Excerpts from david's message of 2011-08-09 20:56:12 +0200: > Philipp Überbacher wrote: > > Excerpts from david's message of 2011-08-09 10:13:51 +0200: > >> Philipp Überbacher wrote: > >>> Excerpts from david's message of 2011-08-08 01:32:25 +0200: > >>>> Emanuel Rumpf wrote: > >>>>> 2011/8/7 Emanuel Rumpf <xbran@xxxxxx>: > >>>>>> ** Input from the user is important, because that's a whole different view ! ** > >>>>>> > >>>>> One could support that > >>>>> by adding direct feedback functionality to the application. > >>>>> > >>>>> - Double-Click Bug-Reports and Feature-Requests > >>>>> - Integrated, cached User Chat ( + Dev Chat) > >>>>> - Tips and Hints with Rating possibility > >>>>> - Integrated News Panel > >>>>> - user supplied, editable context help updated over the internet > >>>> Just don't make your app dependent on some specific mail client. > >>>> > >>>> I've used K3B for many years now. Twice now, it has popped up asking my > >>>> option of the program. It then tries to mail it using KMail, which I > >>>> don't have installed. So you'd think it would recognize the failure and > >>>> either give me the email text to copy and paste into my mail client of > >>>> choice? No, it just hangs forever until I close K3B ... > >>> That's called integration. > >> No, it's called bad assumption by the programmer: that just because > >> someone uses one KDE program, they use them all. > > > > But that's what integration currently means, make a program work well > > with others that belong to the same DE, forget about everything else. > > No, when something your program is trying to use doesn't exist or is not > set up, you don't hang and become unresponsive. You check for error > responses to your system call, terminate the attempt, and tell your user > that you (the program) can't do what you're trying to do. Ideally, you > also tell them why ("KMail not installed"). Then you do a fallback; in > this case, you display a message box containing the information you're > trying to send, along with the address to send it to, and ask the user > to copy and paste it into an email using their mail client. Ah, sorry, I missed that it was completely unresponsive, sorry. I hope they'll fix this error now that they (maybe) heard of it. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user