On Wed, 2007-10-31 at 16:54 +0000, Calum Benson wrote: > On 31 Oct 2007, at 13:54, Denis Washington wrote: > > > > > I have made a mockup that integrates Mousetweaks settings into the > > mouse > > capplet: > > > > http://ultimum-projekt.de/mockups/mouse.html > > > > I hope I haven't forgotten everything. Comments? > > Tab names need some thought, but otherwise looks quite neat. I > think you'd ideally want some sort of preview area on the > Accessibility tab as well, though, for testing out the two functions > there that have a delay slider. > > Also just noticed a couple of points that apply to the existing Mouse > capplet: > > - I'd suggest that something like "interval" might be a better term > than "timeout" for double-click settings. I'm not sure my granny > would know what a "timeout" was, even if she were still alive :) > > - "Double-click" should only be hyphenated in it's noun form IIRC, so > I think "try to double-click" is incorrect. (I'd check this in the > doc styleguide, but the *.gnome.org websites seem to be dead right now.)
Actually, the GDP Style Guide says to use the hyphenated form for the verb as well: double-click on Definition: To press and release the left mouse button on an item twice, in rapid succession. Usage: Normal text rules. Example: To start an application from the desktop, double-click on the application launcher. My initial inclination was to agree with you, but after consulting with my good friend Lynda, goddess of grammar, I think I've changed my mind. In noun form, "double click" is a simple adjective-noun combination, and doesn't require a hyphen. In verb form, it could be taken as an adverb-verb combination, but "double" isn't frequently used as an adverb. (In all cases I can think of where it is used as an adverb, it's used in the postfix position.) So it's more like we're using a noun phrase as a verb, something which is very popular in our industry. And when using a noun phrase as a verb, one should really hyphenate the phrase. Then again, the computer industry has created much of its own terminology to suit its needs. As various terms and phrases have become more common, we've adjusted our usage of them to be less awkward. So perhaps it's time we just consider "double click" and "right click" proper compound verbs and ditch the hyphens. -- Shaun _______________________________________________ gnome-accessibility-list mailing list gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list