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Conference vaxuum::online_bookbuilding

Title:Online Bookbuilding
Notice:This conference is write-locked: see note 1.3.
Moderator:VAXUUM::UTT
Created:Fri Aug 12 1988
Last Modified:Mon Jul 15 1991
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:440
Total number of notes:2134

72.0. "Wishlist Item" by LADEDA::GRIGLACK () Tue Jan 31 1989 16:51

Here's an item I'd like to have added to the wishlist.  There are buttons 
at the bottom of the book window for "previous topic" and "next topic".
These work relative to the current topic.  I'd like to be able to click
to the last topic I viewed.  

For example, suppose I'm reading along and I see a hot reference to some 
section in another chapter.  I click on that hot spot and read the info there.
Then I want to go back to where I was reading to finish that section, or to
continue on, or whatever.  I can't get there easily.  I have to know what
the section was and look it up in the TOC again.

Maybe a "last topic" button could be added to the book window.  You might
essentially stack up the topics in the order they were read.  Then I could use
the "last topic" button to pop up through the stack.


Lisa Griglack
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72.1VAXUUM::UTTWed Feb 01 1989 13:406
    Yes, this feature has been suggested by many people and is definitely
    on the list for a future release of the Bookreader.
    
    Thanks,
    
    Mary
72.2which topic?STAR::KRAETSCHNeXt Window PleaseWed Feb 01 1989 21:469
Any suggestions for the button label?
"Previous Topic" is already used, and "Last Topic" might imply the last topic
in the book.

The inablility to return from a cross-reference is recognized as a shortcoming
in the Version 1 Bookreader.

thanks for any suggestions,
joe
72.3STAR::ROBERTThu Feb 02 1989 11:275
Reverse, go back, unwind (too techie), back up, back, review, ?

Not really crazy about any of them but ...

- greg
72.4helpful editing?STAR::ROBERTThu Feb 02 1989 11:2910
Incidentally, it might be nice if the trail avoided duplications ...
that is, if a given topic is already in the list delete the old
reference and add the new one at the end.  That way you don't see
a lot of flip-flopping when backing up, and the list is usefully
shorter.

Sometimes this will be "unfriendly", but my hunch is that more
often it will be the right heuristic.

- g
72.5MTWAIN::WARDPizzaholicThu Feb 02 1989 19:326
What about "LAST TOPIC READ" ?

This is sufficiently different from "PREVIOUS TOPIC" and "NEXT TOPIC".

Randy
72.6maybe you don't need a new button,PSYCHD::MICHAELSKaren MichaelsThu Feb 02 1989 20:445
Instead of adding a new button to go back you could simply start up a new 
bookreader window at the new location.  But then you would have the problem of
which window the main window (with the index and contents) should control.

               ---Karen
72.7how about a list?TLE::HALLWed Feb 08 1989 12:427
    Don't some applications show you a "history" list of
    where you've been?  That way, you can keep your "finger"
    in a half-dozen or so places at once and keep skipping
    back and forth.  When using a book as a reference, this
    mode of use is common.
    
    \ken
72.8BEAM-ME-UPSTAR::GEORGESJohn GeorgesWed Feb 08 1989 15:288
    How about  +--------+
               | RETURN |
               +--------+    
    
    Also, if I'm two or more levels deep (hot spot within a hot spot), 
    design the RETURN button to bring me back to the original topic, 
    not just back to the previous hotspot. (I think this is what Greg
    mentioned in a previous reply.)
72.9Now, where was I?GOOD4U::AHERNDennis the MenaceMon Feb 20 1989 14:466
    The on-line help on the Sun Microsystems 386i builds an audit trail of
    what the user has looked at and keeps the last 16 documents available
    in a pop-up window called "History".  The user can click-on any item in
    this window to return to that page.
    
    
72.10VAXUUM::UTTMon Feb 20 1989 21:416
    Such functionality is on the list for a future release of the
    Bookreader.
    
    Thanks,
    
    Mary
72.11Go BackCASEE::WYMANBob Wyman, CASEE::WYMANMon Mar 27 1989 12:517
DECwindows Help and MEMEX Hyperinformation use the term "Go Back" to mean return
to the last item read. It would seem to be desirable to use similar language to
these two applications unless the meaning of the function was distinctly 
different. If I understand correctly what is being asked for, the meanings ar
actually quite similar.

		bob wyman