Reply 100 of 107, by DaveDDS
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Exactly. Dual-pane file managers modeled after Norton Commander, e.g., Volkov Commander, are used widely on many systems and all […]
Exactly. Dual-pane file managers modeled after Norton Commander, e.g.,
Volkov Commander, are used widely on many systems and all have this set
of shortcuts, from Midnight Commander and Krusader over Double Commander
and FAR Manager to Total Commander. So, a lot of people already know
these shortcuts by heart. In contrast, we need to learn DDLINK keys,
which don't "make obvious sense", when you already know dual-pane file
managers for decades.
I don't know "Norton Commander", "Volkov Commander", "Midnight Commander",
"Krusader", "Double Commander", "FAR Manager", "Total Commander" or most
of the myriad of commercial tools that some people "just love". ** I've
heard of only a couple of these, and most certainly don't know their users
interfaces "off by heart".
DDLINK was something I created for myself (initially a way to move disk
images to/from a DOS booted from floppy to run my ImageDisk tool), and as
I find it very useful, I decided to give it away for others - It was never
a product, I never made money at it - it's just something I needed.
And I simply see no reason to bloat my code with "features" that I don't
want and will never use...
If you so much prefer the user interface from a different tool....
by all means - use THAT tool!
** I differ from many users in that if I need a tool to perform some
specific task, I almost always *write it* - I don't generally use much
"off the shelf" commercial software, because it never does exactly what
I want and/or efficiently.
That's true for the English language, but not for many others.
Always true - but in my experience many foreign users using English language
software know "a little"/"enough" English to be able to use that software.
Sure, perhaps in your preferred language the word for "copy" begins with
{F5} but I don't know what sound F5 makes or how to represent it's character
in prompts on the screen - In other words, regardless of language, I don't
see remembering 'C' for copy any harder than remembering F5 (unless
of course every piece of software in the world is made to resemble your
favorite tool that does copy operations with F5)
Okay, here is a DDLINK.KEY file for your KEYSUB.
Can be loaded as a TSR using KEYSUB.COM DDLINK.KEY -T before running
DDLINK.
I designed KEYSUB to be able to perform "any keys" on keyboard which
didn't have those keys ... but you can certainly use it for things like
this too...
Note: I excluded Alt+F2 (Change Drive), because it would be in conflict
with the global 'Run application' shortcut on my Linux Mint system.
But... are you telling me that there is a version of Linux that uses keys
NOT compatible with your favorite tools? - shouldn't someone be complaining.
.. Another reason to avoid Fkeys where possible. There will always be
something that uses the Fkeys you choose in an incompatible way... Standard
typewriter keys ('A'-'Z', '0'-'9' etc.) are almost always available for
applications to use as they wish.
(we're sorry, but we decided to use 'x' as a overriding system control key
- we've sure our users won't mind not being able to enter 'x' when entering
text)
Sorry - I guess this turned into a bit of a "rant" - touchy subject!
Dave ::: https://dunfield.themindfactory.com ::: "Daves Old Computers"->Personal