Single-window mode specification

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Revision as of 18:01, 4 May 2011 by Guiguru (talk)
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introduction

This is the specification for the single-window mode, in addition to the multi-window one.

analysis + design goals

Designing the single-window mode (swm) interaction solution boils down to the following tasks:

  1. understanding the user needs behind the huge request for single window and base the overall design on it;
  2. design the switching that controls which is the current active image under swm;
  3. design the opening and closing of GIMP and image files under swm;
  4. design working side-by-side with several files under swm;
  5. redesign docking and tearing off of dockable dialogs, and whole columns of them.

understanding single window

The interest from users is huge among users, literally 100 time higher than any other GIMP topic. Absorbing and classifying all the input, we define the following user needs that drive this interest:

single application instance
This is the user need to see the (usually single) GIMP application instance that is running represented as a single entity. e.g. one item in the ‘taskbar,’ only one menubar (not one on every open file).
stop fighting window managers
Users are fed up with GIMP dialogs getting lost under document windows. And with the ‘taskbar’ being stuffed with non-entities. This has a lot to do with bad window managers and window manager communication on several platforms. All this cannot be ‘repaired.’ Users see the magic bullet in to stop fighting and go single window.
single working plane
This is the user need for a work surface where everything is GIMP, and only GIMP, to concentrate on working. It also is the need for an end to every GIMP window, toolbox and dialog floating around in the desktop window stack individually.

Reminder: the world is still a 50-50 place: 50% of users want to keep the current multi-window way, and the other 50% is looking forward to a single-window interface.

switching the current image

opening and closing of files

working side-by-side

docking and tearing off