[Gimp-user] HATE the new save vs. export behavior



I like the new save vs export behavior. The only thing I might change if not
already in Gimp in a way in preference to put the export formats i use most
often to the top of the drop down list.


I /hate/ the new Save vs. Export behavior. It is completely 
non-intuitive to me, it makes my brain stumble every time I try to do 
just about any of the things that I do in GIMP on a regular basis, and
it makes most of my workflows take more thought and more button clicks
/
key presses than they used to.

Here's just one use case that is completely destroyed by this
change...
Loading a JPG to edit and save back to JPG. Old way:

1. "gimp file.jpg".
2. Make changes.
3. Type ctrl-s periodically while working to save progress.
4. Type ctrl-q.

New way:

1. "gimp file.jpg".
2. Make changes.
3. Open File menu and select "Overwrite" (no keyboard shortcut for
that!).
4. Periodically type ctrl-e to save further progress (because for
some
   inexplicable reason, once you use the "Overwrite" command it
   disappears and is replaced with the "Export" command which appears
   to do exactly the same thing, but /this/ one has a keyboard
   shortcut; how does that make sense, exactly)?
5. Type ctrl-q.
6. GIMP tells me I have unsaved changes, even though I just saved
them
   with ctrl-e.
7. Click "Discard Changes" to really exit.

If I can't remember whether I've saved already or not and hit ctrl-e 
instead of using File | Overwrite, an export dialog pops up and if I 
just accept the file name in it, I am asked to confirm that I want to 
replace the file. Then I'm prompted for export settings. This is
absurd.

Here's another use case that's rendered more complex by this change...
Load an image, edit, and save in a different format. Old way:

1. "gimp image.fmt1".
2. Make changes.
3. ctrl-shift-s.
4. Modify extension in save dialog.
5. ctrl-q.

New way:

1. "gimp image.fmt1".
2. Make changes.
3. ctrl-shift-e. (and, mind you, I have to /remember/ that it's
   shift-ctrl-e, instead of shift-ctrl-s like in every other freakin'
   application I use on either Linux and Windows)
4. Modify extension in save dialog.
5. Type ctrl-q.
6. GIMP tells me that I have unsaved changes, even though I just
saved
   them with shift-ctrl-e.
7. Click "Discard Changes" to really exit.

But what about when I /do/ want to load an image in a non-XCF format
and
then save as XCF? Well, Ctrl-shift-e won't work for that, because the 
export dialog doesn't let you export as XCF. I see no advantage 
whatsoever to this restriction. So I have to remember that in this one
special case of changing the format of an image, I have to use ctrl-s 
instead of ctrl-shift-e.

There isn't a single thing that I use GIMP for that is made easier or 
faster by this interface change. Not one thing.

I understand that there is "information loss" when an image is saved
as
a format other than XCF. But the fact of the matter is that when all
I'm
doing is retouching an image, which is what I do most with gimp, I
don't
give a flying fig about that "information loss." I just want the image
to save, nice and easy, when I'm done editing it. And I don't want to 
have to remember different commands for GIMP than for every other 
program I use. And I don't want the command I have to use the first
time
I save an image to be different from the command I use the next time; 
that just makes no sense. Because of this particular "feature," I
can't
even make this problem less onerous by swapping the ctrl-s/ctrl-e and 
shift-ctrl-s/shift-ctrl-e bindings. Brilliant!

I understand that the GIMP developers consider XCF a "special" format 
which deserves special treatment. Well, I don't, and I'm sure there
are
many, many users like me who don't either. This change is just
sticking
a thumb in all of our eyes.

You could have done this the LibreOffice way... When you try to save
an
image loaded from a format with information loss, you get a pop-up 
warning you and giving you the choice of whether to proceed or save as
XCF (and also giving you the choice to make this warning go away in
the
future and just save like you told it to). This is what LibreOffice 
does, e.g., when you load and then try to save a DOC file.

Or you could have made this change at least a /little/ bit less
onerous
by making the save dialog /default/ to XCF but allowing the user to
edit
the extension to save to another format. But no, if you try to do
that,
it tells you, "Sorry, this dialog only saves in XCF format," and you 
have to cancel out of it and export instead.

In my opinion, this change is a huge, huge step backward in
useability.

  Jonathan Kamens

-- 
billn (via www.gimpusers.com/forums)


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