* Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior @ 2005-04-03 10:37 David Reitter 2005-04-04 11:40 ` David Kastrup 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-03 10:37 UTC (permalink / raw) Hi, I would like to announce a new distribution for OS X, which we call 'Aquamacs'. It's a ready-to-run application for OS X that combines the Carbon Emacs (a CVS build) with a range of packages and customizations from a number of people that all try to make Emacs behave more like a normal OS X application. This includes keyboard shortcuts, a one-file-one-frame paradigm and a good-looking default font, plus other well-known add-ons that we consider standard on OS X. The user-oriented description is at http://www.wordtech-software.com/Aquamacs.html and slightly more technical and opinionated introduction is provided here: http://www.davids-world.com/archives/2005/04/aquamacs_an_ema.html At this point, we consider the distribution experimental (it's version 0.9). Kevin Walzer and I welcome your feedback. Depending on whether people use it, we would work towards a 1.0. Source is provided in the .app bundle, except for what's in the CVS anyways. -- Dave ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-03 10:37 Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior David Reitter @ 2005-04-04 11:40 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 14:02 ` David Reitter 2005-04-04 18:25 ` Aidan Kehoe 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-04 11:40 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com> writes: > I would like to announce a new distribution for OS X, which we call > Aquamacs'. It's a ready-to-run application for OS X that combines > the Carbon Emacs (a CVS build) with a range of packages and > customizations from a number of people that all try to make Emacs > behave more like a normal OS X application. For starters, you could put up information about what you actually do and include. None of the referenced web sites bother to mention any of the included packages. > The user-oriented description is at > > http://www.wordtech-software.com/Aquamacs.html > > and slightly more technical and opinionated introduction is provided > here: > > http://www.davids-world.com/archives/2005/04/aquamacs_an_ema.html > > At this point, we consider the distribution experimental (it's version > 0.9). Kevin Walzer and I welcome your feedback. > Depending on whether people use it, we would work towards a > 1.0. Source is provided in the .app bundle, except for what's in the > CVS anyways. You make a big point out of berating the Emacs development team for a lack of cooperation. However, changes in user interface take a lot of persuasion and preparative work as you can easily see if you follow emacs-devel even superficially. Emacs has a much longer history than all currently "modern" (and conflicting) user interface guidelines. Should one make people abandon Emacs that have been using it for 20 years, so that a newcomer will take an hour instead of half an hour before giving up on it? In addition, catering to the idiosyncrasies of a specific platform like MacOSX is a lot of work if you want to keep Emacs fully functional and reasonably consistent (where appropriate) across platforms. Given the amount of work that is needed for implementing and harmonizing a platform specific port of Emacs, I can't help but notice that your rants about Emacs developers at least to me appear somewhat disproportionate with the amount of involvement I seem to remember from you on this list. So I recommend that you replace them with actually mentioning what packages you are including in your offering, and maybe thinking about how you could constructively help Emacs user interface design while keeping in mind that there are more platforms than just MacOSX around: this means that one has to make good choices about where and how to modularize design decisions for a platform. For the sake of consistency, it might be an idea at some point of time to have, at least for a limited time period, a single person being responsible for user interface decisions. But this person needs to be at least acquainted with all major user interfaces, and it would need to have reasonably good contacts with active developers for all of them. I have actually played with the thought of offering to do that, but my style of communication is likely to cause more permanent damage than good in a sensitive area, and I don't have the time available to invest myself that would be required for somebody taking the lead in some area, even if just for making him appear a mostly uncontentious necessary evil. Anyway: interface work is hard work, and "let us do everything the Apple way" is not going to cut it for a number of other platforms, so in the core Emacs development it is important to keep track of how to make it possible to do things the Apple, Windows, GNOME, whatever way reasonably well without losing sight of the Emacs way. If you want to invest your time in that area cooperatively, it certainly would be appreciated, and the results would probably be beneficial to Emacs at large, but you have to realize that moving Emacs as a whole, while the most effective way in the long run, can be lots of hard work and frustrating at times. Of course, it is easier to rant about how hard it would be instead of trying, but it probably does not lead anywhere much. Anyway, for the sake of projects of mine, I am glad that there at last seems to be a precompiled recent Aqua version of the CVS Emacs around again. Without any usefully available information about what packages and detailed changes from where have gone into it, I still can't recommend it or give out instructions about how software is probably going to get installed there. So I recommend that you fix at least that deficiency. All other OSX compilations, outdated as they may be, at least mention what they include into the package. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 11:40 ` David Kastrup @ 2005-04-04 14:02 ` David Reitter 2005-04-04 17:28 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-04 18:25 ` Aidan Kehoe 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-04 14:02 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Hi David, thanks for your friendly comments. You are of course very right in that we should list the packages that we include in the distribution. We haven't done so as we have included a lot of things from people's publicly available .emacs files in addition to a number of large customizations, e.g. those from Drew Adams. We will include a list pretty soon though. Please note that I didn't complain a lot about a lack of cooperation or attack anyone, and I also didn't suggest to make the main-stream Emacs more OS X like ("let us do everything the Apple way"). If possible, I would very much like to see that Emacs /allows/ us to customize its UI for a particular environment. We can certainly help if the friendly people handling the Mac port would like to pick up some of the UI elements, such as the keyboard shortcuts, which probably do not conflict with other functionality. I have submitted bug reports on other UI problems, such as the scrollbars (not fixed), or a little patch for the file selector (fixed) already. Best David ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 14:02 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-04 17:28 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-04 17:47 ` David Kastrup 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-04 17:28 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > If possible, I would very much like to see that Emacs /allows/ us to > customize its UI for a particular environment. I think we all agree about it. The mainstream Emacs will never be like the one you distribute because an important consideration for it is that it should behave like Emacs on other platforms, as opposed to your distribution which places more emphasis on having it behave like other apps on Mac OS X. But it's still a good goal to try and minimize the difference between the two. At least, to the point where your distribution is not a full Emacs install but only an add-on. An important consideration here is that the same Emacs install should be able to accomodate users who want MacOSX behavior and users who want Emacs behavior. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 17:28 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-04 17:47 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 4:22 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-04 17:47 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: David Reitter, emacs-devel Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> If possible, I would very much like to see that Emacs /allows/ us >> to customize its UI for a particular environment. > > I think we all agree about it. > > The mainstream Emacs will never be like the one you distribute > because an important consideration for it is that it should behave > like Emacs on other platforms, as opposed to your distribution which > places more emphasis on having it behave like other apps on Mac OS > X. There is considerable leeway in those goals. For example, different file selection dialogs and similar are quite common, and in fact, the whole widgetry stuff (like customize and co) could be made to make use of the native widgets where available. Emacs already tends to blend quite better with its environment than XEmacs does (which looks like, well, XEmacs everywhere), and this is not a mistake, in my opinion. > But it's still a good goal to try and minimize the difference > between the two. At least, to the point where your distribution is > not a full Emacs install but only an add-on. An important > consideration here is that the same Emacs install should be able to > accomodate users who want MacOSX behavior and users who want Emacs > behavior. Well, we do have something like customization themes IIRC, but I don't know their extent and how they are used. If a whole set of defaults were to be changed by a single theme (and could be changed back at will), then an out-of-the-box configuration that was different on MacOSX would be quite tolerable. