RE: User interface suggestions
- From: "Tom Musgrove" <TomM pentstar com>
- To: "Calum Benson" <calum benson ireland sun com>, <gnome-gui-list gnome org>
- Subject: RE: User interface suggestions
- Date: Mon, 13 Nov 2000 08:52:04 -0600
Perhaps we could have a floating menu/toolbar that has a list of the
frequently used items, and perhaps another for recently used? This would
generate greater speed savings than the previous suggestions. Another
possibility, is right clicking would have a submenu for frequently used
items. Thus one wouldn't even have to move the mouse to utilize them...
Tom M.
TomM pentstar com
-----Original Message-----
From: gnome-gui-list-admin gnome org
[mailto:gnome-gui-list-admin gnome org]On Behalf Of Calum Benson
Sent: Monday, November 13, 2000 7:45 AM
To: gnome-gui-list gnome org
Subject: Re: User interface suggestions
"Blad, John Erling" wrote:
> It also don't solve the real problem because you *know* where the
> item is when you use it often. If you could generate a hint where
> a seldom used feature is located ..
It's an interesting idea that could work in some cases, but apart from
John's valid points, there are other potential problems with trying to
generalise the idea too-- for example, what do you do with submenus?
Should they have their own individual "most-recently/frequently-used"
lists? Or should they share the same list as their parent menu?
Sub-menus (or even top level menus) with only a few items would be a
problem too-- you could conceivably end up with more items bold than
not-bold, which would have completely the opposite effect from the one
required: the non-bold items would stand out more. Then there's
right-button menus-- what could you sensibly do with those? Show the
most recently/frequently used menu items in that context, or in all
contexts that have a right-button menu, or in the main menu?
You could end up having to have a different policy for every menu in
your application to get around some of these problems (e.g. only
highlight the most-recently-used 10% of the items on each menu), but
then you'd have a different number of bold items on each one, which
might be rather confusing.
Cheeri,
Calum.
--
CALUM BENSON, Usability Engineer Sun Microsystems Ireland
mailto:calum benson ireland sun com Desktop Engineering Group
http://www.sun.ie +353 1 819 9771
Any opinions are personal and not necessarily those of Sun Microsystems
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