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List:       kde-core-devel
Subject:    Re: [patch] Grab windows anywhere, not just titlebar
From:       "Jos Poortvliet" <jospoortvliet () gmail ! com>
Date:       2007-11-24 19:02:39
Message-ID: 5c77e14b0711241102u3eb7f434vc1d3f369fc261b3c () mail ! gmail ! com
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On Nov 23, 2007 10:14 AM, Hans Meine <hans_meine@gmx.net> wrote:
> On Donnerstag 22 November 2007, Riccardo Iaconelli wrote:
> > As an usecase for them, the first example which comes to my mind might be a
> > wizard, which has to do a kio job when switching from page n to page n+1.
> > When the user clicks on "next", before switching page a sheet slides down,
> > and instead of the so annoying popup, all is done in the same window... and
> > you get on the other page when the job has finished.
> >
> > Really, look at them in action, and you'll understand much better the
> > concept behind them. =)
>
> I get the feeling that it would be nice if you could mention some specific
> OS X applications/windows where sheets are used in a way you like.
>
> Are sheets always within a window?  Or never?  I saw also "sheets"(?) that
> slide out at the side of an image viewer, showing multiple thumbnails IIRC.
> Are these also called sheets?  When would you use which?

You're most likely referring to that sidebar apple invented (or at
least used a lot) some time ago, which slides out of the side of an
application.

The sheets they're talking about are as far as I can tell just a way
of displaying modal dialogs - they slide out of the app, just below
the toolbar, and they stay connected to it. A nice visual
representation - they're closely connected. But, as Lubos already
pointed out, you can't move them out of the way if you want to see
something below them - a real drawback. Their advantage, on the other
hand, is just that they stay with the window and are visually more
connected to it - slightly easier to grasp, I guess.

> --
> Ciao, /  /                                                    .o.
>      /--/                                                     ..o
>     /  / ANS                                                  ooo
>
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