Rodrigo Moya wrote: >On Thu, 2006-10-26 at 15:41 +0300, Mart Raudsepp wrote: > > >>On Thu, 2006-10-26 at 10:39 +0200, Xavier Bestel wrote: >> >> >>>On Thu, 2006-10-26 at 10:26 +0200, Rodrigo Moya wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>>>yay, so it's probably better to have convenience functions on >>>>GtkApplication, like: >>>> >>>>gtk_application_create_dialog >>>>gtk_application_create_main_window >>>> >>>> >>>The problem I see with this approach is that the 'typical app window' >>>concept is evolving (we saw the introduction of toolbars, statusbars, >>>maybe we will need a drag-n-drop-to-save-document icon or macosx-like- >>>side-menus or whatever the next fad is as a standard feature). >>> >>> >>Indeed it can evolve quite a bit. >> >>Considering what a typical dialog/toplevel usually contains, it could be >>beneficial if this GtkAppWindow would also be capable of hiding some of >>the layout information from the programmer - so that it could become >>more themeable in that area, instead of requiring packing all this into >>an application programmer selected GtkContainer (usually a GtkVBox). For >>example see many of the blue sky ideas on gnome-look[1] and other >>places[2]. >> >>a set_gadget (statusbar, menubar, etc) should give most of what's needed >>there, but I'm not sure that covers all cases. >> >> >> >yeah, usually a "main app" window has 4 areas: menubar, toolbar, status >bar and working area (which is setup by the app as needed), so why can't >we just have set_* functions for all of them? Then, if we change the >layout, like in the gnome-look mockup, we only need to change the >GtkApplication implementation to lay out things differently. > > My initial fear of the GtkApplication was that it was associated with GnomeApp and thus implied some kind of implicit widget layout - I was happily convinced that this was not the case, having a UIManager interface for dynamicly generated UIs is cool, it shows the application developer what tools he should use and what infrastructure is sane in his app (instead of copying gedit and others, as was outlined in a previous mail).
I think its completely wrong to assume that an application has a menubar, toolbar, statusbar and/or others - every application is different, many applications share these common traits but shouldnt be forced to use those layouts by the api in any way. The HIG is a great thing because its a "guidelines" - not a rulebook, since writing a UI is more a game of exceptions than it is a game of rules. For example - I'd really welcome any effort to create a default main app structure in glade for UI developers to use as a template - this would help solve consistancy problems without hardwiring application behaviour and layout through the gtk+ api (which IMO should remain a simple set of building blocks that one can do virtually anything with). Cheers, -Tristan _______________________________________________ gtk-devel-list mailing list gtk-devel-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gtk-devel-list