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 17:47 ` David Kastrup @ 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 0:02 ` David Kastrup ` (2 more replies) 2005-04-05 4:22 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 3 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-04 23:27 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel On 4 Apr 2005, at 18:47, David Kastrup wrote: > > There is considerable leeway in those goals. For example, different > file selection dialogs and similar are quite common, and in fact, the > whole widgetry stuff (like customize and co) could be made to make use > of the native widgets where available. From a UI and an OS X perspective, customization buffers should definitely go into proper dialogues with native widgets. > > Well, we do have something like customization themes IIRC, but I don't > know their extent and how they are used. If a whole set of defaults > were to be changed by a single theme (and could be changed back at > will), then an out-of-the-box configuration that was different on > MacOSX would be quite tolerable. I don't know if an out-of-the-box configuration for the default Emacs is needed - the idea of a distribution like what we demonstrate with Aquamacs might already do the job. People with other needs - a cross-platform compatible Emacs - will then be happy to use the 'conservative' version instead. I see a trend towards the first - UI integration - because it's more comfortable when you use a lot of applications (and people use more applications, not less), and there has been a great uptake on mobile devices: people use laptops much more than they used to (say, 7 years ago), and people don't switch from one system to another as often. Of course, individual mileage will vary! Either way, merely using a 'theme' with the on-board means, for example to make customization buffers look different, will IMHO not tweak the application UI enough. A user interface is more than just pretty buttons and a choice of colors. If you look at the way themes work in GNOME / KDE, you'll find huge emphasis on the graphics, and only little theme-defined behavior and pretty much no theme-defined layout. Successful OS X software pretty much always uses the native user interface. Even though OS X has superb Java integration (at least for not-quite-cutting-edge Java versions), we don't see many wide-spread Swing based applications. Similarly, the XUL based browser versions from Mozilla aren't as popular as Safari and Camino - even though they offer good or better functionality. Consequently, I'm arguing for native widgets wherever possible. For a new project - or one with less tradition and less importance, there is stuff like wxWidgets. In this case, I would be grateful if someone would implement more Carbon (or Cocoa) based UI stuff, and if better internal interfaces existed, for example to handle scrollbars correctly. This is stuff only developers experienced with Emacs code - yes, you! - can implement. - Dave ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-05 0:02 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-05 14:58 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-05 19:07 ` Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior Richard Stallman 2 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-05 0:02 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com> writes: > On 4 Apr 2005, at 18:47, David Kastrup wrote: > >> There is considerable leeway in those goals. For example, >> different file selection dialogs and similar are quite common, and >> in fact, the whole widgetry stuff (like customize and co) could be >> made to make use of the native widgets where available. > > From a UI and an OS X perspective, customization buffers should > definitely go into proper dialogues with native widgets. I don't think this is OS X specific. Mapping hierarchical widgets to native constructs would be a lot of work. Right now only atomic widgets like the file selection dialog are, if at all, available. I think that some consensus, even if I can't remember this being discussed before, could be achieved that this would be generally desirable at least where the actions were mouse-induced: present people with familiar interfaces. There are drawbacks, like not being able to use the power of Emacs' keyboard commands to manipulate entries, but for people annoyed by that, there would always be the possibility to configure the Emacs text widgets as default. >> Well, we do have something like customization themes IIRC, but I >> don't know their extent and how they are used. If a whole set of >> defaults were to be changed by a single theme (and could be changed >> back at will), then an out-of-the-box configuration that was >> different on MacOSX would be quite tolerable. > > I don't know if an out-of-the-box configuration for the default > Emacs is needed - the idea of a distribution like what we > demonstrate with Aquamacs might already do the job. If you change options with setq, it becomes more troublesome to customize them than if a theme was available. Also it has the problem that people used to NTEmacs can't easily get the same behavior from Aquamacs and the other way round. Shipping all Emacs versions with both an NTEmacs and an Aquamacs customization theme would mean that you get something set up to match your platform best as delivered, but if you are already acquainted to the defaults of a different platform, a single customization will turn your NTEmacs into an Aquamacs and the other way round. > Either way, merely using a 'theme' with the on-board means, for > example to make customization buffers look different, will IMHO not > tweak the application UI enough. A user interface is more than just > pretty buttons and a choice of colors. Customization themes in Emacs have nothing to do with pretty buttons and choice of colors. They are simply a single name for a complete set of customized variable defaults. [Other ramplings about "theme" removed] > Consequently, I'm arguing for native widgets wherever possible. For > a new project - or one with less tradition and less importance, > there is stuff like wxWidgets. In this case, I would be grateful if > someone would implement more Carbon (or Cocoa) based UI stuff, and > if better internal interfaces existed, for example to handle > scrollbars correctly. This is stuff only developers experienced with > Emacs code - yes, you! - can implement. This is stuff only developers experienced with the native scrollbars - yes, you! - can implement. Basically this needs knowledge of both the native widgets as well as Emacs. Your point of view is that other Emacs developers should be forced to learn the details of the widgets of your platform. Are you going to buy me a Mac and developer information for that? My point of view is that it makes more sense if the Mac developers learn the details of Emacs. At least, both code and documentation for Emacs are freely available, so you need not stumble around in the dark. And you can actually test what you are playing with, having a Macintosh available. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 0:02 ` David Kastrup @ 2005-04-05 14:58 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 13:03 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 19:07 ` Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior Richard Stallman 2 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-05 14:58 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > I don't know if an out-of-the-box configuration for the default Emacs is > needed - the idea of a distribution like what we demonstrate with Aquamacs > might already do the job. People with other needs - a cross-platform > compatible Emacs - will then be happy to use the 'conservative' > version instead. It does the job, but it's more work for you. And having two slightly different distributions is a pain in the rear. Better to have one distribution plus an add-on. You can bundle them of course, but the point is that I want to be able to install your Aquamacs (for other people) and still use it as a "normal Emacs" myself. > I see a trend towards the first - UI integration - because it's more We're in favor of UI integration as well, mind you. We just don't have the manpower/experience/time/will to do more of it ourselves. Note that UI integration is different from issues such a default keybindings, etc... > Either way, merely using a 'theme' with the on-board means, for example to > make customization buffers look different, will IMHO not tweak the > application UI enough. You're confused about what is meant by "theme" in the context of Custom. It's new in Emacs-CVS and is still very poorly supported/documented, but the basic idea is that you can take your .emacs and say "here is my DavidReitterTheme". > Consequently, I'm arguing for native widgets wherever possible. You're preaching to the choir. We're using native menus, native scrollbars, native tooltips, ... > In this case, I would be grateful if someone would implement > more Carbon (or Cocoa) based UI stuff, and if better internal interfaces > existed, So would we. > for example to handle scrollbars correctly. Please report any complaint you have against the scrollbar with M-x report-emacs-bug. