This might be a better way for you to work.
I configure the bridge so I can bring it to the front and then access directories and the desktop without dismissing the frame. i have a request in to make the frame Multi application so you can have a=say an Illustrator document and a Photoshop and a AE project all opened at the same tie and all tabbed.
Hit the table it changes your tools and menu bar.
Anyway here is how I have to configured along with the bridge, this works a little better with AI which allows you to drag and drop from the bridge and the finder.
<http://www.pixentral.com/show.php?picture=1LGmupFe2fUgMmV5Rdt6GwP66AbNK90>
With the frame the document will stay focused.
I am not certain it is a bug but hopefully for the next version it will not matter.
And hopefully Photoshop will have drag and drop from the bridge or finder
PeterK.
Yes, Coco did do that with earlier versions, but they did fix it with version 4.x so that it worked properly in CS3. Its image window did indeed snap back down under the Options bar as it should. It's now broken in CS4.
What Coco used to do though was not have the image window literally disappear altogether, as it does in CS4, but the title bar of the image would get lost under the Options bar with no way to pull it back down. The makers of Coco are probably going to have to update the filter once again to subscribe to CS4's new windowing rules. I did create a new ticket on their web site noting the issue.
The makers of Coco are probably going to have to update the filter once
again to subscribe to CS4's new windowing rules.
For a $500 plug-in, that should have been done already. :/
It is a darn expensive filter, considering it does just one thing, but I do use it on practically every image I work on. I'm from the old retouching school where you learned on the job since there wasn't anywhere that taught digital retouching and color. I always thought that the Color Correction tool on the Scitex work stations was fabulous. This filter does a great job replicating it, with the bonus of being able to do more than one color correction at a time.
Anyway, I did discover that if you use only the Command+ or Command- keys to increase or decrease the size of the image window, it does properly stay below the Options bar. It's only when you manually drag the window underneath with the mouse that it disappears.