W dniu 10 stycznia 2010 09:00 użytkownik Diederik van Lierop <mail@...1689...> napisał:
Well, that's the whole idea of the snapping mechanism: If snapping is on, then snapping should take place. For some tools though it can be overridden by holding the shift key. But maybe I don't understand the problem here; what else would you expect? BTW, there is a shortcut key to toggle snapping quickly.
I would expect that if there is no snap indicator displayed, the point I'm dragging will stay in the place it's currently at when I drop it, according to the principle of least astonishment. If there is no indication of snapping, snapping should not occur. Otherwise the snap delay setting is not useful: my movements will snap regardless of whether the snap indicator is displayed or not, so there is no reason to slow down work by setting it to something larger than 0.
Why don't you just turn off the snap delay in the preferences? This gives you the behavior you're looking for, or doesn't it?
It does, but only sort of. If the snap delay is zero, I can no longer make unsnapped movements. If the snap delay is non-zero, I have to wait for the snapping delay to expire every time I adjust the position. So there is no way for me to win. :) I know this might not be easy to implement, but after playing with snapping for some time I think such behavior would be the most convenient for the user.
Regards, Krzysztof