Notices


Reply
Thread Tools
Posts: 239 | Thanked: 194 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ Amsterdam
#31
Originally Posted by generationally View Post
Nice app!!!

Now that checked items get greyed-out and striked-through, is the white check-box really needed anymore?

It just contains the same information as the grey-out/strike-through feature. Just a thought ;-)
It's not necessary, but it's a nice addition in my opinion. People who are more used to checkboxes can still see the checkbox. Other people can still see the greyed out, striked through text.
I guess it will please people of both order.
__________________
Please give or donate your 2 cents to help me keep on going.
 
Posts: 239 | Thanked: 194 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ Amsterdam
#32
Hi,

I still need another [Tester] for EasyList 0.3.8 in Extras-Testing. Can you help out?

Thanks!
__________________
Please give or donate your 2 cents to help me keep on going.
 
Posts: 239 | Thanked: 194 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ Amsterdam
#33
I want to use this opportunity to thank all the testers who helped me test EasyList 0.3.8.
Thank you! Thank you for your votes and thank you for your feedback.
__________________
Please give or donate your 2 cents to help me keep on going.
 
Posts: 5,795 | Thanked: 3,151 times | Joined on Feb 2007 @ Agoura Hills Calif
#34
I have created a list, which looks fine:I am using the latest version, I guess -- it doesn't have a version number in About that I saw.

If I close it and reopen it all the letters are mushed together. If i open the list for editing and save it, it looks fine again. But if I close Easylist and reopen it, it is mushed again.

Screenshots follow.
Attached Images
  
__________________
All I want is 40 acres, a mule, and Xterm.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to geneven For This Useful Post:
Posts: 5,795 | Thanked: 3,151 times | Joined on Feb 2007 @ Agoura Hills Calif
#35
It turns out that the quickest way to get rid of the mooshing is to click Edit List and then immediately cancel.
__________________
All I want is 40 acres, a mule, and Xterm.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to geneven For This Useful Post:
Posts: 239 | Thanked: 194 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ Amsterdam
#36
Originally Posted by geneven View Post
I have created a list, which looks fine:I am using the latest version, I guess -- it doesn't have a version number in About that I saw.

If I close it and reopen it all the letters are mushed together. If i open the list for editing and save it, it looks fine again. But if I close Easylist and reopen it, it is mushed again.

Screenshots follow.
You should be able to check the version number in the Hildon Application Manager. If you go to the uninstall section and select EasyList you can then see the version number.
Do the items become mushed together because there are a lot of items? Can you tell me how many items you've added to the list?

Maybe you can even paste your list here if does not have privacy related things in it.

Thanks.
__________________
Please give or donate your 2 cents to help me keep on going.

Last edited by Willem Liu; 2010-10-19 at 12:32.
 
Posts: 569 | Thanked: 462 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ USA
#37
This is very well done.

I have several projects, some in different cities, & each needs a to-do list. It would be nice to use Easylist to manage more than one list: for instance one for home, one for the job, one for job2, one for the volunteer project, etc.

Currently, I am using a clumsy method of separating the different lists inside the single EasyList via prefacing each entry with a letter and dash, and using alphabetical sort to create sections.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to rotoflex For This Useful Post:
mrsellout's Avatar
Posts: 889 | Thanked: 2,087 times | Joined on Sep 2010 @ Manchester
#38
Congrats on a great little app. Everything seems to work well, but could you add a 'confirm clear checked items' dialog.

Sometimes when you are out shopping you can accidentally press the screen, eg the bottom list items and then the clear checked button and then poof! you've lost some list info. Maybe you could avoid a dialog by putting the clear checked items button in the edit items bit.

Something else that would be nice, but not vital would be to implement longpress for the keyboard.

Anyway thanks for the great app.

mrsellout

Last edited by mrsellout; 2010-10-19 at 13:25.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to mrsellout For This Useful Post:
Posts: 239 | Thanked: 194 times | Joined on Jul 2010 @ Amsterdam
#39
There's been a lot of requests for multi-list support. I've added this functionality and you can get it from Extras-Devel. It's still a bit experimental, hence that's why it's in Extras-Devel. I'm working with it to see if the work-flow is easy enough. I'm planning to add notifications, but it's not in this version yet. It will arrive in the next I hope.
Until then you can use the multi-list functionality, but without any notifications as to what has happened.

There is a distinction between your current loaded list and the lists saved. You have to see the saved lists as templates. Once you've loaded such a template and you edit the list by adding items and you save the newly added items it IS NOT saved to the template you've loaded.

easylist (0.3.15) unstable; urgency=low

* Support for multiple lists.
* Changed order of menu items.