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-05 14:58 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 13:03 ` David Reitter 2005-04-06 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 13:03 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel [-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1180 bytes --] > You're confused about what is meant by "theme" in the context of > Custom. > It's new in Emacs-CVS and is still very poorly supported/documented, > but the > basic idea is that you can take your .emacs and say "here is my > DavidReitterTheme". Oh, then I see - well that's exactly what I would want. That would allow us to integrate something like an OS X theme without mandating it. If such a theme would be supplied with a main version and switched on by default on OS X, I suppose one would want it to be well-tested. Even though the collection has been around for a while, I feel that we need some more feedback from users. We're getting this now - with some problems being genuinely due to our distribution. >> for example to handle scrollbars correctly. > > Please report any complaint you have against the scrollbar with > M-x report-emacs-bug. I have reported this in various places, for example on emacs-pretest-bugs here: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-pretest-bug/2004-03/ msg00110.html and Steven Tamm and Yamamoto Mitsuharu have been made aware of it a while ago. I have no plans to report the same problem again :-) -- Dave [-- Attachment #1.2: smime.p7s --] [-- Type: application/pkcs7-signature, Size: 2400 bytes --] [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/plain, Size: 142 bytes --] _______________________________________________ Emacs-devel mailing list Emacs-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-devel ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-06 13:03 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 14:32 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 2005-04-06 16:17 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 14:08 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel >>> for example to handle scrollbars correctly. >> Please report any complaint you have against the scrollbar with >> M-x report-emacs-bug. > I have reported this in various places, for example on > emacs-pretest-bugs here: > http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-pretest-bug/2004-03/ msg00110.html > and Steven Tamm and Yamamoto Mitsuharu have been made aware of it a while > ago. I have no plans to report the same problem again :-) Sorry I missed it. I have no knowledge of Carbon Emacs, but I do have a lot of experience trying to get non-Xaw scrollbars to work with Emacs. So I can answer some of the issues you raise in your post: > Under OS X, Emacs behaves very strangely with regard to the scrollbars and > sliders. When you just click on a slider without moving it (after you've > scrolled to the middle of the document), you will see that the text > scrolls right away, often far beyond the document. Intended behavior > would be not to do anything. The description of the behavior is not sufficiently precise for me to be sure, but it looks like a genuine bug. I'm not sure what you mean by "far beyond the document", tho. > When the slider is moved, scrolling looks fine at first. However, I can > then move beyond the document. You mean you can scroll til the point where the very end of the document is at the very top of the window. That's normal Emacs behavior. And there are sound technical reasons why it's done this way. > Good behavior under OS X would be to stop scrolling just when one line > after the document is located at the bottom end of the screen > (i.e. frame). Other than being slightly different, in what case is it a problem? The behavior you want is a behavior I find inconvenient in many cases (e.g. I find it unpleasant to type text on the very last line of a window, and I sometimes like to move the text higher up in the window (even if it's at the bottom of the buffer) so I can align it on screen with some other window's text). I sometimes actually even wish the same would hold for the beginning of the buffer (being able to place (point-min) at the bottom of the window). > Also, during scrolling, the size of the slider changes. That should never > be, as the size indicates the length of the document in relation to the size > of the whole scrollbar. That's exactly what it represent: the ratio slider/total is the same as the ratio shownchars/buffercharsize. But depending on where you are in the buffer the window will not always show the same number of chars, so the size of the slider changes accordingly. In order for the slider to have a fixed size independent from the position in the buffer it would have to show "shownpixels/bufferpixelsize". Problem is that bufferpixelsize is very costly to compute so we currently can't do that. > That's an old paradigm! Consequently, the size of the slider only changes > if the document size changes. "Old paradigm" is not an argument I care about. I still haven't heard of any scenario where the current behavior causes an actual problem. The worst I've heard is that users are surprised and then go on with their life. I've never heard of any user actually getting confused by it. I'm not claiming that the current behavior is a feature, but I'm just saying that the cost of a fix is just too high compared to the very minor improvement it would bring. Maybe the situation will be different ten years from now, but before then I don't see things changing on this front. BTW, in Emacs-CVS you can actually "try it out" by calling `count-screen-lines'. On reasonably large buffers, it takes a while. Also the bufferpixelsize can be changed by font-lock fontification, so we'd have to throw away jit-lock and go back to plain font-lock. > Furthermore, clicking on one of the little arrows doesn't result in an > immediate scroll action (one line). It only scrolls when the mouse button is > released. Good behavior would be to scroll as soon as the button is down, > and then scroll again (line by line, but continuously), after a short > delay -- just like pressing a key will repeat that letter on and on after > a delay. That looks like a genuine bug. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) 2005-04-06 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 14:32 ` David Reitter 2005-04-06 17:14 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) Miles Bader 2005-04-06 16:17 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 1 sibling, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel On 6 Apr 2005, at 15:08, Stefan Monnier wrote: >> Under OS X, Emacs behaves very strangely with regard to the >> scrollbars and >> sliders. When you just click on a slider without moving it (after >> you've >> scrolled to the middle of the document), you will see that the text >> scrolls right away, often far beyond the document. Intended behavior >> would be not to do anything. > > The description of the behavior is not sufficiently precise for me to > be > sure, but it looks like a genuine bug. I'm not sure what you mean by > "far > beyond the document", tho. It overscrolls: it scrolls down beyond the end of the buffer, so that the screen is all empty. It shouldn't jerk when you click and drag - very often, I grab the slider to scroll down a little. When the window jumps to a totally different document position, the slider becomes practically useless in that usage context. I acknowledge your explanations on the other points - thanks. In the UI that I'd like to implement in order to conform to standards in my environment, the vertical slider size shows a proportion of _ displayed lines_ not document characters or real lines (those that end with a CR or LF). Whether that is better or not, I don't know, but what I do know is that a) "less visual change on the screen is more", and that b) both Windows and Mac software has sliders with a stable size. But the slider size should have less priority. Is there a way to store count-screen-lines statically and just update it when necessary? -- Dave ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-06 14:32 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 17:14 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) Miles Bader 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 17:14 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > I acknowledge your explanations on the other points - thanks. In the UI that > I'd like to implement in order to conform to standards in my environment, > the vertical slider size shows a proportion of _ displayed lines_ not > document characters or real lines (those that end with a CR or LF). Whether Since the height of lines can vary, the number of displayed lines can change from one part of the buffer to another, so it's still not stable. You really need to use the pixel size. > visual change on the screen is more", and that b) both Windows and Mac > software has sliders with a stable size. The closest kind of software would be things like web-browsers for which some details are relevant: - the slider size changes as the page is being filled and rendered, so it's not nearly as stable as you make it out to be. - html pages are typically small and web-browsers's algorithms are taylored for that case, they tend to become unusable when browsing large pages (like more than a megabyte), whereas it is considered important for Emacs to be able to comfortably edit multi-MB files (although there is also a limit). - html-rendering becomes even more unusable if you start to actually interactively edit the 1MB page. I.e. it's not just that Emacs hackers are incompetent, but it's that the problem is difficult. > Is there a way to store count-screen-lines statically and just update it > when necessary? Of course. That's one of the tricks we'd have to use in order to get "stable" slider sizes. Problem is, I haven't yet heard of other useful things we could do with that kind of extra info, so again: the amount of work seems unjustified. