That seems ok. ;-)Holger wrote:I really don't think that they are similar, and not that much overlapping.
All four (well, three) combinations seem useful to me:
1. handicap on, skip level on (default):
People can skip single levels, but are always asked if they really want.
Especially, fast scanning through whole level sets is not possible.
This seems to be a good default for new players.
2. handicap on, skip level off:
The setting for "die hard" R'n'D players.
3. handicap off, skip level on or off:
Directly select each and every level, without any warnings or notifications.
Useful if you just don't care about solving levels before seeing the next one.
My proposal from March 2004 (+ slight modifications I made now) was:The last two should be treated the same, I think. Then we could use red for "never played any level from this set", yellow for "already player or solved levels from this set, but there are unsolved levels left" and green for "all levels solved in this set".
If somebody has a better idea for a colouring scheme, please write it here!
(I know that this was discussed before somewhere...)
(for levelsets - colour of the name, for levels - colour of the level number when browsing):
> green = completed (level/set)
> red = not completed level / set with no levels completed
> yellow = current level (the one following the last completed one) / set with some levels completed
> purple (or blue) = skipped level
You're probably right.Zomis wrote:But the problem then would be to get newbies to understand the meaning of the double-arrow button...