From: Justin C. W. <ju...@ma...> - 2011-08-24 05:06:58
|
On Aug 23, 2011, at 20:33 , Adam M. Goldstein wrote: > > On Aug 23, 2011, at 2:13 PM, Justin C. Walker wrote: > > <-- snip --> > >> >> I just tried the (just-downloaded) latest nightly (2298), and compared it with the version I used on 8/19 (2141), and I'm really confused. >> >> After I ran 2298, and reran 2141[*] to verify what I saw initially, I see 10.7-style scrollbars in both versions. Is there some kind of funky library caching going on? I have no idea how to enable the "new" scroll bars, but they are definitely there now. >> > > I'm not sure if this addresses the question, but there is a system preference ("general") in which you can choose whether you want scroll bars, always, only when scrolling, or, something I don't totally get, "dependent on the input device." Based on SWAG, I think that this setting will do the following: - with an old-fashioned (ca. 2010) mouse, always gives you scroll bars - with a new laptop with trackpad, give you "automatic" - with a magic mouse, give you "in between" >> The behavior I see now (in both versions) which differs from what I reported (and saw) on 8/19, is the "lock-step" scrolling doesn't occur. Instead, when I reach the top or bottom of the "group" panel on the left, it shows an "elastic" behavior, exposing blank space below or above the content. When this happens, the "icon" panel scrolls in the same direction. > > I just updated my source code and compiled it with Xcode 3.2 (Whatever the last revision before 4 is). If I select something in the PDF preview panel, and then I move the pointer onto the main table, the PDF preview panel will move as though the pointer were positioned over the panel, and, at the same time, as though the pointer were over the main table. I don't see this. But then, I didn't compile from scratch. Or from anything else, for that matter. I just downloaded the nightlies. > Maybe this is a feature? Of Lion? Two panels can be correlated with one another in the manner of a diff layout, as one moves, the other one does too. I've not read anything like this, nor have I seen it with other apps. But BibDesk is one of the few with such an involved window structure. Justin -- Justin C. Walker Director Institute for the Enhancement of the Director's Income -- Fame is fleeting, but obscurity just drags on and on. F&E |