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) 2005-04-06 14:32 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 2005-04-06 17:14 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-06 22:25 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X David Kastrup 2005-04-06 22:44 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Miles Bader @ 2005-04-06 22:07 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel On Apr 6, 2005 11:32 PM, David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com> wrote: > that I'd like to implement in order to conform to standards in my > environment, the vertical slider size shows a proportion of _ displayed > lines_ not document characters or real lines (those that end with a CR > or LF). Whether that is better or not, I don't know, but what I do know > is that a) "less visual change on the screen is more", and that b) both > Windows and Mac software has sliders with a stable size. The only way I can see to truly have stable scroll-bar size is to base the size calculation on displayed pixels (lines are not necessarily a constant height, so the number of displayed lines is not a fixed proportion of total lines in the document). I'm curious how _any_ program manages to do this calculation in a reasonable amount of time; do they really lay-out the _entire_ document ahead of time? Do they use some sort of heuristic instead? What happens when the heuristic fails? -MIles -- Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) Miles Bader @ 2005-04-06 22:25 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-06 22:51 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 22:44 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-06 22:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: David Reitter, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, miles Miles Bader <snogglethorpe@gmail.com> writes: > On Apr 6, 2005 11:32 PM, David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com> wrote: >> that I'd like to implement in order to conform to standards in my >> environment, the vertical slider size shows a proportion of _ displayed >> lines_ not document characters or real lines (those that end with a CR >> or LF). Whether that is better or not, I don't know, but what I do know >> is that a) "less visual change on the screen is more", and that b) both >> Windows and Mac software has sliders with a stable size. > > The only way I can see to truly have stable scroll-bar size is to > base the size calculation on displayed pixels (lines are not > necessarily a constant height, so the number of displayed lines is > not a fixed proportion of total lines in the document). I think you are laboring under the delusion that the scroll bar actually displays something sensible, namely that mouse-2 exactly at the bottom of the slider will take you exactly one page of screen material further. I think you'll find that users are much less surprised if this goal is not exactly established than if the slider grows and shrinks in size. So the solution is to base the slider size on some more-or-less sensible metric like lines-in-file (where available) to lines-on-screen, and anyway, don't muck with it while dragging. > I'm curious how _any_ program manages to do this calculation in a > reasonable amount of time; do they really lay-out the _entire_ > document ahead of time? Do they use some sort of heuristic instead? > What happens when the heuristic fails? What should happen? The user will correct over/undershoot, probably not even considering that the computer could be at fault. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-06 22:25 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X David Kastrup @ 2005-04-06 22:51 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 22:51 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: David Reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel, miles > I think you are laboring under the delusion that the scroll bar > actually displays something sensible, namely that mouse-2 exactly at > the bottom of the slider will take you exactly one page of screen > material further. I think you'll find that users are much less > surprised if this goal is not exactly established than if the slider > grows and shrinks in size. So the solution is to base the slider size > on some more-or-less sensible metric like lines-in-file (where > available) to lines-on-screen, and anyway, don't muck with it while > dragging. That's what the code does with the Motif scrollbar, BTW. I think it's also what's used with Gtk. Stefan PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic idea to enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further than the bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events corresponding to "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". I.e. they're throwing away valuable information before the application can even decide whether it's indeed useless or not. It's idiotic because it requires *more* code in the toolkit and has as its only effect to reduce the flexibility of the toolkit. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-06 22:51 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-07 19:26 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-07 19:41 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-07 18:27 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic idea to enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further than the bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events corresponding to "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the LessTif developers. Should I do that? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-07 19:26 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-07 19:30 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 19:41 ` Jan D. 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-07 19:26 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel > PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic idea to > enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further than the > bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events corresponding to > "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". > I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the > LessTif developers. Should I do that? Feel free to try, but I don't have much hope: - The LessTif people are probably bound by compatibility. - The Gtk people are usually bound by dogmatism. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:26 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-07 19:30 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 19:46 ` Jan D. 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-07 19:30 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, david.reitter, snogglethorpe, rms, emacs-devel Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: >> PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic >> idea to enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further >> than the bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events >> corresponding to "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". > >> I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the >> LessTif developers. Should I do that? > > Feel free to try, but I don't have much hope: > - The LessTif people are probably bound by compatibility. > - The Gtk people are usually bound by dogmatism. Didn't Miles in the context of "David would welcome Athena semantics even with fancy-looking scrollbars" mention that it would be possible to process the scrollbar events without even passing them into the scrollbar widgets in the first place? Looks like another reason here for thinking about that approach. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:30 ` David Kastrup @ 2005-04-07 19:46 ` Jan D. 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2005-04-07 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: rms, david.reitter, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, snogglethorpe, miles > Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > >>> PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic >>> idea to enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further >>> than the bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events >>> corresponding to "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". >> >>> I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the >>> LessTif developers. Should I do that? >> >> Feel free to try, but I don't have much hope: >> - The LessTif people are probably bound by compatibility. >> - The Gtk people are usually bound by dogmatism. > > Didn't Miles in the context of "David would welcome Athena semantics > even with fancy-looking scrollbars" mention that it would be possible > to process the scrollbar events without even passing them into the > scrollbar widgets in the first place? > > Looks like another reason here for thinking about that approach. It may have been me that said that. I have tried that approach but there is some difficulties, i.e. not all parameters of the GTK scrollbar are available, most notably thumb pixel size. But I've tried to get overscrolling better with this approach, Athena sematics may be easier to do. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:30 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 19:46 ` Jan D. @ 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 2:05 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-07 19:59 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, snogglethorpe, rms On 7 Apr 2005, at 20:30, David Kastrup wrote: > Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes: > >>> PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic >>> idea to enforce that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further >>> than the bottom. And they enforce it by hiding the events >>> corresponding to "user moves the mouse yet-further-down". >> >>> I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the >>> LessTif developers. Should I do that? >> >> Feel free to try, but I don't have much hope: >> - The LessTif people are probably bound by compatibility. >> - The Gtk people are usually bound by dogmatism. > > Didn't Miles in the context of "David would welcome Athena semantics > even with fancy-looking scrollbars" mention that it would be possible > to process the scrollbar events without even passing them into the > scrollbar widgets in the first place? I understand something like that is happening in the mac port, which makes it very hard to get decent behavior in the first place. Users exert their freedom to chose a particular UI environment. GTK can be seen as part of an environment, as it creates compatible behavior across applications. As mentioned earlier in this thread, UI is more than the pretty visual image of a widget - it's the behavior that counts. Consistency is extremely important. While I respectfully disagree with Stefan's view that it is an "idiotic idea" to not let the 'thumb' extend beyond the bottom of the scrollbar, and while I think that this commonly used scrollbar behavior is actually consistent with the document/window metaphor put forward in most modern windowing environments since the mid-80's (which implies no over-scrolling), I think that a discussion about what the right behavior is is not necessary at all. Instead, suffice it to say that it should be up to the UI layer to implement the exact behavior. That would respect the user's choice of environment (provided GTK implements things correctly.