On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 5:46 PM, Michal Suchanek <hramr...@centrum.cz> wrote: > 2009/9/25 Bean <bean12...@gmail.com>: >> On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 5:00 PM, Michal Suchanek <hramr...@centrum.cz> wrote: >>> If I understand it correctly this means that a panel is a bunch of >>> cells which are laid out horizontally and at some random point (but at >>> most after max_columns cells) a row break is inserted and the later >>> cells start in a new row. >>> >>> I would prefer a more deterministic approach: the panel is either one >>> column or one row (vertical or horizontal). >>> This should cover the common cases, real tables are seldom needed. >> >> Hi, >> >> But max_columns can cover both case, >> >> max_columns = 1 >> one column >> >> max_columns = 1000 (or any big number) >> one row, we could also use special number -1 to indicate infinite >> number of widgets. >> > > OK, it does but it is quite confusing way of achieving that. > > What do the other possible values give you, though? > > If I set max_colums to 3 then I get rows of 1-3 cells, > non-deterministically. I can't say in what row or column a particular > cell will be. Is such layout useful for anything?
Hi, If max_columns = 3, then every row has three widgets, except for the last one, which can have 1 or 2 widgets. We can draw n * 3 tables with it. -- Bean gitgrub home: http://github.com/grub/grub/ my fork page: http://github.com/bean123/grub/ _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel