On Donnerstag, 23. Oktober 2008, Lukas Ocilka wrote:
In my opinion, having a [Back] button disabled is the way to go if we are anywhere in installation and the dialog is full-screen.
Keeping the [Back] button there (even if disabled) makes all the dialogs unified in having all the buttons with the same functionality on the very same places all over the installation. I remember we were talking about this before.
I don't quite understand this... What Martin wrote sounds like we have dialogs where we have wizard buttons ([Abort] [Back] [Next]) PLUS [OK] [Cancel] button in the same dialog. If that is the case, that's a clear violation of the intent and purpose of a wizard. That does not make any sense. If there is a wizard, the wizard buttons are to be used for navigation (positive confirmation - [Next], [OK], [Accept] or whatever; non-destructive negative way out: [Back] / [Cancel]). Please clarify. And a couple of screenshots would help. CU -- Stefan Hundhammer <sh@suse.de> Penguin by conviction. YaST2 Development SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, GF: Markus Rex, HRB 16746 (AG Nürnberg) Nürnberg, Germany -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: yast-devel+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: yast-devel+help@opensuse.org