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 2:05 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-08 11:31 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Miles Bader @ 2005-04-08 2:05 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, rms On Apr 8, 2005 4:59 AM, David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com> wrote: > Users exert their freedom to chose a particular UI environment. GTK can > be seen as part of an environment, as it creates compatible behavior > across applications. As mentioned earlier in this thread, UI is more > than the pretty visual image of a widget - it's the behavior that > counts. Yeah, well as a user, I'm always a bit miffed by the all-or-nothing attitudes of many GUI zealots. As a user, I know that I choose an "environment" like GTK/Gnome because I like the way it behaves/looks _on average_ better than other choices. None-the-less, there are very often things I dislike about it, and I'm very appreciative when the GUI developer had the foresight to allow me to override his defaults (however well considered they are). It's great to provide defaults that match expectations of the majority, but die-hard dogmatism in the name of the "users" is not great at all. > Consistency is extremely important. Consistent _defaults_, and guidelines that encourage consistent behavior are good things; consistency at all costs often causes more damage than good. > while I think that this > commonly used scrollbar behavior is actually consistent with the > document/window metaphor put forward in most modern windowing > environments since the mid-80's (which implies no over-scrolling) Er, how exactly does the "document/window metaphor" imply no over-scrolling? It seems more a case of "gee maybe users will get confused if their document is scrolled too much ... let's prevent it!" (which is all fine and good, but it's merely a practical heuristic). > Instead, suffice it to say that it should be up to > the UI layer to implement the exact behavior. The UI layer should be able to specify defaults; the final decision should be up to the user. -Miles -- Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 2:05 ` Miles Bader @ 2005-04-08 11:31 ` David Reitter 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 11:31 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: rms, Stefan Monnier, emacs-devel On 8 Apr 2005, at 03:05, Miles Bader wrote: >> Instead, suffice it to say that it should be up to >> the UI layer to implement the exact behavior. > > The UI layer should be able to specify defaults; the final decision > should be up to the user. Either the user choses an environment, i.e. operating system, that specifies these defaults, or he gets more fine-grained control over the interface. That's all fine - like I said in my earlier message: it shouldn't be up to the application. For that reason stuff like wxWidgets has architectural advantages over the non-native widgets used by GTK. Non-native UI usually doesn't feel as nice and comfortable. To give a practical example, Java Swing applications always feel clunky and somehow "not right" on the Mac. (But then again, I concede that Mac users tend to me more picky about UI than your average GNU/Linux or Windows user.) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 2:05 ` Miles Bader @ 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-08 13:12 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 15:46 ` Kevin Rodgers 1 sibling, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-08 12:42 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel, rms, snogglethorpe, miles > Consistency is extremely important. I think Ralph Waldo Emerson would disagree. There's consistency and there's consistency. In my experience, what people care about is "in which direction and by how much does my thingy move when I click with button X on part Y of the scrollbar" and "does the slider's position and size reflect the part and quantity of my thingy that is currently displayed". The size of the slider while dragging is often something they barely notice since while dragging they're not looking at the scrollbar but at the thingy instead. [ replace "thingy" with "buffer", "spreadsheet", "html page", ...] The precise size of a slider seems to only annoy GUI-fanatics (aka people who know what is "the document/window metaphor"), and the only justification I've ever heard for their complaint is "that's not how God meant it to work", which reinforces me in my belief that it's just dogmatism rather than an actual concern for the unenlightened user. As for overscrolling: yes, it has puzzled a few users occasionally, because it's not obvious where the buffer actually ends. But note that this problem is not specific to overscrolling since it already appears when viewing a buffer too small to fill the window. > While I respectfully disagree with Stefan's view that it is an "idiotic > idea" to not let the 'thumb' extend beyond the bottom of the scrollbar, The only reason why you disagree is because you haven't tried to write the code that interfaces something like Emacs with one of those silly scrollbars. After working on such code you realize that GUI guidelines might be great, but they shouldn't be "cast in code" directly in the GUI library because there are always exceptions. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-08 13:12 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-08 15:46 ` Kevin Rodgers 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 13:12 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel On 8 Apr 2005, at 13:42, Stefan Monnier wrote: > There's consistency and there's consistency. In my experience, what > people > care about is "in which direction and by how much does my thingy move > when > I click with button X on part Y of the scrollbar" and "does the > slider's > position and size reflect the part and quantity of my thingy that is > currently displayed". The size of the slider while dragging is often > something they barely notice since while dragging they're not looking > at the > scrollbar but at the thingy instead. [ replace "thingy" with "buffer", > "spreadsheet", "html page", ...] Of course there are priorities, and absolutely, the size of the scrollbar is less important than good scrolling behavior when you click underneath it or when you drag it. _Exact_ size - as pointed out by others before - might be totally unimportant. As it stands now, the scrollbars are jerking around in size, however, and when you try to drag the scrollbar, the displayed portion of the buffer will jump somewhere unpredictable. Anyways, can I as a user please get the freedom to configure whether I like over-scrolling or not? ( cf. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2003-03/msg00593.html ) > The only reason why you disagree is because you haven't tried to write > the > code that interfaces something like Emacs with one of those silly > scrollbars. After working on such code you realize that GUI guidelines > might be great, but they shouldn't be "cast in code" directly in the > GUI > library because there are always exceptions. What would be a good argument for such an exception? The fact that it's hard to interface with the event-driven (or whatever) interface models of certain current APIs might be due to other players in this game than the UI toolkit. Let's say one can state what would be good from a UI perspective, and then one will have to figure out what is reasonably doable from a technical standpoint. Arguments IMHO start with the user-centric view! Either way, I would humbly suggest that the bugs be fixed first; I know it's hard and I know that I can't do it lacking knowledge of the technical implementation. And I understand these things are difficult, so I won't even try. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 13:12 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-08 14:08 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > As it stands now, the scrollbars are jerking around in size, however, and > when you try to drag the scrollbar, the displayed portion of the buffer will > jump somewhere unpredictable. Yes, and these are just plain bugs. > Anyways, can I as a user please get the freedom to configure whether I like > over-scrolling or not? Of course, as soon as someone implements it. >> The only reason why you disagree is because you haven't tried to write the >> code that interfaces something like Emacs with one of those silly >> scrollbars. After working on such code you realize that GUI guidelines >> might be great, but they shouldn't be "cast in code" directly in the GUI >> library because there are always exceptions. > What would be a good argument for such an exception? Who cares? Every rule bumps into an aexception sooner or later. Every "model" or "metaphor" has its limits. > The fact that it's hard to interface with the event-driven (or whatever) > interface models of certain current APIs might be due to other players in > this game than the UI toolkit. Event-drivenness is usually just a technical detail which may make the code ugly, buggy, and/or brittle, but rarely if ever has any real impact on the feasible behavior. > Let's say one can state what would be good from a UI perspective, and then > one will have to figure out what is reasonably doable from a technical > standpoint. Arguments IMHO start with the user-centric view! Who said otherwise? > Either way, I would humbly suggest that the bugs be fixed first; I know it's > hard and I know that I can't do it lacking knowledge of the technical > implementation. And I understand these things are difficult, so I won't > even try. There's no evidence that it's hard, actually. It's probably just plain and simple bugs, and like most bugs they can probably appear trivial and obvious if you happen to look at it from the right angle. Give it a try. