Bug #23004 Sizing of sidebar gives unexpected results
Submitted: 5 Oct 2006 8:46 Modified: 22 Oct 2006 11:51
Reporter: Kai Sautter (Basic Quality Contributor) Email Updates:
Status: Can't repeat Impact on me:
None 
Category:MySQL Query Browser Severity:S3 (Non-critical)
Version:1.1.20 OS:Windows (Windows XP)
Assigned to: CPU Architecture:Any

[5 Oct 2006 8:46] Kai Sautter
Description:
If you minimize the right side bar by dragging it to minimal width and then try to open it again by dragging it open again,
you only get a (gray) area (=separator bar) but not the sidebar. If you reposition the mouse to the right end of the window,
you can then open the side bar, but it will have a broader separator to the tabs, which you can not make smaller.

If you do the first dragging to quickly, the separator takes almost all the window width.
The bar broadens much quicker than the mouse moves.

In the latter case, you have to close Query Browser before you can have a "normal" view again.

Version 1.2.2 beta still shows this problem.

How to repeat:
(1) Open Query Browser

(2) Minimize the sidebar using the mouse (drag the sidebar border to the window border)

(3) Reopen the sidebar by dragging the sidebar border from the window border towards the center of the window.

(4) Repeat (3) to see the actula sidebar content.
[5 Oct 2006 9:31] Valeriy Kravchuk
Thank you for a problem report. Please, try to repeat with a newer version, 1.2.4rc, and inform about the results.
[5 Oct 2006 10:17] Kai Sautter
I have checked Version 1.2.4beta for this behaviour. The problem is fixed in this version.

Yet the version shows a new "strage behaviour when double-clicking on the collapsed sidebar. This will open the sidebar as far just to provide enought spcae for a scroll bar and nothing else. Expected behaviour would be, that the default size or the size before minimizing is restored.
[22 Oct 2006 11:51] Valeriy Kravchuk
So, this bug is not repeatable in 1.2.4 rc. Please, create new bug reports about any bugs you found in 1.2.4 rc (and check for already reported ones, as there are many).