[prev in list] [next in list] [prev in thread] [next in thread] 

List:       kde-bugs-dist
Subject:    [Bug 164312] Drag and drop with tabs
From:       Christoph Wiesen <chris () deadhand ! com>
Date:       2008-08-14 13:31:03
Message-ID: 20080814133103.5532.qmail () ktown ! kde ! org
[Download RAW message or body]

------- You are receiving this mail because: -------
You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is.
         
http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=164312         




------- Additional Comments From chris deadhand com  2008-08-14 15:31 -------
Thanks for the feedback and patch of course. 

Based on your information I'll just re-open A as a whishlist item for kdelibs.
Since D is fixed now only B and C remain. From my point of view neither B nor C \
conflict with D - note though that I have not yet been able to check out Dimitry's \
actual implementation - see below.

Peter, the idea with B is to drag a folder to another tab (not the current one), so \
that other tab's view is changed. You can check it out in Konqueror 3 or 4 - the tab \
behaviour seems pretty much intact in Konqueror/KDE4 as well. I included it since \
this is the behaviour in Konqi, so some people might expect it. 

Note that B and C conflict with each other. Personally I'd prefer to see C \
implemented. It's simply a faster way to copy/move/link to another tab than D.


The difference between B/C and D, and the reason why neither conflicts with D is, \
that to activate D you need to hover over another tab for about one second before it \
switches to that tab. So if you release the mouse button before that you'd activate \
B/C instead of D.

That said, maybe Dimitry's implementation doesn't have the delay (I assume it does \
not because there is no action you could invoke before the delay hits).


Hope I didn't cause more confusion with all the B, C and D here. If so let me know ;)
Unless you agree that C (or B) might be useful I think RESOLVED is fine for the \
report since the most important feature is implemented.


[prev in list] [next in list] [prev in thread] [next in thread] 

Configure | About | News | Add a list | Sponsored by KoreLogic