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-08 13:12 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 15:46 ` Kevin Rodgers 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2005-04-08 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Stefan Monnier wrote: > As for overscrolling: yes, it has puzzled a few users occasionally, because > it's not obvious where the buffer actually ends. But note that this problem > is not specific to overscrolling since it already appears when viewing > a buffer too small to fill the window. Why can't the overscrolled portion of the window (or any portion beyond the end of the buffer) be displayed differently? I think the fringe face would be good for that. -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 15:46 ` Kevin Rodgers @ 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2005-04-09 8:04 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel > From: Kevin Rodgers <ihs_4664@yahoo.com> > Date: Fri, 08 Apr 2005 09:46:23 -0600 > > Why can't the overscrolled portion of the window (or any portion beyond > the end of the buffer) be displayed differently? I think the fringe > face would be good for that. There's already an optional feature to do this: default-indicate-unused-lines. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii @ 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-09 16:46 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-09 16:18 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-11 18:22 ` Kevin Rodgers 2 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-09 16:04 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: ihs_4664, emacs-devel Kim Storm wrote: > From: Kevin Rodgers <ihs_4664@yahoo.com> > Date: Fri, 08 Apr 2005 09:46:23 -0600 > > Why can't the overscrolled portion of the window (or any portion beyond > the end of the buffer) be displayed differently? I think the fringe > face would be good for that. There's already an optional feature to do this: default-indicate-unused-lines. I am always wary about changing default values close before a release, but in this case, it would seem completely harmless to enable this by default. This would make sense, since the purpose is to avoid confusing inexperienced users, who would typically not worry about customizing an option like this. The description of the option in the Emacs manual needs updating regardless, as it currently uses obsolete variable names. Sincerely, Luc. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-09 16:46 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-09 17:02 ` Luc Teirlinck 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Miles Bader @ 2005-04-09 16:46 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: eliz, ihs_4664, emacs-devel On Apr 10, 2005 1:04 AM, Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@dms.auburn.edu> wrote: > default-indicate-unused-lines. > > I am always wary about changing default values close before a release, > but in this case, it would seem completely harmless to enable this by > default. I seem to recall a previous flamewar about that... -Miles -- Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-09 16:46 ` Miles Bader @ 2005-04-09 17:02 ` Luc Teirlinck 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-09 17:02 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: eliz, ihs_4664, emacs-devel Miles Bader wrote: On Apr 10, 2005 1:04 AM, Luc Teirlinck <teirllm@dms.auburn.edu> wrote: > default-indicate-unused-lines. > > I am always wary about changing default values close before a release, > but in this case, it would seem completely harmless to enable this by > default. I seem to recall a previous flamewar about that... I must have missed that one. So much about it being "completely harmless", I guess. Sincerely, Luc. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-09 16:18 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-11 18:22 ` Kevin Rodgers 2 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-09 16:18 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: ihs_4664, emacs-devel >From my previous message: The description of the option in the Emacs manual needs updating regardless, as it currently uses obsolete variable names. I have just fixed this, since the required changes were trivial. Sincerely, Luc. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-09 16:18 ` Luc Teirlinck @ 2005-04-11 18:22 ` Kevin Rodgers 2 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Kevin Rodgers @ 2005-04-11 18:22 UTC (permalink / raw) Eli Zaretskii wrote: >>From: Kevin Rodgers <ihs_4664@yahoo.com> >>Date: Fri, 08 Apr 2005 09:46:23 -0600 >> >>Why can't the overscrolled portion of the window (or any portion beyond >>the end of the buffer) be displayed differently? I think the fringe >>face would be good for that. > > > There's already an optional feature to do this: > default-indicate-unused-lines. Wow, that is cool. I don't know how I missed it! -- Kevin Rodgers ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-07 19:26 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-07 19:41 ` Jan D. 2005-04-08 14:32 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2005-04-07 19:41 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, miles > PS: The only problem is that those toolkits have the idiotic idea > to enforce > that the bottom of the thumb cannot go further than the bottom. > And they > enforce it by hiding the events corresponding to "user moves the > mouse > yet-further-down". > > I can talk with the GTK developers about this. And also with the > LessTif developers. Should I do that? We already had this discussion, and Owen Taylor said (27 Mar 2003): > * Allowing dragging the scrollbar thumb past the end of the > trough is something I'm quite hesitant to do: > > - It will look like a bug to the user > - Some themes may not be able to handle such a case nicely (think > of a theme where the stepper arrows are round circles in the > trough instead of being as wide as the trough ... in that > case the thumb can't simply be truncated by the stepper arrow) http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2003-03/msg00609.html Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-07 19:41 ` Jan D. @ 2005-04-08 14:32 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-08 14:50 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-08 14:32 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel, monnier, miles I looked back at the 2003 conversation. Taylor simply refused to implement behavior that fits logically with Emacs, demanding that we change Emacs to put actual blank lines in the bottom of the screen. It would be absurd to change Emacs's text model to fit the demands of a GUI toolkit. However, we could consider computing the "total size" for scrolling to include N fictitious final blank lines, N = window height. With this technique, the slider would not touch the bottom until you have scrolled as far as you can. This has an undesirable feature: it would mean that you can't scroll to put point-max at the bottom of the screen just by looking at the scroll bar. However, I am not sure that matters terribly, since you can manage to see when you're at the end in other ways (such as by looking for Bot in the mode line). Also, it avoids another undesirable feature, which is that the visible slider would shrink as fewer lines remain at the top of the screen. Perhaps we should try this for GTK and LessTif scroll bars. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 14:32 ` Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-08 14:50 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-10 1:54 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-08 14:50 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, Jan D., emacs-devel, snogglethorpe, miles > It would be absurd to change Emacs's text model to fit the demands of > a GUI toolkit. However, we could consider computing the "total size" > for scrolling to include N fictitious final blank lines, N = window > height. > With this technique, the slider would not touch the bottom until you > have scrolled as far as you can. AFAIK that's what we do for LessTif and Gtk, Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-08 14:50 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-10 1:54 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-10 5:53 ` Jan D. 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-10 1:54 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: miles, david.reitter, jan.h.d, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel > It would be absurd to change Emacs's text model to fit the demands of > a GUI toolkit. However, we could consider computing the "total size" > for scrolling to include N fictitious final blank lines, N = window > height. AFAIK that's what we do for LessTif and Gtk, Jan, is that what we do for GTK? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-10 1:54 ` Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-10 5:53 ` Jan D. 2005-04-10 10:58 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-11 1:56 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 2 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Jan D. @ 2005-04-10 5:53 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel, Stefan Monnier, miles >> It would be absurd to change Emacs's text model to fit the demands of >> a GUI toolkit. However, we could consider computing the "total size" >> for scrolling to include N fictitious final blank lines, N = window >> height. > > AFAIK that's what we do for LessTif and Gtk, > > Jan, is that what we do for GTK? Yes,and for Lesstif/Motif. There has been bug reports on this approach. The main confusion seems to be that when a small buffer is used (like the three initial lines in the *scratch* buffer), the scrollbar thumb does not extend to the bottom, since we have added the fictitious lines at the bottom. The assumtion is that if you are seeing the whole buffer, the scroll bar thumb should indicate that by extending from top to bottom. Jan D. