Re: [Usability] Discoverable off-screen window dragging
- From: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- To: Calum Benson <Calum Benson Sun COM>
- Cc: Usability <Usability gnome org>, gnome-accessibility-list gnome org, Hans Petter Jansson <hpj novell com>
- Subject: Re: [Usability] Discoverable off-screen window dragging
- Date: Thu, 29 Nov 2007 18:47:41 -0500
When I was working on X Windows accessibility at Digital in the early
1990's, I modified the popular window manager at the time (mwm?) to have
an option to automatically put up scrollbars if the window was too large
for the display. It seemed to work well, though I cannot remember
if/how the user was able to adjust the scrollbars using keyboard traversal.
The proposed mouse movement thing seems like a great idea that would
work well for mouse users. I've seen very similar behavior when an X
Window server is too large for the physical display. The behavior is
not at all unexpected, but instead feels very natural.
On a related note, enhancing metacity's window movement behavior from
the keyboard would be really nice. If you press Alt+F7 to move a
window, you can move it all over the screen using the arrow keys. But,
if you press Alt+Space and select Move that way, you cannot push the
window vertically off the screen -- the window gets stuck on the title bar.
Will
Calum Benson wrote:
Cc'ing gnome-accessibility-list too...
On 28 Nov 2007, at 23:23, Hans Petter Jansson wrote:
I've been discussing accessibility/usability with visually impaired
users lately, and one thing that came up, and that I believe to be
low-hanging fruit, is the problem of windows being bigger than the
screen in one or both dimensions.
This happens frequently for visually impaired users, since they
generally have very large fonts.
I was told by one user that the way he worked around this was by going
to the control panel, choosing a smaller font temporarily, moving the
window, then setting the big font again. Of course, he was very
happy to
hear about the alt+drag shortcut.
Which made me wonder if there's a more discoverable way of moving
windows around when they're too big/partially off-screen.
One idea that came up was automatically adding scrollbars to the
windows, but I don't see how that could work reliably, and it would
clutter the screen and be error-prone/hard to do technically.
A better idea might be something like the following logic in the
window
manager:
IF window is focused AND
pointer is pushing against the edge of the screen AND
window has area off that edge of the screen AND
user is not dragging
THEN
move the window in the opposite direction of the edge being pushed
So e.g. if you have a focused window which is partially off the
right-hand side of the screen, and you push your pointer against that
side, bumping into the edge, the window will move to the left until
you
can see its right-edge frame. The rate of movement would be equal
to the
number of pixels the pointer "wants" to move off-screen at each
increment. Only the focused window would be affected.
I think this would be a lot more discoverable and useful for
everyone -
not just visually impaired users - and it looks like all the required
information is available to the window manager, so it shouldn't be
terribly hard to implement.
Thoughts?
--
Hans Petter
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