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The really, really, astonishingly sad part is that we're still stuck with open/save dialogs in mainstream systems after all these years. Being forced to work with this mini-filer while preparing the place to save your document is just so very backwards.
According to this comment; http://osnews.com/thread?42369 the reason why we have to put up with this is that the first few versions of the Macintosh System Software didn't support multitasking. If it did, they would probably have let you use Finder as the open/save "dialog". This is quite doable, but nobody dared to change much in the "feel" part of "look and feel" over the past 20 years.
If you want a full file manager as your open/save dialog than go ahead, there are Linux desktops that offer that possibility. Gnome states that an open/save dialog should be just that: a way to choose a file or a location to save a file. Period. Do one thing and do it well, sound familiar?
But what happened to the bit about doing it well?
It's got its hands tied behind its back by a bunch of loonies that think everyone is a fool!
Edited 2008-02-12 07:37 UTC




Member since:
2006-02-04
while kde is better than gnome about it, nothing is quite as nice as windows, the file chooser (both save and open) gives you the full context menu, I can zip, unzip, cut, paste, rename, make shortcuts, launch files in other applications, start programs, check properties, whatever.