Hi,

I think stroke to path is already a naming convention for a very similar functionality, so I will keep this name if possible if the feature is not too different. If a user will receive most of the time the same result I will try to keep it to avoid confusion. Having too many features with similar behaviours could be frustrating.

I would strongly suggest not to create a new menu option if the behaviour is not too different from the expected one if we think the users are going to keep using it as they were doing before.

Otherwise, reading the feature explanation, "decompose object" or "deconstruct object"sounds self-explanatory to me.

I don't have an answer, but I would raise some questions about how we think it is going to be used: what is the purpose, what is the expected outcome and I would compare to the stroke to path option to ensure that are enough different.

:)

On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 10:20 AM, Olof Bjarnason <olof.bjarnason@...400...> wrote:




Mvh


/Olof
-----------------
Är du systemutvecklare?


On 7 May 2016 at 10:14, C R <cajhne@...400...> wrote:
Basicly, this is how Stroke to Fill should work.

How it works now:
Ctrl+Alt+C > Stroke to Path

Result: stroke is indeed converted to path, but the fill and all other parts of the selection that are not strokes vanish. If any LPEs are applied to the path they are thrown out as well (you need to convert object to path before this operation to preserve the appearance).


How it should work (this "deconstruct" alternative):
Ctrl+Alt+C > Stroke to Path

Result: All LPE's applied to stroke, then the stroke is converted to path.

My thought is, if we use the convention that a fill is only turned into an object if there is a fill set on the object, then we can please anyone who prefers the old behaviour. All they have to do is get rid of the fill colour on the object before applying Stroke to Path.

The current way it's handled is counter-intuitive. Most of the time, all you want to do is convert the outline to a fill, not throw away tons of data. The point is to preserve appearance, and the Jabier's new function does this much much better.

Thanks, that is a good explanation. However the wording "stroke to path" isn't that clear to me.

Now that I understand what is going on I think "deconstruct" is actually a quite good albeit little techy word for the operation. "Decompose"? "Path to fills"? 

The end result is a bunch of filled paths, and the input is what exactly? I think "X to Y" is a good but then the X and the Y should be closer to what the operation is actually doing ;)

 

My 2p.
-C






On Sat, May 7, 2016 at 9:03 AM, Olof Bjarnason <olof.bjarnason@...400...> wrote:
Is there any image giving an example of what the command does...? Like before/after with arrows and descriptive text?

It's kind of hard to understand what is happening from the very brief description at the top of that thread...



Mvh


/Olof
-----------------
Är du systemutvecklare?


On 7 May 2016 at 09:53, Jabiertxo Arraiza Cenoz <jabier.arraiza@...2893...> wrote:
Hi to all UI power!
I Just to know a name for the patch https://bugs.launchpad.net/inkscape
/+bug/1556592


See the ScislaC proposal on #5
Bryce like "Deconstruct object", me too.

Is ok the name? Another one?

Cheers, Jabier.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find and fix application performance issues faster with Applications Manager
Applications Manager provides deep performance insights into multiple tiers of
your business applications. It resolves application problems quickly and
reduces your MTTR. Get your free trial!
https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/302982198;130105516;z
_______________________________________________
Inkscape-devel mailing list
Inkscape-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-devel



------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find and fix application performance issues faster with Applications Manager
Applications Manager provides deep performance insights into multiple tiers of
your business applications. It resolves application problems quickly and
reduces your MTTR. Get your free trial!
https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/302982198;130105516;z
_______________________________________________
Inkscape-devel mailing list
Inkscape-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-devel




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find and fix application performance issues faster with Applications Manager
Applications Manager provides deep performance insights into multiple tiers of
your business applications. It resolves application problems quickly and
reduces your MTTR. Get your free trial!
https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/clk/302982198;130105516;z
_______________________________________________
Inkscape-devel mailing list
Inkscape-devel@...1794...s.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-devel