Summary | Tweak event editing form time logic |
Queue | Kronolith |
Queue Version | HEAD |
Type | Enhancement |
State | Assigned |
Priority | 1. Low |
Owners | Horde Developers (at) |
Requester | chuck (at) horde (dot) org |
Created | 10/11/2008 (6059 days ago) |
Due | |
Updated | 10/21/2008 (6049 days ago) |
Assigned | 10/21/2008 (6049 days ago) |
Resolved | |
Milestone | |
Patch | No |
Assigned to
Taken from Chuck Hagenbuch
State ⇒ Assigned
the form is created from scratch there anyway, and adapt it to the
traditional UI once we're happy with it.
of the end time setting. I don't see how this could become a regular
scenario, and if it did, the user would get used to using the
duration setting for such adjustments.
setting; it's very easily overlooked. I had even forgotten about it
when discussing this issue with her.
eliminated if we got rid of End Time in the form, and just had
Duration. I think that would be simpler for all single-day events,
and multi-day events are doable - and they are far from the norm.
I don't want to have to calculate the duration of an event in the head
if I only have the start and end date/time. This is different for
all-day events of course, and I already played a bit with it in the
past. But it didn't work well without some major edit form redesign. I
suggest we play with that in the new interface since the form is
created from scratch there anyway, and adapt it to the traditional UI
once we're happy with it.
from 9pm-12am, which is the next day. if you then try to adjust it
back from 12am/midnight to 11pm, the event is now not 2 hours long,
as expected, but 26 hours long.
of the end time setting. I don't see how this could become a regular
scenario, and if it did, the user would get used to using the duration
setting for such adjustments.
representing that multi-day events are the same event; it's very easy
for someone who's just created a 26 hour event to think that they have
a copy of their event instead, and delete the "second one"; now
they've deleted the original, and don't know what happened. I'll open
another ticket for making it clearer when events are the same on the
calendar view.
It occurs to me, though, that this confusion would be entirely
eliminated if we got rid of End Time in the form, and just had
Duration. I think that would be simpler for all single-day events, and
multi-day events are doable - and they are far from the norm.
As it is now, looking at the event edit form, there is a lot of
complication; just now it struck me that the radio buttons aren't
grouped at all, so End, Duration, and Alarm seem to be on the same
level. Getting rid of End Date would help with that.
there's an existing event from 8-11pm. you move it one hour later from
9pm-12am, which is the next day. if you then try to adjust it back
from 12am/midnight to 11pm, the event is now not 2 hours long, as
expected, but 26 hours long.
the argument is that we should force the user to change the date if
the user wants to change the date.
event start time AND the duration. Usually it's the same duration.
likely because, well the start time has changed. The event duration
stays the same. The end time being adapted is one of the best
usability feature of the event form IMO.
Patch ⇒ No
State ⇒ Feedback
Milestone ⇒
Queue ⇒ Kronolith
Summary ⇒ Tweak event editing form time logic
Type ⇒ Enhancement
Priority ⇒ 1. Low
automatically adjusting end times (event from 9-11pm, move it to 11pm,
it goes to 1am the next day; instead, have it go until midnight?). or,
only adjust end times when creating events; when editing existing
events, make time adjustments all manual