Skip to main content
Known Participant
September 17, 2020
Answered

Import "Done" Button

  • September 17, 2020
  • 10 replies
  • 4171 views

Two questions and a gripe:
1) What is the purpose of the "Done" button on the Import dialog?
2) Has it always existed or is it a new addition?

After getting everything set to import (keywords added, etc), I keep accidentally clicking the "Done" button, which might as well be "Cancel" because the effect is that absolutely nothing happens (except wasting my time because now I have to start completely over and this time watch for the "Import" button).

I swear it hasn't always been this way.  Am I right?  Is the "Done" button a new addition? Because I've been using Lightroom since v1.0 was released and I don't ever remember having this problem, only recently have I started accidentally hitting the "Done" button. That's what makes me think it is new.  And if it truly is as useless as it seems ... why not get rid of it?  There is already a "Cancel" button, we don't need two buttons that both effectively cancel the import process.

Correct answer Ian Lyons

It was added with 9.4 follwoing mutiple requests on the Lightroom Feedback forum.

 

As Ddegannes has shown, it enables the User to exit the Import window with the current seetings (excluded import source) whereas these were previously ignored.

 

A similar button exists in the Export window.

10 replies

New Participant
October 29, 2023

I also think that adding the Done button to the import dialog was a poor decision.  It's not at all obvious what it means and it is too easy to press it by mistake. I've also made the mistake of pressing it not realizing that it doesn't mean what I think it means, which is that I'm done with selecting which photos to import. I even formatted my card once thinking that the import had completed and then had to recover my photos from the card. This may be consistent with other Adobe Tools but it is certainly not an industry standard. On1 uses a Done button pretty much like an OK button and I'm sure that there are plenty of other examples where Done means OK. 

 

As others have said this button should be given a better name and there should be a confirmation dialog to prevent the user from inadvertently cancelling the import. 

New Participant
January 6, 2023

I would suggest that in the vast majority of cases we are in the import/export dialogoe to actually do those total actions i.e when all the settings are done we actually do want to import or export
How many times does one go in to just reset the parameters and ne4ed to use Done?
It's all very well saying to retrain muscle memory but that is not the answer as it is the brain that will often say - "Oh it's the left hand button that I've used sometimes before"
We tend to work/read left to right so the order should maybe be
EXPORT ( yes , in caps or bold please) Done, Cancel

 

DdeGannes
Community Expert
January 7, 2023

You only need to use the Done button when you wish to create a specific import profile, that you want to be present every time you import.

If Lightroom there are multiple ways to complete various tasks. Presets, mouse functions and keyboard shortcuts. If you do not like the Done button there is no need to use it.

For my workflow I never use it but am aware what it achieves.

It was introduced in LrC version 9.4 see the screen capture.

 

 

Regards, Denis: iMac 27” mid-2015, macOS 11.7.10 Big Sur; 2TB SSD, 24 GB Ram, GPU 2 GB; LrC 12.5,; Lr 6.5, PS 24.7,; ACR 15.5,; (also Laptop Win 11, ver 24H2, LrC 15.0.1, PS 27.0; ) Camera Oly OM-D E-M1.
New Participant
October 30, 2022

It's insane to me how Adobe products are the most-used products by designers world-wide, yet have some of the most horrible designs across the entire industry.

Did no one think to maybe have a warning dialog before wiping out hours of 'import' progress? Or grouping the two 'cancel' buttons, rather than throwing the actual "complete this dialog" button between them? Or giving the second cancel button a better name than "Done"?

Community Expert
November 5, 2022

So adding "Done" now makes these screens consistent with Adobe Camera Raw's very similar Cancel / Done / Open.

 

The effective difference between ACR's Cancel and Done, is that with the latter you won't have discarded the work you have just done in the interface, if for whatever reason you don't want to take the image(s) into PS right now (Open would silently include a Done action also).

 

Similarly in LrC you may customise the export settings for a new export, and then remember you'd forgotten to complete some Develop work on the images. So you come out and complete that work. With only Export and Cancel buttons available, you'd probably click Cancel assuming you don't want to get an unwanted Export underway yet. And then when you returned to Export all those export settings would need to be customised again. Adding Done means you can now come out, do what else you need, then return to the same point you'd previously got to. (Export / Import have always silently included a Done action).

New Participant
November 5, 2022
quote

Adding Done means you can now come out, do what else you need, then return to the same point you'd previously got to.


