On Sun, 2003-06-29 at 00:30, Dawit A. wrote: > On Saturday 28 June 2003 19:02, David Hugh-Jones wrote: > > Hmph. I think it would be rather odd if the trashcan forbade the user to > > move more files to it! Especially as it would be the only folder that > > did that. I suggest just asking if the user wants to empty the trash is > > more appropriate. > > What do you do if the user said no because they are not sure what they have in > the trashcan ? Do you abort ? The other way it is pretty clear ? If you want > to move stuff into the trashcan simply say no, empty the trashcan and try > again. The same thing you would do with real trashcans. The difficulty comes > when the size of the trashcan is smaller than the size of the file(s) > deleted. If the user said no, then you don't empty the trash, and move the file into the trash anyway. The reason people are worried about losing the different options to trash/delete, is that they are worried about running out of space. Having the trashcan start to grumble when it reaches a certain size, means they can hit "move to trash" without this worry. If, when it grumbles, they want to ignore it, then that is not a problem. Dave