World: r3wp
[!REBOL3 GUI]
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Pekr 15-Oct-2010 [3894] | hmm, looks easy to do :-) |
Henrik 15-Oct-2010 [3895] | Anyone thinks it should be some other way? I agree on the current behavior. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3896] | ...the current behavior - am I right that you mean the one described by Pekr? |
Henrik 15-Oct-2010 [3897] | yes |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3898x2] | OK, thanks |
So, does everybody else want to "remain silent forever" in this respect? | |
Pekr 15-Oct-2010 [3900] | Any other point of view, how Cyphre's code could be interpreted? |
Izkata 15-Oct-2010 [3901] | vpanel 2 [.....] -> "I want 2 vertical panels" -> button 1 button 4 button 2 button 5 button 3 button 6 |
Pekr 15-Oct-2010 [3902] | Izkata: So how should system know, how many elements you want to have in each? |
GrahamC 15-Oct-2010 [3903x2] | That's also how rebgui does it ... across is default so vpanel 2 [ .. ] is two coumns |
columns | |
Izkata 15-Oct-2010 [3905] | I've actually not used either, Pekr just asked for other interpretations - and that's how I first read Cyphre's code. Pekr: Elements divided by number, rounded up (with final column simply containing the remainder) is how I would do it... |
Robert 15-Oct-2010 [3906x2] | The thing is: Either the number is like a SKIP refinement or like the number for LOOP |
IMO SKIP is more useful as it eleminates explict NEWLINE items. | |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3908] | Izkata: understood, and how about the Hpanel? There you want the layout proposed by Pekr? |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3909x2] | The number for rows/cols still isn't intuitive to me ("2 columns" or "2 rows" would be clear). As far as ordering, it would be nice if you could lay out your code so it "maps" visually to the layout. |
That goes along with what Daniel (Iskata) is saying. | |
Robert 15-Oct-2010 [3911] | If you have V* than the number is always H and vice versa. IMO that's something good to remember. Otherwise source can become to chatty. And yes, laying out the code in the intended way is good style anyway. |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3912] | Not his layout, but the idea of "I have n groups". |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3913] | Aha, did not know, that RebGUI did it that way |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3914x2] | So, if you specify an H or V mode (and mindset), then when you're grouping your faces, do you think in terms of a FORSKIP look or a SPLIT model? And what makes it easy to add a new row or col? |
vpanel 1 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] vpanel 2 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] vpanel 3 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] hpanel 1 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] hpanel 2 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] hpanel 3 [ button "1" button "2" button "3" button "4" button "5" button "6" ] | |
Henrik 15-Oct-2010 [3916] | an alternate type of grouping could be blocks of blocks: panel [ [button "1" button "2"] [button "3" button "4"] [button "5" button "6"] ] not sure how useful that is. |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3917] | Note, I am not saying that's what I expect, but rather it's to visualize how the orientation affects the order. Something else to think about is whether you can, or should be able to, invert H and V and have the layout still work. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3918] | invert H and V and have the layout still work - that is generally not impossible, of course, but it is against the readability requirement Cyphre mentioned as his reason why he proposed Hpanel and Vpanel styles instead of having panel #H panel #V |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3919] | In order to transpose the grid, you need to know the number of items in the opposite axis of the panel. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3920x2] | In order to be able to show the grid you need to know the number of items in both axes, but that is not the problem to compute |
This is more a dialect design problem, i.e. what will be more "intuitive" for the user | |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3922x2] | I don' t know how the row/col value overrides, or avoids conflicting with, the width of the face, or if the parent' panel is sized as a layout, based on sub-faces and you can't change it. A pair! would have the same problem, if used to explicity state both the number of rows and columns. |
Yes, and I think the grouping of the data in the code layout is the driving force there. The number tells you how many "groups" (H or V) and then you enter items so they are contextually related in the code. | |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3924] | A pair! has two more problems, actually: 1) it is redundant, since knowing the number of cells, and just one of the dimensions, you can easily compute the other one; such a data redundancy is, in databases, called "denormalized data" and is undesirable 2) the user frequently wants to give just one number, assuming, that the other is computed every time some cells are added or removed, thus, not wishing to give the value for both dimensions |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3925] | 1) Eliminating redundancy is not the same as normalization. 2) "the user frequently wants to..." This is speculation, isn't it? :-) I could just as easily say that the normal case is that I know how I want my canonical grid laid out, and I may want to specify some cells to be empty. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3926] | the user frequently wants to... - that it is not a speculation, I was told by Cyphre that there are at least two users frequently wanting that |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3927] | And while we can say that normalization's goal is to eliminate redundancy in storage, we can also say that it doesn't solve the redundancy problem at all levels (e.g. when joining data). There are also reasons to denormalize. It's interesting to think about though. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3928] | specify some cells to be empty - the number of cells is given by specifying the graphical objects in the layout; the software can count them and know the number of cells; if you want to obtain "empty cells" just put in some Pads |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3929x2] | ...that there are at least two users frequently wanting that I stand corrected. :-) |
Pads - Yes, Gabriele's design had an elegant solution for this IIRC. | |
Maxim 15-Oct-2010 [3931x2] | the last time I worked on a grid, the sizing values where autocomputed and shared accross rows and columns. |
when one cell changed a single X or Y value, all the other cells of the same row or column where aware and could update on their own. | |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3933] | Please, keep in mind, that this discussion is not about computation! This is about the dialect, which must not be redundant to not allow to specify impossible combinations |
Maxim 15-Oct-2010 [3934x2] | the overall sizing algorithm took care of "collateral" effects. |
but the *design* of the layout engine provides logical clues into how it should be expressed in terms of a dialect. | |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3936] | Max - Which brings up the point of what controls the size. Do the sub-faces control the size of the panel, or does the panel control the size of the sub-faces? Ladislav - Yes. |
Maxim 15-Oct-2010 [3937x3] | if the system uses the whole column to resize things horizontally (width affecting word-wrap and thus controls height indirectly) then the height should be automatic. |
should == "could" | |
to me a lot of this discussion resembles HTML table box model discussion... maybe you should look into how they solved the various issues. for example, cells can "span", which is an elegent way to solve the gaps in cell data. | |
Gregg 15-Oct-2010 [3940] | Yes, I think tables are key here (tbl did spanning long before HTML I believe :-). Do H and V panels help that much, e.g. to reduce clutter? I imagine the team talked about that, and whether just a TABLE would be enough. |
Ladislav 15-Oct-2010 [3941x3] | Gregg: regarding the difference between Vpanel and Hpanel. Pekr wrote something that makes sense to me, showing how a layout should look. You wrote a "source code", which does not allow me to "see the look you want", in fact. |
Do you want in Vpanel the second element to be below the first one, or to the right of it? | |
(assuming both positions are available) | |
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