Replying to Avatar Gregor

nostr:npub1n0sturny6w9zn2wwexju3m6asu7zh7jnv2jt2kx6tlmfhs7thq0qnflahe I used my Damus generated key to sign into TestFlight Nostur for the first time, and I get several spinning wheel screens, on eg. the Reaction notifications page, Emoji and Discover feed.

No bookmarks carried over, perhaps a standardization issue.

Then I tried whether the LN address profile field would accept my BOLT12 address, plain or URI format, and while it saved the string, zap attempts also resulted in a spinning icon.

If I may suggest:

- investigate emoji reaction based features in connection with imported profiles

- Enable straight BOLT12 tip payments, even if full BOLT12 zap support proves too complicated for now

- try to make bookmarks cross compatible

- Add an automatic draft save feature, like Damus did. Particularly helpful when you need to minimize the compose pane to check the feed for information.

- While the iPhone user interface recently progressed, the iPad version still uses a rather unexpected black gray two tone look.

- The iOS compose window uses unexpected gray backgrounds too, and, started jumping vertically with each keystrokes after the post text reached a certain length. I had to add another line break at the bottom to keep the active text line in view.

How do I choose and edit relays?

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

I forgot that I had to update the iPad TestFlight first.

- Reaction notifications work on iPad, continue to cause a spinning circle on iPhone

- iPad UI uses a mostly consistent background now, still shows occasional gray patches around the username in the right pane

If you go to Settings and then scroll down there is an option: “Configure your relays…”

Thanks, I found it. I missed the Relays section headline.

Coming from Damus, the Settings seem crowded.

What about moving basic Relay Settings one level higher, or at least higher up in the Settings?

Also, how about linking to the Relay settings from the Relays tap of the user profile?

I like the Swift first codebase, the more time I spend in the UI, I would just like to go through it with a figurative hatchet. I know, open source I can, just a significant difference between visual conceptualizing and writing code. Perhaps in the future.