Change the way the new stats are shown [DENIED]

old granted and denied feature requests

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wahaha
AniDB Staff
Posts: 1497
Joined: Sun Nov 17, 2002 3:33 pm

Change the way the new stats are shown [DENIED]

Post by wahaha »

The current list is as follows:
0/0/0/0 -- total/shared on rel/shared/deleted+unknown

I'd suggest the following scheme instead:
Image
(all three possible bg-colors just to show that it's visible, the green-color is #005F00)

It'd be:
0 (0+0) -0 -- total - deleted (shared on rel+shared) deleted*
*[shown as negative value, if applicable]

The "users"-count on top of each file should then also take the deleted-status in account (= meaning to *not* count them)
exp
Site Admin
Posts: 2438
Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2002 9:42 pm
Location: Nowhere

Post by exp »

dunno about this one,

your suggestion doesn't look bad, but it doesn't take alle the usefull information into account either. bc atm you're mixing unknown and onhdd/oncd state together. but i think there is a big difference between those two.
maybe something like "total (rel+shared) onhdd+oncd -deleted" would be better (onhdd+oncd as one added number).
but this is getting rather long again :|

and I don't see why the overall usercount should not include the users who deleted that file. after all 99% of them will prolly have seen that ep, so even deleted might mean that this file is better than all other available files in anidb. bc if it were truely crappy most ppl would not let it remain in mylist, would they?

BYe!
EXP
wahaha
AniDB Staff
Posts: 1497
Joined: Sun Nov 17, 2002 3:33 pm

Post by wahaha »

exp wrote:bc if it were truely crappy most ppl would not let it remain in mylist, would they?
Never, it boosts the Gigs... ;)
But I agree... I only delete horrible stuff, but there are surely enough people who delete their stuff after watching it even though it was a nice show :?

"total (rel+shared) onhdd+oncd -deleted" looks good, but since I always suggest something else, here's a change to this:
"onhdd+oncd (rel+shared) +unknown -deleted"

I can't judge which version is less confusing, though. I only bet that both are not *really* intuitively understandable...
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