Monday, September 29, 2014

Windows 7 is fucking useless

We upgraded to Windows 7 the other day. I hate it.

I use two monitors. Two screens, so I have more to look at. I can keep a drawing open in AutoCAD on one, and open Excel on the other, then examine the drawing, make a list of parts, and count them. It's useful to me.

Because I have two screens I tend to put things in particular places so I know where to look for them, so I can find then easier. Our "current jobs" folder I put on the right screen, in the upper left. When I double-click a job folder in "current jobs" I expect the job folder to open so that it mostly hides the current jobs. In the upper-left of the screen on the right. That leaves me the upper-right and the lower-left and the lower-right to open sub-folders or other lower-tier windows. And that leaves me AutoCAD on the left screen, with no windows covering it and no windows hidden behind it. That's useful to me.

But now we have Windows 7. Now I open the first window and put it where I want. Then every damned window that opens later, opens into a "cascade" pattern. This means that the active window is always hidden by whatever window I open next. This is fucking useless.

I have to go and move the newly opened window, and re-size it to a useful size. So I do that. And then the next window I open opens in "cascade" mode so that it hides the window I just fixed! So I have to move and re-size the new window, too.

If I close the windows at the end of the day and open them again the next morning, the process starts over. Windows 7 seems to remember the size and location of the most-recently-opened window, and opens all subsequent windows in cascade from that point. This is fucking useless.

Pretty soon I got so frustrated with Windows 7 that I opened up the Help -- even though Windows Help is always fucking useless -- and searched for where the window opens. Here's what I got:


(Notice how I resized that window? It's just a habit with me. I need Windows to cooperate with me. It's not cooperating. It's telling me how to work. I don't like that.)

Most of the results returned by Windows Help were completely irrelevant. Google has me spoiled. Google results are almost always at least relevant and very often useful. Not so, Windows Help. If I want help on "where the windows opens" why the hell would it think that the number 1 best result is "Minimize all open windows to view the desktop"? Windows Help is fucking useless.

Anyway, after work I was on Google, so I searched for where the window opens in Windows 7. On the first page of results I found Set Default Window Size - Windows 7 & 8 - Information ...

On the first page of results. From Wake Forest University. Here's what it says:

Windows 7 & 8 will automatically remember the current size of a window when it is closed. If you open Microsoft Word and make the window larger or smaller, it will save that setting when you close Word. All windows will remain that size until you change it and close again. If the window is not re-sized properly when the application is reopened, then try the steps below.

To force Windows to record the size of a window and set it as the default size for that program each time it's opened, simply re-size the window to your preferred size, then depress and hold the CTRL key while you click the red X to close it. The program should use that size as the default size until changed.

Depress and hold the CTRL key while you click the red X to close the window.

Perfect. Now all I have to do is remember to do it every goddamn time I close a window.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

AutoDesk AutoCAD 2015 Help: To Transfer Custom Settings Using the CUI Editor

One interesting thing -- you can access the online AutoCAD help even if you're not on your work computer.

I like the old, tiny little window AutoCAD used to have for customizing toolbars. And the customization was written out to a textfile. I like that, too. It was a big file, but you could read it. I could read it. The file they have now is written in XML, some language I don't speak. And now the file is ten times as big. And prone to error, in my experience.

So when we got around to installing AutoCAD 2015 and "migrating" my menu customizations into it, I wanted to be very careful. I didn't want any menu glitches. So I read the Help page on transferring settings.

It says... No. First this:

The CUI Editor is a rectangle on the screen, divided down the middle into two "panes", one on the left, and one on the right. At the top, each pane has a drop-down thing that lets you open a menu file. So this way you can copy custom menus and custom toolbars from one file to another. That's what I want to do.

Sometimes I get duplicate entries on my menu. I don't know why. I figured I did something wrong in the old AutoCAD, when I customized the menu. So this time I took my time with the help.

It says to open the file you want to import from, in the left pane. (It says in steps 2 and 3, that "in the left pane" I should open the file "from which you want to import customizations". The file I will import from goes in the left window.)

It says to open the file you want to export to, in the right pane. (It says in steps 4 and 5, that "in the right pane" I should open the file "to which you want to export customizations". The file I will export to goes in the right window.)

So I will grab things from the left window, and drag them to the right window.


Then it Step 7 it shows that you drag from the right window to the left window.

Then, just to mess with your head, below the image in Step 7 it says you can drag things "in either direction".

Is this really the best they have to offer? Confused help, and error-prone menus?