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-10 5:53 ` Jan D. @ 2005-04-10 10:58 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-11 1:56 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Miles Bader @ 2005-04-10 10:58 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, miles, emacs-devel, rms, Stefan Monnier On 4/10/05, Jan D. <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> wrote: > Yes,and for Lesstif/Motif. There has been bug reports on this > approach. The main confusion seems to be that when a small buffer is > used (like the three initial lines in the *scratch* buffer), the > scrollbar thumb does not extend to the bottom, since we have added the > fictitious lines at the bottom. The assumtion is that if you are > seeing the whole buffer, the scroll bar thumb should indicate that by > extending from top to bottom. Yes; while this workaround allows the scrollbar to be used fully, it's just that -- a workaround. It makes the scrollbar display quite unintuitive in the (common) situation Jan described. [IOW, the GTK maintainers aren't off the hook yet... :-] -Miles -- Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-10 5:53 ` Jan D. 2005-04-10 10:58 ` Miles Bader @ 2005-04-11 1:56 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-11 1:56 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, snogglethorpe, emacs-devel, monnier, miles Yes,and for Lesstif/Motif. There has been bug reports on this approach. The main confusion seems to be that when a small buffer is used (like the three initial lines in the *scratch* buffer), the scrollbar thumb does not extend to the bottom, since we have added the fictitious lines at the bottom. The assumtion is that if you are seeing the whole buffer, the scroll bar thumb should indicate that by extending from top to bottom. Yes, it is not perfect. But all the alternatives have drawbacks. This might be the best of all the possibilities. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar bug on OS X 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) Miles Bader 2005-04-06 22:25 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X David Kastrup @ 2005-04-06 22:44 ` Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 22:44 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: David Reitter, emacs-devel, miles > I'm curious how _any_ program manages to do this calculation in a > reasonable amount of time; do they really lay-out the _entire_ > document ahead of time? AFAIK, yes. HTML rendering engines do the rendering "eagerly" as they receive the HTML data. They typically do it in a separate thread, so while the page is being rendered things aren't stable on screen (objects may still move, and the slider may change size). Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar size flaky on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) 2005-04-06 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 14:32 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 16:17 ` David Reitter 2005-04-06 17:19 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X Stefan Monnier 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 16:17 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel Addendum: > That's exactly what it represent: the ratio slider/total is the same > as the > ratio shownchars/buffercharsize. But depending on where you are in the > buffer the window will not always show the same number of chars, so > the size > of the slider changes accordingly. Not sure if that gets updated correctly. Take a look at the three screenshots I put up here: http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/dreitter/scrollbar-issue/ You'll see some random document in a buffer. Screenshots 1 and 2 show different parts of the document, and you see that the slider has a totally different size. To me as a user, it looks like we're seeing about the same amount of the buffer in the window. So why does the slider have a different size? If I play around (scroll back and forth) a little more, you can see what happens - screenshot 3 shows the same portion of the buffer as in 2, but this time with a very small slider. According to your explanation and looking at the size of the buffer, screenshots 1 and 3 are correct, but 2 is not. -- Dave ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Scrollbar size flaky on OS X 2005-04-06 16:17 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter @ 2005-04-06 17:19 ` Stefan Monnier 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-06 17:19 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: emacs-devel >> That's exactly what it represent: the ratio slider/total is the same as >> the >> ratio shownchars/buffercharsize. But depending on where you are in the >> buffer the window will not always show the same number of chars, so the >> size >> of the slider changes accordingly. > Not sure if that gets updated correctly. > Take a look at the three screenshots I put up here: > http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/dreitter/scrollbar-issue/ > You'll see some random document in a buffer. Screenshots 1 and 2 show > different parts of the document, and you see that the slider has a totally > different size. To me as a user, it looks like we're seeing about the same > amount of the buffer in the window. So why does the slider have > a different size? > If I play around (scroll back and forth) a little more, you can see what > happens - screenshot 3 shows the same portion of the buffer as in 2, but > this time with a very small slider. > According to your explanation and looking at the size of the buffer, > screenshots 1 and 3 are correct, but 2 is not. Looks like a bug indeed. Stefan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 0:02 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-05 14:58 ` Stefan Monnier @ 2005-04-05 19:07 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-05 19:25 ` Lennart Borgman 2 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-05 19:07 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: monnier, emacs-devel From a UI and an OS X perspective, customization buffers should definitely go into proper dialogues with native widgets. Most cases, perhaps nearly all, would be easily handled with those native widgets. But it might be hard to make this support everything that Emacs customizations actually do. Meanwhile, we could afford to maintain this for one set of widgets, such as GTK. But if the idea were to use the native widget set of every system, you're talking about a tremendous amount of work. Successful OS X software pretty much always uses the native user interface. The purpose of Emacs is to enhance the GNU operating system of which it is part, and thus to contribute to the liberation of computer users from non-free software. Mac OS is a non-free operating system. Viewed amorally, as mere technology, it may be useful; but it is fundamentally unethical. Our goal is to replace it with free software, not to enhance it. To produce "successful OS X software" is a distraction from the goal. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-05 19:07 ` Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-05 19:25 ` Lennart Borgman 2005-04-06 14:59 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2005-04-05 19:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: monnier, emacs-devel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Stallman" <rms@gnu.org> > Meanwhile, we could afford to maintain this for one set of widgets, > such as GTK. But if the idea were to use the native widget set of > every system, you're talking about a tremendous amount of work. What about wxwidgets? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-05 19:25 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2005-04-06 14:59 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-06 16:20 ` David Kastrup 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-06 14:59 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, monnier, emacs-devel What about wxwidgets? I don't know anything about them technically, but if they make the job easier and they are free software, there is no theoretical reason we could not use them. However, our priority should be GTK, I think. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-06 14:59 ` Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-06 16:20 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Kastrup @ 2005-04-06 16:20 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: Lennart Borgman, emacs-devel, monnier, david.reitter Richard Stallman <rms@gnu.org> writes: > What about wxwidgets? > > I don't know anything about them technically, but if they make > the job easier and they are free software, there is no theoretical > reason we could not use them. > > However, our priority should be GTK, I think. wxwidgets take GTK+ as one of their backends, so one does not exclude the other. However, AFAICS wxwidgets supports just C++. I don't think that it would make sense to move Emacs to C++. Also they are third-party software. Basing Emacs ports to rely on them in favor of other approaches would seem like a strategical risk to me. Such a commitment, I think, would require some securities. Anyway, given the C++ problem, I don't think that we need to think about that. If somebody wants to invest time taking a look how to combine Emacs with xwidgets without having to replace our build and memory allocation infra structure, that's fine. But I can't see it as a viable porting path at the moment. -- David Kastrup, Kriemhildstr. 15, 44793 Bochum ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-06 16:20 ` David Kastrup @ 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-07 22:24 ` Lennart Borgman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-07 18:27 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: lennart.borgman.073, monnier, david.reitter, emacs-devel wxwidgets take GTK+ as one of their backends, so one does not exclude the other. However, AFAICS wxwidgets supports just C++. I don't think that it would make sense to move Emacs to C++. Yes, that is a pretty severe drawback. Thanks for analyzing the issue. