This Bugzilla instance is a read-only archive of historic NetBeans bug reports. To report a bug in NetBeans please follow the project's instructions for reporting issues.
I propose we add a feature similar to Windows XP's "remove unused desktop items" wizard. Users would be presented with a "Usage optimization wizard". During normal usage Netbeans would simply have to remember when was the last time any given feature was used. For example, when was the last time the user collapsed or expanded a block of code. Then, when this wizard is run it would list all features that have been used infrequently or not at all in the past and based upon that knowledge it would recommend shutting them down (for the sake of improving performance). A nice side-effect of disabling unused features is that the user will gain more work-area real estate as unused toolbars are removed. Now, the beauty of this feature is that it will have a fail safe button. If at any point the user want to use a feature that is mysteriously missing and he can't remember how to bring it back all he needs to do is go back into the "usage optimization wizard" and hit the "reenable all modules" button. Voila, good as new! Impact: - I believe the overhead of remembering when a feature was last used should be cheap. - The benefit of disabling unused modules is extra screen real-estate (in the case of toolbars and menu items which are no longer displayed), reduced memory footprint, cpu load and faster startup time. - The beauty of this wizard is its ease-of-use. It takes a lot of the guesswork out of enabling/disabling modules and improves performance for lay users. - You can implement this feature incrementally. At the beginning try this out on some low-hanging fruit like code-folding and the editor toolbar (on top) and if it goes well other components can integrate themselves into the wizard as time goes by.
I think this feature would not work too well in the way you have described it... Real impact: - thousands of i-net discussion threads about: "I had this feature in NB but now it is gone, why did the NB guys removed it?" or "There is a bug in NB - items just disappears from the menus" - some useful but not frequently used features will not be available when needed - if you work on various projects, you can use some feature million times in one day and not to use it at all another day next month. To make the items available, you would have to go through the "fail-safe" dialog or something, it is not too handy. However, I like the idea of saving space by hiding unused items and I can imagine someone might try to turn it on (I think it definitely shouldn't be ON by default). It just shouldn't work like "remove unused desktop items" but like "hide unused menu items" - you know this feature from XP too. If you open some menu, there are items that are frequently used and one extra item in the bottom of the menu - an arrow. If you click this arrow, the rest of the menu is expanded, all items from the menu are visible. It wouldn't work well on the pop-up menu though...
[note: what I wanted to say was: "Do not hide the items, just make them collapsed"]
Please revisit this issue. I believe most of it has been addressed by the Ergonomics project. The only feature missing is making the process more dynamic. Right now Netbeans will activate features on demand, but it never suggests disabling them (or disables them automatically if idle for a long time).