On 9/27/2010 11:23 AM, Barry MacKichan wrote:
Microsoft's recommendations on the UI of programs are only recommendations. If the task requires it, two windows are fine. This is what you would have if you previewed in Acrobat Reader anyway -- two apps but also two windows.

Yes, they are, and moving away from that recommendation for anything other than "things CANNOT be done unless we use two windows" is not understanding the user experience that windows users expect =)

Seeing the preview in acrobat viewer is seeing two different applications, with one window per application. This is fine, because that's how applications should behave in the world of a windows user. You shouldn't use *nix UI principles in windows in the same way that you don't use windows UI principles in MacOS, etc.

It's been a while, but my memory is that many of Adobe's apps, such as PhotoShop, have multiple windows, especially if you detach the palettes. If you recommend Unicode editors in xlshort, I think TeXWorks should be included.

These are still inside the master application window. You can move these around, but they don't go "outside" the application frame, such as for programs that have been complied for multiple operating systems without using OS specific look-and-feel management, such as Gimp or Inkscape.

TeXWork should be recommended. But I wouldn't recommend it as main TeX editor on windows just yet, because it refuses to behave like every other application I use on it. That makes it a "good alternative if the following editors aren't good enough for you :...." and then a list of real "for windows" programs. I'll happily endorse it as primary editor on MacOS, though, because there the styling matches the standard application experience.

- Mike "Pomax" Kamermans
nihongoresources.com



--------------------------------------------------
Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.:
 http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex

Reply via email to