-- Willem Liu <willem.liu@gmail.com> Tue, 07 Sep 2010 13:56:12 +0200
__________________
Please give or donate your 2 cents to help me keep on going.
 
Posts: 5,795 | Thanked: 3,151 times | Joined on Feb 2007 @ Agoura Hills Calif
#40
Originally Posted by Willem Liu View Post
You should be able to check the version number in the Hildon Application Manager. If you go to the uninstall section and select EasyList you can then see the version number.
Do the items become mushed together because there are a lot of items? Can you tell me how many items you've added to the list?

Maybe you can even paste your list here if does not have privacy related things in it.

Thanks.
Version 0.3.14

Sure, here's the list --

!2: Foucault, Michel. "What Is an Author?" In The Critical Tradition, pp. 904-14
!Barthes, Roland. "The Death of the Author." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 874-77
3: Gadamer, Hans-Georg. "The Elevation of the Historicality of Understanding to the Status of Hermeneutic Principle." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 721-37
!4: Iser, Wolfgang. "The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1002-14
5: Wimsatt, William K. and Monroe Beardsley. "The Intentional Fallacy." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 811-18
6: Richards, Ivor A. and Monroe Beardsley. "Principles of Literary Criticism." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 764-73
Empson, William. Seven Types of Ambiguity. New York: New Directions Publishing Corporation, 1966, pp. 16-19
Brooks, Cleanth. "Irony as a Principle of Structure." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 799-806
7: Eikhenbaum, Boris. "The Theory of the 'Formal Method.'" In Russian Formalist Criticism: Four Essays. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1965, pp. 99-141
Brooks, Cleanth. "Irony as a Principle of Structure." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 799-806
8: Levi-Strauss, Claude. "The Structural Study of Myth." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 860-68
Suggested: Barthes, Roland. "The Structuralist Activity." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 775-84
9: Jakobson, Roman. "Linguistics and Poetics." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 871-74
Jakobson, Roman. "Two Aspects of Language and Two Types of Aphasic Disturbances." In Studies on Child Language and Aphasia. The Hague: Mouton Publishers, 1971, pp. 67-73
10: Derrida, Jacques. "Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences" and "Différance." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 915-25 and pp. 932-39
11: De Man, Paul. "Semiology and Rhetoric." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 882-92
12: Brooks, Peter. "Freud's Masterplot" and "The Dream-Work." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 500-08 and pp. 882-92
13: Lacan, Jacques. "The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1129-48
14: Eliot, T. S. "Tradition and the Individual Talent." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 537-41
Bloom, Harold. "A Meditation upon Priority." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1156-60
15: Deleuze, Gilles and Felix Guattari. "Introduction: Rhizome." In A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987
Žižek, Slavoj. "Courtly Love." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1181-97
16: Jauss, Hans Robert. "Literary History as a Challenge to Literary Theory." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 981-88
Bakhtin, Mikhail. "Heteroglossia in the Novel." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 588-93
17: Benjamin, Walter. "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1233-48
Horkheimer, Max and Theodor Adorno. "The Culture Industry." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1255-62
18: Jameson, Fredric. "The Political Unconscious." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1291-1306
19: Greenblatt, Stephen. "The Power of Forms." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1443-45
McGann, Jerome J. "Keats and Historical Method." In The Beauty of Inflections: Literary Investigations in Historical Method and Theory. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988
20: Woolf, Virginia. "Austen-Brontë-Eliot" and "The Androgynous Vision." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 602-10
Kolodny, Annette. "Dancing through the Minefield." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1550-62
21: Gates, Jr., Henry Louis. "Writing, 'Race,' and the Difference It Makes." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1891-1902
Morrison, Toni. "Playing in the Dark." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1791-1800
22: Said, Edward. "Introduction to Orientalism." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1801-13
Bhabha, Homi K. "Signs Taken for Wonders." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1875-99
23: Foucault, Michel. "The History of Sexuality." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1627-36
Butler, Judith. "Imitation and Gender Insubordination." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1707-18
24: Fish, Stanley. "How to Recognize a Poem When You See One." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1023-30
Guillory, John. "Cultural Capital." In The Critical Tradition, pp. 1472-83
25: Knapp, Steven and Walter Benn Michaels. "Against Theory." In Against Theory: Literary Studies and the New Pragmatism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press Journals, 1985
__________________
All I want is 40 acres, a mule, and Xterm.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to geneven For This Useful Post:
Reply

Thread Tools

 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 21:30.