![]() ![]() User goes up to c:\docs\letters\new and stays at d:\backup\letters - so far so goodħ. User goes down to c:\docs\letters\new\orders and stays at d:\backup\lettersĦ. > c:\docs\letters and d:\backup\letters would be rememberedĥ. ![]() User goes down to c:\docs\letters\new and stays at d:\backup\letters User goes down to c:\docs\letters and d:\backup\lettersĤ. Users goes to c:\docs and d:\backup via a bookmarkģ. Or use the history to return to a different directory.ġ. ![]() Unfortunately that would cause another problem: The user may use the directory hotlist (bookmarks) to open a different pair of directories. And only after returning to the same exact path, the sync should resume. What I suggest instead, is remember the exact paths that we had opened when the sync navigation was "broken". As soon as he/she returns back to exactly the same path, and if the current path in the other panel remains the same that was when that happened, then the sync navigation can be resumed. If we really want to somehow keep the sync dir change, I would rather suggest remembering the last path, which was opened before the user entered a non-matched subdir. Why? Because the user entered a folder named the same, as the one he visited half an hour ago during the sync mode… The user navigated somewhere, without any changes in the other panel, then suddenly the inactive panel starts to change path. Debug and Release when compiling a program in Visual Studio). There can be many same-named folders in different places (it's not uncommon to have similar projects and sub-projects, not to mention technical subdirs always named the same, like e.g. Petermad wrote: ↑, 12:13 UTCMaybe when you go up-dir in one of those ways, then only go up-dir in the opposite panel if the folder name is the same in the two panels. ![]()
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