Recent versions of Gtk have featured dialogs using a "header bar": action 
buttons are placed in a bar at the top of the window, with the title centered in the bar. 
It's a clean look, and saves space. The file-chooser dialog, the color-chooser,  and the 
print dialog have all adopted that look.

Since Balsa uses those dialogs, most of Balsa's own dialogs have been changed to also use 
header bars, to keep a consistent look. The "Store Address" dialog, however, 
cannot be changed without some redesign: it depends on the action buttons being in a box 
at the bottom of the window.

The buttons are:
OK: save the highlighted address and close the dialog;
Save: save the highlighted address, but do not close the dialog;
Close: close without saving.
The line above them reads: "Save this address and close the dialog?", which 
explains what each button would do. With a header bar, the buttons would be at the top of 
the window, and we lose the capability of explaining their actions.

I'm thinking that we could reduce them to just "Save" and "Close" (or "Cancel"), which makes them 
self-explanatory, but requires two clicks (or keystrokes) to save the current address and close the dialog, instead of one. 
"Save" would be on the right, and "Cancel" on the left.

Opinions?

Peter

Attachment: pgpA8B9f9c4bI.pgp
Description: PGP signature

_______________________________________________
balsa-list mailing list
[email protected]
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/balsa-list

Reply via email to