Ah, you should aspire to more...Jon wrote:We at Sonny Software can do only so much to right society's wrongs…
Jon
Sonny Software

Hi Sue,Sue wrote:I would prefer call number in the 'main' window, however.
Is it feasible to have a preferences pane that allows a user to choose which fields to show in reference entry?
Also, can tab from field to field be more logical? ie in journal entry tab goes journal-volume-pages-date, when journal-volume-date-pages is more logical.
This does make the questionable UI choice less of a problem.Jon wrote:I doubt many people work primarily in the reference window view
I care about it because you asked for feedback, and I gave it. From a programmer's point of view, it represents an arbitrary mixing of views--namely, a concealable view containing some fields, and a drawing containing others.I'm also not sure why you care about the disclosure triangle in the center of the reference window -- don't use it.
While quite funny, I'm not sure why you tip toe around the issue that many, including Apple, have with drawers. My point regarding the Google search was a valid one. You gave as your defense that you don't hate drawers, but I would've thought your goal would be to make an app that more than just you don't hate.Finally, as for Google, I did a search for martian radioactive hamsters, and got 535 hits, which says something about a threat I never even knew existed.
In other words, flexibility.jweaks wrote:I care about it because you asked for feedback, and I gave it. From a programmer's point of view, it represents an arbitrary mixing of views--namely, a concealable view containing some fields, and a drawing containing others.
One of the things I've always disliked about EndNote is that one has to scroll to get to the information needed (in my case, the abstract is usually the most important piece of information). Bookends has always shown all of the data at a glance, which I much prefer (and for which we've gotten a lot of postive feedback). The drawer is just another way of showing/hiding information with a click, much like a disclosure triangle. The drawer can also be made larger/smaller to suit your needs (if you want to see the call number at all times, say, you can make the drawer quite small). Once Bookends 9 is available everyone can decide for themselves how well it works and return for comment.In other words, what's with the scroll bar hate?
Not to prolong this unnecessarily, but I believe that in fact the drawer as it is implemented in Bookends 9 will remain closed for most people most of the time. First, the reference window is used when entering data by hand or confirming some information not available in the List View drawer. Second, the drawer contains information that is not often vital (call number, language, etc. -- and if any of it is vital to a particular user, it can be moved to a user-defined field in the main window). It is my guess that most people will not consult the reference drawer very often (if you dislike the drawer here, you should really dislike it in the List View, where I image many people rely on it).jweaks wrote:I do think the ignoring UI Standards issue is not a small issue, though.
Just see how mail.app had a similar poor use of a drawer that had to stay open in 10.1, .2, & .3, and then finally corrected it.
Absolutely.But, I suppose a programmer lives and dies on her/his opinions.
Jweaks, I agree with you completely: while it's wonderful that the extra fields are there, the drawer looks just AWFUL. And as you may have noticed, Bookends doesn't behave like a full-fledged OS X app. Try resizing a library window, for example: you see outlines, rather than getting a live resize.jweaks wrote:Jon,
Thanks for providing your reasoning. I do think the ignoring UI Standards issue is not a small issue, though.
Just see how mail.app had a similar poor use of a drawer that had to stay open in 10.1, .2, & .3, and then finally corrected it.