Invisible window in 10.2.1 Finder?
Bring up your Finder in 10.2.1, and open one window. Use Cmd-~ to switch between windows. You'd expect it to not do a darned thing, but on mine, the current window is deactivated, then reactivated, then back. It's like the Finder is swapping between the visible window and an invisible one.
Anyone else see this?
[ 09-22-2002: Message edited by: Kickaha ]</p>
Anyone else see this?
[ 09-22-2002: Message edited by: Kickaha ]</p>
Comments
Time to file with bugreport...
It's a major convenience to people like me who navigate by keyboard more than others and it's only a minor annoyance to people who don't care for it.
The Desktop is NOT a window. It has no title bar, it has no close/minimize/zoom controls. You cannot move it, resize it, or put it in column or list view.
It conforms to no definition of window other than "It shows icons"... which is a pretty lousy definition. (Quick test: Write a class definition for a Window, complete with behaviour methods. Now subclass Desktop from it... if you had to turn *off* methods to get your desired behaviour, then you have an ill-conceived IsA relationship, and should scrap it.)
The Desktop is it's own special little beast, and should *NOT* be treated as Just Another Window. It's not.
Command-~ has a well defined behaviour in every application EXCEPT the Finder, which has decided that Other Thing shall be treated like a Window for 'just this action'. Bollocks. That's Windows(tm) UI design.
Having to figure out why my windows all went inactive for no good reason while attempting to change windows is bad UI design... anytime you make the user have to investigate why something doesn't work as consistently expected, you've failed as a UI designer.
If you want to switch to the desktop, request a dedicated keystroke from Apple, because bastardizing Cmd-~ for it is just dumb. Or, better yet, open up a window to ~eugene/Desktop. Voila. You get your easy access to the Desktop, and they don't have to break the UI to do it.
For the record, I too use the keyboard to navigate, and rarely touch the mouse when traversing the filesystem. It's no great feat, really. UI design is... and this time they dropped the ball.
[ 09-23-2002: Message edited by: Kickaha ]</p>