By @richardplondon


Except, you don't. At all. You lose all the progress you made choosing which photos to import, which is the primary purpose of that dialog, and where 99% of the time is spent. It doesn't even remember which path you were importing from. The only thing that's actually saved is the 5 or so options on the right, a laughably small amount of work which should be saved automatically, not requiring pressing a confusing new button.

Even a mediocre designer could tell you that having two cancel buttons, and putting them to the left/right of the actual completion button, and not differentiating them using any sort of hue or lightness or icon or tooltip, and giving one of them a name that implies it's a completion button when it's not, is horrible HORRIBLE design. The fact that anyone thought ANYTHING ABOUT THIS BUTTON was a good solution is absurd.

New Participant
December 11, 2020

Completely agree. Import is an action -- you either do it or cancel the action. You don't "Done" the import 😉 I press it all the time by mistake, and I know that it's there. Muscle memory and years of workflow.

 

Here's a suggestion, make it a user setting to remove it from the UI.

 

Anyhow, just thought I'd chime in.

 

-Wm

Conrad_C
Community Expert
March 18, 2021

@Wm Schwartz wrote:

Completely agree. Import is an action -- you either do it or cancel the action. You don't "Done" the import 😉 I press it all the time by mistake, and I know that it's there. Muscle memory and years of workflow.


 

Until this changes, or in case it does not change, I have been suggesting this as a way to re-calibrate muscle memory:

 

The positions of buttons did not change. In earlier versions, Cancel and Import were the last two buttons. They are still the last two buttons. The Done button is just a new one on the left. The way to get it right every time, regardless of version, is to train muscle memory to always click the button at the right end. It hasn’t moved or changed, it has always been Import.

Participating Frequently
November 20, 2020

It would have been better if placed to the right of where it is now.

New Participant
September 24, 2020

I hate that done button. My issue is the same as dwterry - I feel exactly the same way. The reason why I am here is because I jjust googled in search of an option to disable the "done" button. It is a waste of time! After all these years, it is second nature to click the leftmost button to import. By instinct, I click it only for nothing to happen. Place it in another position, if it is that it is useful to some people. Or else, give me the option to disable it.

Ian Lyons
Ian LyonsCorrect answer
Community Expert
September 17, 2020

It was added with 9.4 follwoing mutiple requests on the Lightroom Feedback forum.

 

As Ddegannes has shown, it enables the User to exit the Import window with the current seetings (excluded import source) whereas these were previously ignored.

 

A similar button exists in the Export window.

JohanElzenga
Community Expert
September 17, 2020

This is something new and was actually requested. When you click 'Cancel', Lightroom will forget what you have just selected and fall back to your previous import settings. When you click 'Done', Lightroom will also cancel the actual import but it will store the settings you just made in memory for next time.

 

-- Johan W. Elzenga
PhotographyMD
Known Participant
October 21, 2020

Thank you.

 

What a horrible thing to name this button. I was on the 3rd "Import" before I noticed that all that was being created were the Collections. No photos were brought into Lightroom and a fair amount of time was wasted trying to find them before realizing this.

DdeGannes
Community Expert
September 17, 2020

If you use your mouse to hover over the Done button for a couple of seconds there will be a popup which displays what effect it will have. I believe this is a common function in LrC.

 

Regards, Denis: iMac 27” mid-2015, macOS 11.7.10 Big Sur; 2TB SSD, 24 GB Ram, GPU 2 GB; LrC 12.5,; Lr 6.5, PS 24.7,; ACR 15.5,; (also Laptop Win 11, ver 24H2, LrC 15.0.1, PS 27.0; ) Camera Oly OM-D E-M1.
Just Shoot Me
Brainiac
September 17, 2020

1] I have wondered the same thing. I have never Clicked it to see what exactly it is supposed to be for but I suspect it is for creating import presets and or setting default settings that are used everytime the import dialog is opened without actuially Importing any images.

 

2] It is a New addition, Feature. As far as I know there was No documentation on it in the Release notes and I have gone back several versions release notes. I don't recall when I first saw the Done button in the Import dialog window but it isn't there in Lr 5.7.1.

 

Then I suggest you be more accurate with your cursor before clicking the left button on your mouse.

 

dwterryAuthor
Known Participant
September 18, 2020

It's not an accuracy issue ... it's more like having driven the same car for 13 years suddenly someone moved the break pedal and when I simply step where I expect it to be, something different happens.  It's called "muscle memory".  Things are not the way they used to be, and my "muscle memory" has not yet adapted.

Just Shoot Me
Brainiac
September 18, 2020

But it is an Accuracy issue. Likw if you buy a New car and the radio and heater/AC controls are in a different spot.

 

Retrain your muscle.