I'm a new mailing list user so feel free to point out my errors so I can get it right next time.
I joined the GIMP User mailing list because I was unable to find an easier way to send feedback of any kind.... and the developer list didn't seem appropriate because I'm not a developer and wouldn't be. I simply have some comments and suggestions that I want to pass on in the hope that the development group makes some changes to GIMP in the future. First, to be clear, I'm referring to the most recent version of GIMP which appears not to have been updated in a long while... v2.6.11 I've *HAD* GIMP for quite some time and occasionally use it but each time I do I find it a bit too disorganized for my liking so I return to the software I usually use. But recently, I upgraded to Windows 7 (64) and found that my preferred software would not install in the 64-bit environment. So I had to try something else so there I was looking at GIMP again. One of my first complaints came when I took a screen shot then pasted the contents of the clipboard into GIMP and tried to save the file. My plan was to save it as a Windows Bitmap (*.BMP) so naturally I selected SAVE AS... and then arrived at the troublesome SAVE AS window. 1) I noted that the folder tree was not in sync with the SAVE IN folder. Not even when I created a new folder did the tree realign itself to show the location where that folder had been created. That made it VERY easy to end up creating folders in completely unexpected locations. And of course, finding a misplaced folder is equally difficult. So my first recommendation is that GIMP's SAVE IMAGE window be restructured to cause the folder tree under the PLACES heading, to always remain in sync with the active folder .... to expand to reveal it. So whether you change the SAVE IN folder drop list, or you click one of the folder shortcut buttons, or you create a new folder..... however a folder is accessed, the tree should always expand to that folder. 2) When I first tried to save my image as a BMP, I tried to do so by changing the drop list at the bottom right of the SAVE IMAGE window. It begins with ALL IMAGES as the default so it seemed to me that selecting Windows Bitmap (*.BMP) in that list would do the trick.... which of course it did not. Strangely the file was given an XCF extension. It was only after I expanded the item entitled LIST FILE TYPE (BY EXTENSION) that my choice of the "Windows Bitmap (BMP)" file type took on any meaning. The point here is that it wasn't intuitive. I had to save twice and first got something I didn't expect then corrected my mistake to achieve the saving of a BMP as expected. I'm still not clear about why the right hand filter exists if it serves no purpose when saving? So my second suggestion is to clarify the file type selection for saving files so that it becomes intuitive and unmistakable. 3) The third issue is one of esthetics. GIMP is divided into separate windows. We all see the Toolbox, an Image Window and a Layers window.... but they are separate windows rather than child processes. That leads to an interesting problem when you want to minimize (not close) GIMP. Closing GIMP shuts down all the open windows but minimizing has effect on only the central image window. In fact, the Toolbox and Layer windows don't even have minimize buttons. So there is no way to actually completely minimize GIMP. There will always be some remnant of it left covering the screen unless the Toolbox etc... windows are closed. This was really awkward for me as my graphics work has me constantly minimizing and restoring. But maximizing presents a similar problem. Since the Toolbox and Layer windows are not child windows, they obstruct the central image window when it is maximized and that can get annoying really fast. In my *efforts* to use GIMP I found myself constantly resizing and closing and opening different elements of the program and that was not only time consuming and required additional effort but also left me wanting a different image editing program. So my third suggestion is to consolidate GIMPs Toolbox, Layer and similar windows into GIMPs main window so that they are child processes and never obstruct the image window. That would also allow for minimizing everything at once. GIMP seems like a very capable image editing program so I'd really like to see it continue in development. And if it does, I hope to see these suggestions somehow incorporated into it. Now I just have to cross my fingers and hope that the right people see this post and feel the same way. I'm outta here. HAP _______________________________________________ Gimp-user mailing list Gimp-user@lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU https://lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user