Hi! > As far as I can tell the 'right' way to do it is to create an > NSScrollView and put your buffer content into another NSView within > it. This seems to give you native scrollbars for a lot less work than > is being done at the moment. However I think we'd lose the ability to > put the vertical scrollbars on the left. I don't know how important > that feature is. > It's hard to know. One way to handle this is to keep both implementations around. Clearly, the combination of having scroll bars to the left and make them floating won't be supported. This might be needed anyway since I'm not sure if GNUStep supports floating scroll bars. I think there's a bigger problem, though. It looks to me like the mode > line is currently drawn into the same NSView as the rest of the > buffer, so just wrapping the current NSView with an NSScrollView would > result in the vertical scrollbar overlapping the mode line, and the > horizontal scrollbar below it. > Unfortunately, I never looked into the technical details, so I can't say whether this is the right way to handle it. However, then I wrote this I envisioned a layout that would be identical to when scroll bars were disabled, but that they should appear when the user scrolled the text using the mouse. Clearly, the scroll bar should not cover the mode line, the minibuffer/echo area, nor the header line (if present). Am I right about this? If so then it seems the only way to get the > floating scrollbars would be to recreate the effect ourselves, which I > suspect is rather a lot of work. > If you are correct, then I would suggest that we shouldn't pursue this. If it's not possible to implement this in a clean OS friendly manner, we risk ending up with complex, fragile, code that might not work on future OS X versions. -- Anders