| Ok? Do you ever only use one of find and grep? I think they are very similar as the search and the filter bar. I mean you can replace find with tree | grep, not sure about the other way around, but it's probably also possible. > There is zero need I do, so it is not exactly zero and I would be annoyed to have them gone, because it is a huge time saver when handling thousands of messages. > if there is no result for the text entered in the textbox then switch to the search If the filter starts to draw in messages from other directories, that would be stupid and kind of defeats the point of having a filter in a first place. If you want that why don't you use the search? > it's just Mozilla wanted to copy-paste the idiotic solution of MS Office with a top-most search function I don't care where the search bar is placed and I think that functionality did already exist before the current UI, either via ^K or in a menu. I (maybe) do agree with you, in that I don't like putting widgets in window frames (that's for the WM) and prefer classical (CUA-like) menubars. Can you please criticize the functionality itself? I can't comprehend why you don't see the point of a separate filter. Do you mostly keep messages in the INBOX? Maybe my original word choice wasn't optimal, because you can consider filtering a subset of searching, but I do consider them to be different. If you rather you use a different terminology, that's fine, but I don't think it will change my point. |
It's not a CLI. More so, redundant functions eats the screen real estate, which isn't getting taller on a non-mobile platforms.
> I do, so it is not exactly zero and I would be annoyed to have them gone, because it is a huge time saver when handling thousands of messages.
You sounds like I'm advocating to removal of both the search and the filter boxes.
> If the filter starts to draw in messages from other directories
sigh
You input something in the combined search|filter box:
If you got the result you need from this folder then you just do your thing.
If you did not got the result you need then press Enter which would start the search in the whole mailbox, just like the search textbox works now.
> I don't care where the search bar is placed
Great for you, but I care. TB interface was already far from understandable by both computer illiterate and computer literate and this is just another illogical placement what doesn't add functionality, yet wastes the space.
BTW, did you provided the support to anyone by the phone? Can you be sure what the person on the other side inputs in the right textbox? I can, somewhat, if there is only one. If there are two then 70% of time they would use the wrong one even if telling you it's the right one. I provided enough L1/L2 to know it well.
> Can you please criticize the functionality itself
Yes, there is no functionality need in the two separate textboxes for, essentially, one function: searching.
> Do you mostly keep messages in the INBOX?
Thanks, no.
> because you can consider filtering a subset of searching, but I do consider them to be different
Yes, they both are the methods to find some message/s what you can't just scroll to. And those 'quick filter' buttons near the current filter textbox are quite nice, btw.
My problem is what that search textbox is a clear import from the MS Outlook[0] and it was did only to mimic the other product, without a second of actually thinking if this is even needed.
Just imagine: what if instead of that search box that space would be used for... a filter/search combo textbox, along with a quickfilter buttons, just like today, but not wasting the space for nothing in the window titlebar.
Also I finally noticed what there is even a special combo to invoke the filter so it also can be used to differentiate the usage right away: ctrl+shift+k - filtering, ctrl+shift+f - searching the mailbox.
Just for the sake of it I did a poor man's mock-up:
https://ibb.co/JjXwxhhB
And, uh, just one more thing: when you do search in TB you are brought to a separate tab with the search result. There is zero need to the search input to stay in the current search box. It's literally useless.
[0] if never even saw it then just search for the screenshots.
EDIT: and about 'heuristic' - there also two ways to do it:
1. just have a toogle buried somewhere, to enable/disable autosearch
2. just do the search automatically, with a low priority and find a way to notify the user what this are results from the other folder. Can be as simple as '--- results from the other folders ---' line.