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-07 22:24 ` Lennart Borgman 2005-04-08 9:17 ` Johan Vromans 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Lennart Borgman @ 2005-04-07 22:24 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, Robert Roebling, monnier, emacs-devel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Stallman" <rms@gnu.org> To: "David Kastrup" <dak@gnu.org> Cc: <lennart.borgman.073@student.lu.se>; <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>; <david.reitter@gmail.com>; <emacs-devel@gnu.org> Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 8:27 PM Subject: Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior > wxwidgets take GTK+ as one of their backends, so one does not exclude > the other. However, AFAICS wxwidgets supports just C++. I don't > think that it would make sense to move Emacs to C++. > > Yes, that is a pretty severe drawback. Thanks for analyzing the issue. I wrote to wx-users@lists.wxwidgets.org and asked and got this promising answer (and some other too): > Can wxWidgets be used from C? You might want to have a look at wx.NET (the C# bindings for wxWidgets) which have (or at least used to have) intermediate C-bindings. mvh, Robert Roebling ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-07 22:24 ` Lennart Borgman @ 2005-04-08 9:17 ` Johan Vromans 2005-04-08 9:50 ` David Reitter 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Johan Vromans @ 2005-04-08 9:17 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: rms, david.reitter, Robert Roebling, emacs-devel, monnier "Lennart Borgman" <lennart.borgman.073@student.lu.se> writes: >> Yes, that is a pretty severe drawback. Thanks for analyzing the issue. > > I wrote to wx-users@lists.wxwidgets.org and asked and got this promising > answer (and some other too): Also, I think the number of widgets that emacs will use is rather limited. -- Johan ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-08 9:17 ` Johan Vromans @ 2005-04-08 9:50 ` David Reitter 2005-04-09 3:38 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: David Reitter @ 2005-04-08 9:50 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: rms, Lennart Borgman, Robert Roebling, emacs-devel, monnier On 8 Apr 2005, at 10:17, Johan Vromans wrote: > Also, I think the number of widgets that emacs will use is rather > limited. Using a UI toolkit represents a long-term commitment. Given that UI toolkits seem to live in a fashion-driven biosphere, it might be interesting to consider alternatives. How about documenting interfaces for the most commonly used functions, starting with tasks where a good GUI would be helpful? For example, one could define a structured language to serialize customization settings, which could then be parsed by little external modules - written by the community or the port people in order to implement system-native behavior. This would not preclude the use of the default behavior, i.e. customization buffers. I understand (and I know very little about the technical side of emacs!) that custom options have such an API anyways - it would come down to defining a serialization (to write stuff into a file and read it out again) and an update protocol. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-08 9:50 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-09 3:38 ` Richard Stallman 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-09 3:38 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: lennart.borgman.073, robert, emacs-devel, monnier, jvromans How about documenting interfaces for the most commonly used functions, starting with tasks where a good GUI would be helpful? For example, one could define a structured language to serialize customization settings, which could then be parsed by little external modules - written by the community or the port people in order to implement system-native behavior. This would not preclude the use of the default behavior, This sounds like a research project to me. It might be an interesting research project, for whoever is minded to do research in this area. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 17:47 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-05 4:22 ` Richard Stallman 1 sibling, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Richard Stallman @ 2005-04-05 4:22 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, monnier, emacs-devel Emacs already tends to blend quite better with its environment than XEmacs does (which looks like, well, XEmacs everywhere), and this is not a mistake, in my opinion. To the extent that we can make Emacs fit the general GUI environment without altering the core features of Emacs, it is a usually good thing to do so. I would be against altering keyboard keys, except in very narrow was such as swapping DEL and BS. And changing the main mouse commands such as Mouse-1 between systems seems like a bad idea too. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 11:40 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 14:02 ` David Reitter @ 2005-04-04 18:25 ` Aidan Kehoe 2005-04-04 21:01 ` Eli Zaretskii 1 sibling, 1 reply; 54+ messages in thread From: Aidan Kehoe @ 2005-04-04 18:25 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: David Reitter, emacs-devel Ar an ceathrú lá de mí Aibréan, scríobh David Kastrup: > [...] Should one make people abandon Emacs that have been using it for 20 > years, so that a newcomer will take an hour instead of half an hour > before giving up on it? That’s a false dichotomy; people who have been using some form of Emacs for twenty years are informed enough to be able to configure their way around the new defaults. New users, very much less so. > In addition, catering to the idiosyncrasies of a specific platform like > MacOSX is a lot of work if you want to keep Emacs fully functional and > reasonably consistent (where appropriate) across platforms. Certainly, but most of the work should be up-front--assuming stuff like cua-mode keeps respecting the Apple key--and they’re volunteering to do it. And, given that Andrew Choi is gone, and the Carbon port is very much alive, it seems there is and will be a decent userbase prepared to support GNU Emacs on that platform. > [snipping stuff on the GUI development of GNU Emacs and the package list > of this package, neither of which I have much interest in.] -- “I, for instance, am gung-ho about open source because my family is being held hostage in Rob Malda’s basement. But who fact-checks me, or Enderle, when we say something in public? No-one!” -- Danny O’Brien ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
* Re: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior 2005-04-04 18:25 ` Aidan Kehoe @ 2005-04-04 21:01 ` Eli Zaretskii 0 siblings, 0 replies; 54+ messages in thread From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2005-04-04 21:01 UTC (permalink / raw) Cc: david.reitter, emacs-devel > From: Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@parhasard.net> > Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2005 20:25:20 +0200 > Cc: David Reitter <david.reitter@gmail.com>, emacs-devel@gnu.org > > > [...] Should one make people abandon Emacs that have been using it for 20 > > years, so that a newcomer will take an hour instead of half an hour > > before giving up on it? > > That's a false dichotomy; people who have been using some form of Emacs for > twenty years are informed enough to be able to configure their way around > the new defaults. That depends on the amount of configuring around the defaults. If that amount gets too large, I, for one, would be very unpleased. I use Emacs for productivity, not for the dubious pleasure of wasting my time hunting down new defaults that make Emacs behave contrary to my expectations. Please also don't forget that quite a few veteran Emacs users routinely work with several different Emacs versions on different machines, so having too many differences between versions means those Emacs veterans will have hard time crafting customizations that work with all of the versions. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 54+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2005-04-11 18:22 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 54+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2005-04-03 10:37 Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior David Reitter 2005-04-04 11:40 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 14:02 ` David Reitter 2005-04-04 17:28 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-04 17:47 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-04 23:27 ` David Reitter 2005-04-05 0:02 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-05 14:58 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 13:03 ` David Reitter 2005-04-06 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 14:32 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 2005-04-06 17:14 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 22:07 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) Miles Bader 2005-04-06 22:25 ` Scrollbar bug on OS X David Kastrup 2005-04-06 22:51 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-07 19:26 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-07 19:30 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 19:46 ` Jan D. 2005-04-07 19:59 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 2:05 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-08 11:31 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 12:42 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-08 13:12 ` David Reitter 2005-04-08 14:08 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-08 15:46 ` Kevin Rodgers 2005-04-09 8:04 ` Eli Zaretskii 2005-04-09 16:04 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-09 16:46 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-09 17:02 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-09 16:18 ` Luc Teirlinck 2005-04-11 18:22 ` Kevin Rodgers 2005-04-07 19:41 ` Jan D. 2005-04-08 14:32 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-08 14:50 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-10 1:54 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-10 5:53 ` Jan D. 2005-04-10 10:58 ` Miles Bader 2005-04-11 1:56 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-06 22:44 ` Stefan Monnier 2005-04-06 16:17 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X (was: Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior) David Reitter 2005-04-06 17:19 ` Scrollbar size flaky on OS X Stefan Monnier 2005-04-05 19:07 ` Aquamacs distro for OS X like behavior Richard Stallman 2005-04-05 19:25 ` Lennart Borgman 2005-04-06 14:59 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-06 16:20 ` David Kastrup 2005-04-07 18:27 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-07 22:24 ` Lennart Borgman 2005-04-08 9:17 ` Johan Vromans 2005-04-08 9:50 ` David Reitter 2005-04-09 3:38 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-05 4:22 ` Richard Stallman 2005-04-04 18:25 ` Aidan Kehoe 2005-04-04 21:01 ` Eli Zaretskii
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