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Disgusting design options

@chesspanda6 said in #10:

nothing is wrong... its just that... a random thread of endless questions starts

I didn't understand what disclosure buttons do, so i searched and found this thread and asked question here.
I found out what it does it adds button to expand/collapse buttons for variations of the move.

@chesspanda6 said in #10: > nothing is wrong... its just that... a random thread of endless questions starts I didn't understand what `disclosure buttons` do, so i searched and found this thread and asked question here. I found out what it does it adds button to expand/collapse buttons for variations of the move.

@aljustiet said in #12:

nothing is wrong... its just that... a random thread of endless questions starts

I didn't understand what disclosure buttons do, so i searched and found this thread and asked question here.
I found out what it does it adds button to expand/collapse buttons for variations of the move.

yeah but like couldn't you just have searched that up or just tried it yourself...

@aljustiet said in #12: > > nothing is wrong... its just that... a random thread of endless questions starts > > I didn't understand what `disclosure buttons` do, so i searched and found this thread and asked question here. > I found out what it does it adds button to expand/collapse buttons for variations of the move. yeah but like couldn't you just have searched that up or just tried it yourself...

Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations.

Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations.

Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations. Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations.

@TotalNoob69 said in #14:

Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations.

Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations.

I found what it does with AI. I think, I could just try to do variations and see it for myself. I'm newbie in chess, overall, like my ELO on chess.com is 350. On top of that, it's 20:07, here and I'm tired.
I'm trying to understand what "Annotations on board" exactly does, now.

@TotalNoob69 said in #14: > Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations. > > Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations. I found what it does with AI. I think, I could just try to do variations and see it for myself. I'm newbie in chess, overall, like my ELO on chess.com is 350. On top of that, it's 20:07, here and I'm tired. I'm trying to understand what "Annotations on board" exactly does, now.

@TotalNoob69 said in #14:

Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations.

Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations.

Even though, thank you for the explanation.

@TotalNoob69 said in #14: > Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations. > > Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations. Even though, thank you for the explanation.

@aljustiet said in #15:

Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations.

Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations.

I found what it does with AI. I think, I could just try to do variations and see it for myself. I'm newbie in chess, overall, like my ELO on chess.com is 350. On top of that, it's 20:07, here and I'm tired.
I'm trying to understand what "Annotations on board" exactly does, now.

Yeah, it was a joke, sorry if it seemed otherwise...

It means that it will import annotations from a PGN, so if you annotate a game with aarows on ChessBase for example, they will show on Lichess too. I recommend to keep that setting on, since if you want to make a studies of your OTB games on Lichess, keeping annotations is nice.

@aljustiet said in #15: > > Don't worry, @aljustiet , it was a joke. The disclosure functionality is trying to collapse PGNs in studies so that you can more easily follow the main line and not get bogged down in the variations. > > > > Unfortunately, this feature has been met with universal disdain, so it was relegated to a toggle that is off by default. You can try it and see what it does in studies with a lot of variations. > > I found what it does with AI. I think, I could just try to do variations and see it for myself. I'm newbie in chess, overall, like my ELO on chess.com is 350. On top of that, it's 20:07, here and I'm tired. > I'm trying to understand what "Annotations on board" exactly does, now. Yeah, it was a joke, sorry if it seemed otherwise... It means that it will import annotations from a PGN, so if you annotate a game with aarows on ChessBase for example, they will show on Lichess too. I recommend to keep that setting on, since if you want to make a studies of your OTB games on Lichess, keeping annotations is nice.

I thought the OP was going to be offering us some Disgusting design options.

I thought the OP was going to be offering us some Disgusting design options.

@MrPushwood said in #18:

I thought the OP was going to be offering us some Disgusting design options.

did you not see the 3d board?

@MrPushwood said in #18: > I thought the OP was going to be offering us some Disgusting design options. did you not see the 3d board?

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