You can dock gimp dialogs into one window along with the canvas...I think. A fews years ago I remember doing this. I think it was a plugin that I used. Perhaps do a google search and maybe it will turn up.
heathenx
Ocetalo wrote the following on 2/1/2008 10:44 AM:
I agree with you. I have the same problem when using GIMP, and it gets even worse. Not only floating dialogs on specific features (such as color levels or filters), but also the three GIMP base windows: the main tools window, the second tab windows (including channels, layers, textures, etc.) and the canvas window are open separately, so one has to be sitching and switching from one to another. I thought it was GIMP's fault. By reading you I see it's Windows'. That's kind of ironic something named "Windows" has such a bad management of windows, isn't it?
2008/2/1, Daniel Hulme <art@...1790... mailto:art@...1790...>:
On Fri, Feb 01, 2008 at 10:07:22AM -0500, Richard Querin wrote: > Also, the behaviour/frustration of working with floating dialogs > depends on what platform you're on. I second that. I often hear Windows users complain about programs that use multiple windows for toolboxes and such, and I see where they're coming from. At work, when I have to use Windows, it's inconvenient mostly when I have Inkscape (or GIMP) as well as another window (usually, the document I'm drawing illustrations for): if I click on the other document's window on the taskbar to edit that, and then click on the Inkscape one to bring that to the front, the toolboxes end up left behind the other document. When I do this in Linux, I can make arbitrary windows be on top or group them, and then I don't have a problem; in fact, it is advantageous, because I have more control over where to put them and when to display them. My only problem is that I keep trying to press escape to get rid of them (particularly the Find dialog), which does nothing. If your workflow is impeded by missing features in your window manager, you should complain to the supplier of the window manager. I think it's a shame that the hard-working and dedicated Inkscape authors have had to spend time working around misfeatures in third-party software; that said, I look forward to 0.46, and hope that dockable dialogs bring with them other benefits. -- It's so hard to see the Sun with the truth in your eyes. http://surreal.istic.org/ Calm down, it's only ones and zeroes.