Re: [Inkscape-devel] [Inkscape-user] Baffling UI
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 11:52:09PM +0100, Olivier Lefevre wrote:
Thanks for the explanations. So if I create the rectangle and immediately switch to the select tool yes I get to see its properties and change them. It did not occur to me to try the selector because the object seemed to have disappeared as soon as I clicked elsewhere. I'll be damned if I know why it was white: I have _viewed_ some SVG documents in Inkscape before but this is my first stab at creating one.
In the status bar I would suggest not using F and S but spelling out Fill and Stroke in full: there is enough space for that and if you are a newcomer and both F and S say "N/A" it is not obvious what they refer to. Besides it seems weird for the stroke to be N/A: I can understand
Would it perhaps be clearer to get rid of the labels entirely and just show a rectangle or other shape in the fill color, with a border in the stroke color (if any)? Then we could eliminate the need to localize at all, which could be beneficial in languages where the translation for 'fill' or 'stroke' may end up being a longer word.
Bryce
having no fill but how can an object have neither fill nor stroke yet still somehow exist? As per your own message, shouldn't the stroke have been white or transparent and not N/A? White is definitely a color and in most editing tools transparent _is_ a color, too, albeit obviously a peculiar one.
Inkscape is not a viewer. Its primary function is editing. Therefore, plain arrow keys are reserved for the most basic editing action:
OK.
-- O.L.
On 1/29/07, Bryce Harrington <bryce@...961...> wrote:
Would it perhaps be clearer to get rid of the labels entirely and just show a rectangle or other shape in the fill color, with a border in the stroke color (if any)?
I don't think so, because you can't make it large enough for the color to be visible enough. The current layout presents wide enough swatches for both colors which can be quickly identified even with a quick sideways glance. If one of the colors will be applied to a thin frame, it will be much more frustrating to try to find out what color it really is. More importantly, now each of the swatches can display a text label - "None", "Unset", etc. - which you can't fit into such a "frame swatch". Also each swatch now displays a gradient preview with an "L" or "R" prefix to indicate linear and radial (elliptic). Not only you cannot fit these letters into the framed swatch, but without them, in many cases it's difficult to tell a slight gradient from a flat color, especially if applied to the stroke.
participants (2)
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Bryce Harrington
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bulia byak