On 22 Feb 2006, at 13:32, Christopher Creutzig wrote:
Dave Baldwin wrote:
I don't think the correspondence of dot and cross to edited and un- edited is obvious or natural and it would be better to no show any
Actually, I think it's obvious, given that the red close button in all OS X apps behaves the same way. (Except you only get the cross when moving the mouse pointer near it.)
i.e. the button is empty when there is nothing to do (to save your work), but is marked always when you need to do something. It gains a close symbol (cross) when you mouse near it (and you have noting to do) to give some weak idea of what an arbitrary coloured button does. Plenty was written why this is poor UI design when OS X was first released - beauty over function.
With TM the invisible button (holding the dot or cross) is marked when you have nothing to do and when you have something to do. When you mouse close to the button it appears.
Anyhow my real point was you couldn't instantly see which files needed saving without having to read along the tabs. Try having a dozen or so files open and the odd one or two dirty. Using colour and/or a symbol / no symbol to show this works much better than using two symbols, one of which is always showing.
Dave.
Regards, Christopher
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