I move the main IDE toolbar in
   Rev or MC to another desktop, then all windows go to that desktop.

   I'm not sure exactly what the rule is, but it would seem that
   the toolbar governs which desktop is in use.

   I just ran another test and found something VERY interesting:
   if you close MC's toolbar you can move windows independently
   across different desktops!  Success!

   So now one of us needs to try to pin down exactly what the
   difference is between the working and non-working states here:
   is it the order in which windows are opened?  Their mode?

   If you have time to make a standalone to experiment with this
   the results will likely be invaluable for fixing it.

   I generally keep all my Rev windows in one desktop, so this
   isn't a big issue for me, but if you have time to help diagnose
   this the success I found with MC's toolbar closed suggests we
   might be able to find a relatively simple fix for this.


--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World
 Rev training and consulting: http://www.fourthworld.com
 Webzine for Rev developers: http://www.revjournal.com
 revJournal blog: http://revjournal.com/blog.irv
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