(branched from the component table viewer thread)

In my opinion, a schematic with multiple sheets is not like a text editor
with multiple documents.  The schematic editor is working on a single
project, and it should be way more common to apply operations (that might
want to be undone) to all schematic sheets, than it is to apply operations
across all files you happen to have open in a text editor (other than "find
in files", of course).

In my experience, other EDA tools work around the "undoing global changes"
issue that JP mentioned in the same way that text editors do when you
replace in multiple files -- they warn the user that the change cannot be
undone, and sometimes leave the files/sheets in an "unsaved" state so there
is actually a way to undo it for certain files (i.e. by closing them
without saving)

-Jon

On Tue, Apr 18, 2017 at 7:46 AM, Nox <noxfiregal...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I agree with you about the multi file editor behaviour. There it is
> natural that the undo/redo works per file. But is this behaviour also
> reasonable for a schematic? I just checked the behaviour of visual studio.
> There global replacement will be reverted if the stack is in sync. Else
> only the active document is affected. So I guess you are right. We have to
> first agree which way redo/undo should work. Personally I would perfere to
> move to a "mixed" or global redo/undo.
>
> What do you think: how hard will it be to implement a "container"
> undo/redo item which batchs multiple changes (e.g. for component changes,
> annotation, etc) and has an ID to check with all open sheets if the top
> most change matches. Of course it is questionable if a "silent" partial
> undo/redo is the best way to handle desynced stacks. Or might a global
> redo/undo will be easier to maintain? Or should global operations simply
> always "break" the local undo/redo stacks (so our "state of the
> art"-handling)?
>
> P.S: should we branch the discussion here maybe?
>
>
>
> Am 18.04.2017 um 09:12 schrieb jp charras:
>
>> Le 17/04/2017 à 22:51, Nox a écrit :
>>
>>> I know that I already suggested that in another context but what about
>>> changing the undo/redo
>>> semantic to the more common approach to maintain an global undo/redo
>>> stack and switch the view
>>> accordingly? I know that the "per screen" is the established way in
>>> kicad and that it is very
>>> dangerous to break existing workflows. But the undo/redo behaviour is
>>> currently hardly
>>> "understandable" for beginners. E.g. why does the undo not follow my
>>> actions but stays on one view?
>>> Why does exporting the netlist break the undo? Why can automatic
>>> annotation not be reverted? The
>>> undo list wiped on a frequently basis that personally i hardly trust
>>> into the undo functionality at
>>> all.
>>>
>>> Would it be an option to introduce a "test version" of a global
>>> undo/redo to get some feedback from
>>> the crowed which way would be preferred?
>>>
>>> For me, the problem is not to have a global or per screen undo/redo
>> list, but what an user is
>> expecting when undoing/redoing a change.
>>
>> We *always* expect to undo the last change.
>> Any undo/redo system has this behavior.
>>
>> Now consider an editor (the schematic editor with 3 sheets for instance,
>> but this is also the case
>> of text editors with 3 files opened and currently edited).
>>
>> 1 - in sheet1 you call a tool (component table editor, automatic
>> annotation) which modify all sheets.
>>
>> 2 - after  that you enter sheet2 and make new changes then sheet3 and
>> also make new changes.
>>
>> 3 - back to sheet1 and try to undelete the latest change in this sheet:
>> this is the global change
>> (i.e. annotation). This is possible in sheet1.
>> But how can you undo this annotation in others sheets: this is not the
>> latest change and cannot be
>> undone safely (you can have deleted/replaced/edited a symbol in other
>> sheets, or deleted a sheet):
>> what is the actual meaning of "undo the annotation" in other sheets).
>>
>> And ultimately:
>> What a undo (and therefore redo) command must undo:
>> 1 - the latest change in the full schematic (global undo/redo)
>>   or
>> 2 - the latest change in the currently edited (active) sheet (local
>> undo/redo)
>>
>> This is a choice, and the answer is for me not trivial.
>>
>> It could be worth to know what is the option for global/local changes in
>> a schematic hierarchy in
>> other schematic editors.
>>
>> Multi-file text editors can undo the latest change only in the active
>> file, not in all opened files.
>>
>>
>
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