In cases where you are unlikely to change every single option, it's still much faster to handle it exactly like originally stated, and is why other very popular graphics software applications use the convention. In workflow, it makes sense to focus the dialog on the next likely action, so if the user is filling out a form, focus would naturally be on the next blank field that needs to be filled in. The reason for auto focusing to the history combo box is for speed on repeating the last used settings. It makes sense that the next focus should be the OK button for these dialogs. In which case the Enter key would function as requested, to press the OK button and commit changes. The logic: 1. If you have chosen a history item from the combo box, you most-likely want to apply the changes immediately following, so the OK button is focused. 2. Hitting Enter/Return presses the button and completes the workflow for this result. If it's desired, I can do some workflow comparisons to show the difference in various workflows with this "new" convention. :) I believe most workflows will benefit from this change without the need to add more non-standard hotkeys to GIMP. -C It makes little sense to then have to change your hand position to apply the change with another hotkey, since we have already decided to focus it instead of the first item in the dialog, especially when the default when you press enter again is to do absolutely nothing. Also two shift keys are not always present, and tab works fine to move focus, so there's not much point in having Enter/Return focus the next box, instead of applying the change, which is intuitive. After all, enter commits the value, so it makes sense enter again will commit the dialog. On 20 May 2016 1:49 am, "Liam R. E. Quin" <liam@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thu, 2016-05-19 at 19:03 +0100, C R wrote: > > And yet hitting Enter/Return key to commit/save is standard here too, > > which > > is why there's a popup warning on overwrite in cases of overwriting a > > file. > > Yes. (sorry for not being clear) > > Whether enter commits the action in those cases depends on the focus > and autocomplete status, unfortunately. > > I'd favour something like shift-enter doing the default action - still > one hand and not easily done accidentally. > > I am not sure why Enter doesn't move from one text field to the next in > e.g. the Rotate dialogue - tab is needed instead. The Sun and AT&T UI > research led to the idea of pressing enter focussing each entry in turn > until you got to the OK button, and then applying it, but they didn't > study advanced image editors. > > Liam > > > > > -- > Liam R. E. Quin <liam@xxxxxxxxxxx> > _______________________________________________ gimp-developer-list mailing list List address: gimp-developer-list@xxxxxxxxx List membership: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-developer-list List archives: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gimp-developer-list