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Felix Ernst 44c82a16b3 Make space shortcut for selection mode view-local instead of global
Before this commit, the "Space" keyboard shortcut was bound to
triggering selection mode by default. After this commit, pressing
"Space" will only trigger selection mode when the file view area
has keyboard focus.

Pros:
+ Other buttons in the UI can be triggered with Space once again
  just like it is expected from an accessibility point of view.
+ "Type-ahead" searching works once more when typing the space
  char for file names containing such a space char.

Cons:
- "Space" can no longer be used to add the currently underlined
  item to the selection. Instead "Ctrl+Space" needs to be used.
  (However, this is the current status anyway unless a user has
  manually unbound "Space" as a shortcut from Selection Mode.)
- The Selection Mode action will no longer show "Space" as its
  shortcut in menus.

Overall, I see solutions to all of these problems, but they seem
over-engineered for the issues they are trying to solve, so I
believe this somewhat small commit is the best solution for now.

BUG: 458282
BUG: 458281
CCBUG: 463048
FIXED-IN: 23.04
2023-01-11 15:49:20 +01:00
cmake Adapt build system for building against qt6 2022-01-14 08:04:01 +01:00
completions Add zsh completions 2022-12-12 21:19:42 +03:00
doc doc: fix typo (Trash -> User Feedback) 2022-09-03 13:21:06 +02:00
LICENSES Download missing licenses 2021-05-20 22:20:10 +02:00
po GIT_SILENT Sync po/docbooks with svn 2023-01-08 02:28:16 +00:00
src Make space shortcut for selection mode view-local instead of global 2023-01-11 15:49:20 +01:00
.gitignore Update .gitignore 2021-05-09 18:02:20 +00:00
.gitlab-ci.yml Add Qt6 windows CI support 2022-10-16 15:02:22 +00:00
.kde-ci.yml Baloo is available on Linux/FreeBSD only 2022-04-03 20:09:57 +12:00
CMakeLists.txt Properly use X11 startup ids 2022-12-30 12:33:01 +00:00
CMakePresets.json GIT_SILENT: improve cmakepreset support 2021-08-06 07:08:20 +02:00
COPYING commited initial version of Dolphin 2006-11-21 06:02:05 +00:00
COPYING.DOC updates for new licence policy 2008-01-12 16:39:07 +00:00
DolphinVcsConfig.cmake.in Adapt build system for building against qt6 2022-01-14 08:04:01 +01:00
logo.png Add Dolphin icon as repository logo 2020-05-19 10:14:04 +03:00
plasma-dolphin.service.in D-Bus activation systemd service 2020-11-19 10:40:56 +01:00
README.md Update README.md to gitlab :D 2020-10-06 16:02:54 +00:00

User Documentation

See https://userbase.kde.org/Special:myLanguage/Dolphin

Development Information

Dolphin's source code can be found at https://invent.kde.org/system/dolphin/

To build Dolphin from source, see https://community.kde.org/Get_Involved/development#Applications

To submit a patch to Dolphin, use https://invent.kde.org/system/dolphin/-/merge_requests/.

Development Philosophy

Dolphin is a file manager focusing on usability. When reading the term Usability people often assume that the focus is on newbies and only basic features are offered. This is not the case; Dolphin is quite full-featured, but the features are carefully chosen so as to not impede any of the users in the target user groups.

Target User Groups

Focusing on usability means that features are discoverable and efficient to use. The feature set is defined indirectly by the target user group of Dolphin:

  • Lisa: Lisa has been familiar with computers for 10 years. From her job, she has experience with Word, Excel and Outlook. At home she mainly uses the computer for browsing the web and writing e-mails. She requires a file manager for managing photos from the camera, documents she gets via e-mail, or PDFs she downloads with a browser. Lisa knows concepts like folders and a file hierarchy, but she is not familiar with the file hierarchy of Linux.

  • Simon: Simon has been a developer at a software company for 8 years. At home he uses a file manager to maintain his large collection of photos and music. Additionally he owns a small homepage and needs to transfer updated files on the FTP server. Moving and copying files are regular tasks in Simon's workflow.

Not part of the target user group of Dolphin are Fred and Jeff:

  • Fred: Fred is 75 years old and is able to write e-mails and browsing the web. He is not familiar with file hierarchies and stores all his documents on the desktop.

  • Jeff: Jeff is Linux-freak since the age of 16 a few years ago. He is a developer and in his spare time he acts as administrator for a small company. Jeff has two monitors to keep the overview about his huge number of opened applications.

This does not mean that Fred or Jeff cannot work with Dolphin. But there might be features and concepts of Dolphin that overburden Fred. Also Jeff might miss some features which are a must-have for his daily work. This is acceptable; there are other tools that cater specifically to their needs.

Non-Intrusive Features

Before a feature is added in Dolphin, check whether the feature is mandatory for the target user group. If this is not the case, then this does not mean that the feature cannot be added; first it must be clarified whether the feature might be non-intrusive, so that it adds value for users outside the primary target user group of Dolphin. The term "non-intrusive" is mainly related to the user interface. A feature that adds a lot of clutter to the main menu, context menus or toolbar might harm the target user group. In this case the feature should not be added.

A good example of a feature that is non-intrusive is the embedded terminal in Dolphin. It only requires one entry inside a sub-menu, but adds great value for Jeff, who is not part of the target user group.

Options

Options are mandatory as the "average Joe" user does not exist. Still it is not the goal of Dolphin to offer options for all kind of things. Again the focus is on the possible needs of the target user group. Each additional option makes it harder finding other options, so the same rules for features are applied to options too.