Hi all! I'd like to comment the "button up/down" idea ... maybe the questions are already solved somehow, but just to be sure ...
Am Mittwoch, den 22.12.2010, 11:22 -0500 schrieb Kohei Yoshida: > My preferred approach is to create two buttons to move the insertion > position up or down, instead of relying on the user clicking on the > sheet name in the list. To me 1) that makes more sense, and 2) is > easier to implement than handling mouse click events on the list > control. Here we face the "ease of use" vs. "efficiency" issue ... the proposed approach might fall short for the power users. Ease of use: If a document has a limited number of sheets, and the user is rather "mouse-driven", then clicking three times or so is okay. As we said before, the result is directly visible and, thus, an improvement ... Efficiency: Some users (more advanced users) that work in large tables might simply prefer to scroll down via the mouse-wheel, and to directly click on the target position. Concerning the latter, if we want to have something like that (and there will be requests to mimic the today's behavior), we require space consuming "placeholder" lines between the "real" sheets. This somehow "disturbs" the known sheet mapping ... and even for our "ease of use" proposal, the users have to re-think the mapping (horizontal vs. vertical). Furthermore, let's assume that a less experienced user misses the current dialog design and moves a sheet to the wrong position. Then both the actions move/copy are non-destructive (looking at the data that is kept after all). So correcting this issues might a smaller problem - in comparison to what we can gain for power users. Finally, the current design is not that bad ... if we want to go for a design that suits the non-experts, then we also have to keep in mind the power users. Does that make sense to you? I'll try to think a bit more about this issue ... By the way, if buttons get added, please consider to add them at the right hand side (if possible, I'll double-check this with other specs). And, they should be in close relationship - to make sure that the required mouse movement is minimized, e.g. if the user wants to correct the usual "one click too far" issue. Cheers, Christoph _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice