Reader UI of the Week: Recover from corruption with Icewalker
Each week, WoW Insider and Mathew McCurley bring you a fresh look at reader-submitted UIs as well as Addon Spotlight, which spotlights the latest user interface addons. Have a screenshot of your own UI that you'd like to submit? Send your screenshots along with info on what mods you're using to readerui@wowinsider.com, and follow Mathew on Twitter.
Reader UI is no stranger to UI crashes and corruption issues. Believe me, I've had my fair share of UI crashes that completely and utterly obliterated my entire setup. It is a sad state of affairs when your settings just decide to up and leave on you. Not fun, right?
Losing your user interface in a crash or through some corruption issue is annoying and demoralizing, to be sure. However, rebuilding usually takes less time than you think and sometimes adds new and unique aspects to your UI that weren't there before. In destruction comes organized rebirth, or something like that.
Icewalker sent in his UI with the sad tale of UI failure and starting over, which I felt for. Poor, innocent UIs getting corrupted, probably from Old God influence, just puts me in a bad mood. So today, we will take a look at Icewalker's new, basic UI and grieve together for all of those user interfaces lost in senseless crashes and the wanton ways of home computing.
Sing, Icewalker, the song of the corrupted.
Icewalker's UI -- crash and burn, starting from scratch, death knight UI
Icewalker opted to redo the whole thing, potentially even simpler than the first.
The seven stages of interface grief
I'm not entirely sure there are seven stages of interface grief, probably more like two or three, but I thought the header would be fun. The first thing that comes to mind when your interface explodes is all that time and energy it took you to make your UI in the first place. Would you remember where everything went? Which addons did what? Why are there new UI pieces all over the place -- oh right, you had a bunch of stuff hidden. It is a cacophony of interface elements and broken dreams.
Fear not. Step back. Breathe. Your addon list is usually easily memorable enough, and muscle memory or an old screenshot of your UI will hopefully help you remember your buttons. If you saved your macros with the in-game macro editor, they should still be there, so there's not too much of a loss in terms of scripting or coding when macros are concerned.
After the initial shock of things gone awry, you begin the mental task of rebuilding. At this point, you want to do as little work as possible, so it turns out your UI could come out much simpler than the first time around, since you're looking for shortcuts everywhere in between. Icewalker's new UI has basic symmetry along with large, expandable areas for Bartender at the bottom. Sure, the bottom could be fine-tuned better with the action bars, but this is day 0 of UI crash, right? Keep spaces open for your rebuilding efforts so that you don't run into a space problem as you get back into the old groove.
Small unit frames
I don't know how many times I've written this down, but I love smaller unit frames. When I see a user interface with enormous unit frames all over it, I can't stop thinking about all that wasted space. Wasted! On unit frames! Do you really need your unit frames that large, barring some sort of vision issue? If you've got terrible eyesight (like me), you get a pass.
Everyone else, check out Icewalker's unit frames and see how they are not small enough not to be useful but not large enough that they take over the screen. Vuhdo replaces the group interface, so there are not giant unit frames for every party member down the side of the interface. Yes, it's a smaller target to click when you want to do something to a party member, I know. I am sorry. I guess that's why I recommend Grid so highly; heck, even Blizzard does.
Buffs as bars
The gauntlet has been thrown in the Buff Wars, and I've come down on bar style. I love bar-style buffs and debuffs because I like having the name of the buff/debuff in addition to its duration in a visible format. I've been using icon buffs and debuffs for awhile now when Elkanos was down for the count, but Elkanos is back and I have no more excuses.
The reason I like buffs and debuffs as bars is because they fit so neatly over unit frames. You can keep them as extensions of the unit frames themselves, especially the player's unit frame. An incredibly useful tool, layering your bar-style buffs and debuffs on their respective unit frames makes for some pretty stuff. Remember to filter out the stuff you don't need, though, or things could get crowded. Leave the raid buffs and such to the out-of-the-way area and the important stuff like Jagged Tear close to your heart.
Conc Shot (or, how I say conclusion)
Grieve and feel pain as the mighty constructs of man come tumbling down before our eyes and we rebuild society as it was meant to be -- simple, out of the way, and new. Icewalker obviously has work to do and things will never be exactly the same, but life will go on and new ideas that had not been present before shall present themselves. With death comes rebirth, and with UI death comes a sick new action bar setup and probably more tweaks than he cares to admit right now. They will come, and they will become normal.
Until it all breaks again.
Interested in getting the most out of your user interface? Come back once a week for more examples of reader UIs. For more details on individual addons, check out Addon Spotlight, or visit Addons 101 for help getting started.
Reader UI is no stranger to UI crashes and corruption issues. Believe me, I've had my fair share of UI crashes that completely and utterly obliterated my entire setup. It is a sad state of affairs when your settings just decide to up and leave on you. Not fun, right?
Losing your user interface in a crash or through some corruption issue is annoying and demoralizing, to be sure. However, rebuilding usually takes less time than you think and sometimes adds new and unique aspects to your UI that weren't there before. In destruction comes organized rebirth, or something like that.
Icewalker sent in his UI with the sad tale of UI failure and starting over, which I felt for. Poor, innocent UIs getting corrupted, probably from Old God influence, just puts me in a bad mood. So today, we will take a look at Icewalker's new, basic UI and grieve together for all of those user interfaces lost in senseless crashes and the wanton ways of home computing.
Sing, Icewalker, the song of the corrupted.
Icewalker's UI -- crash and burn, starting from scratch, death knight UI
Mat,Thanks for the submission and the email, Icewalker. I am dreadfully sorry that your user interface fell apart on you, but hopefully our community-wide grieving can stem the anguish just enough to help you soldier on. Starting over is never fun, and as I've discussed before, you basically have two options when a crash and erasure occurs -- turn on a UI replacement like ElvUI, or rejigger the whole thing from scratch.
Hey, I just wanted to submit my new UI, aimed towards Death Knights. I created this a couple days ago, after having a lot of problems with corruption in my WoW install. I decided to scrap and reinstall everything, which means a new UI, yay! I'll have a couple detail shots to show you where things are that you can't see.
Installed Addons:
Ace3
Addon Control Panel
Altoholic
Atlasloot Enhanced
Bagnon
Bartender4
Blood Shield Tracker
DDR - DocsDebugRunes
Deadly Boss Mods
eAlign
Elkano's BuffBars
IceHUD
kgPanels
Masque
Masque: Darion
MikScrollingBattleText
NeedToKnow
OmniCC
Outfitter
Postal
Prat 3.0
Quartz
RatingBuster
SexyMap
Shadowed Unit Frames
Skada Damage Meter
Tidy Plates (Using Neon theme)
Visual Combat Table
VuhDo
(Outline Picture) Here is just a little image showing pretty much all of the addons you can see. Looking at this now, I can think of some better uses for the second set of bartender4 areas, but that will come another time.
(Combat/Casting Picture) And here is just a little image of the UI in combat. I would have liked to get a picture in a raid or party, but no one was really cooperating at the time, but you can get the general gist of how it works.
Well, I hope you enjoyed the UI!
-- Icewalker
Level 85 Death Knight
Malfurion (US Alliance)
Icewalker opted to redo the whole thing, potentially even simpler than the first.
The seven stages of interface grief
I'm not entirely sure there are seven stages of interface grief, probably more like two or three, but I thought the header would be fun. The first thing that comes to mind when your interface explodes is all that time and energy it took you to make your UI in the first place. Would you remember where everything went? Which addons did what? Why are there new UI pieces all over the place -- oh right, you had a bunch of stuff hidden. It is a cacophony of interface elements and broken dreams.
Fear not. Step back. Breathe. Your addon list is usually easily memorable enough, and muscle memory or an old screenshot of your UI will hopefully help you remember your buttons. If you saved your macros with the in-game macro editor, they should still be there, so there's not too much of a loss in terms of scripting or coding when macros are concerned.
After the initial shock of things gone awry, you begin the mental task of rebuilding. At this point, you want to do as little work as possible, so it turns out your UI could come out much simpler than the first time around, since you're looking for shortcuts everywhere in between. Icewalker's new UI has basic symmetry along with large, expandable areas for Bartender at the bottom. Sure, the bottom could be fine-tuned better with the action bars, but this is day 0 of UI crash, right? Keep spaces open for your rebuilding efforts so that you don't run into a space problem as you get back into the old groove.
Small unit frames
I don't know how many times I've written this down, but I love smaller unit frames. When I see a user interface with enormous unit frames all over it, I can't stop thinking about all that wasted space. Wasted! On unit frames! Do you really need your unit frames that large, barring some sort of vision issue? If you've got terrible eyesight (like me), you get a pass.
Everyone else, check out Icewalker's unit frames and see how they are not small enough not to be useful but not large enough that they take over the screen. Vuhdo replaces the group interface, so there are not giant unit frames for every party member down the side of the interface. Yes, it's a smaller target to click when you want to do something to a party member, I know. I am sorry. I guess that's why I recommend Grid so highly; heck, even Blizzard does.
Buffs as bars
The gauntlet has been thrown in the Buff Wars, and I've come down on bar style. I love bar-style buffs and debuffs because I like having the name of the buff/debuff in addition to its duration in a visible format. I've been using icon buffs and debuffs for awhile now when Elkanos was down for the count, but Elkanos is back and I have no more excuses.
The reason I like buffs and debuffs as bars is because they fit so neatly over unit frames. You can keep them as extensions of the unit frames themselves, especially the player's unit frame. An incredibly useful tool, layering your bar-style buffs and debuffs on their respective unit frames makes for some pretty stuff. Remember to filter out the stuff you don't need, though, or things could get crowded. Leave the raid buffs and such to the out-of-the-way area and the important stuff like Jagged Tear close to your heart.
Conc Shot (or, how I say conclusion)
Grieve and feel pain as the mighty constructs of man come tumbling down before our eyes and we rebuild society as it was meant to be -- simple, out of the way, and new. Icewalker obviously has work to do and things will never be exactly the same, but life will go on and new ideas that had not been present before shall present themselves. With death comes rebirth, and with UI death comes a sick new action bar setup and probably more tweaks than he cares to admit right now. They will come, and they will become normal.
Until it all breaks again.
Filed under: Add-Ons, Reader UI of the Week








Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Amaxe Aug 2nd 2011 5:29PM
All we need is an addon which saves addon settings...
whitewolf9024 Aug 2nd 2011 5:43PM
Reflux ftw?
Mgssidley Aug 2nd 2011 6:13PM
Most addons have profiles. I know that profiles can get messy but what I do to fix that is have the main profile set to Default(A lot will create one for each character) and then delete every other profile. Makes everything a lot less cluttered.
Tevildo Aug 2nd 2011 6:19PM
I use git to save my addon settings. It was created for version control of source code, and lua saved variables are... plain text source code :) Wouldn't matter if they weren't of course, but it's still a nice coincidence. Just create a repository to track the WTF folder and remember to commit after any changes to your ui and voila! A history of your addon settings that you can step through at will. Made some changes that you don't like and want to undo? Want to step back to the way you had it set up 2 months ago (my addon config changes frequently...)? Git lets you do this.
Unfortunately, no wow addon for it yet.
Amaxe Aug 2nd 2011 10:05PM
Never heard of these, but I'll look em up anyway.
Telimar Aug 3rd 2011 4:37AM
Tevildo: I tried to use a vcs but gave up because wow (or ace or whatever) randomly rearranges the tables in the settings so it's very hard to track what has actually changed.
bjorn9486 Aug 3rd 2011 7:11AM
I do kinda the same thing as Mgssidley. I create a profile for the add-on called "Default" and I set it to how I will want it to look and work. Then on every character, I create a profile for them (with the same name), copy the default profile, and then tweak it how I want it for that toon. 99% of my UI is the same across the board for all my characters, but I also get slight customization that I need (I needed grid for my healer to be slightly different for example).
Camo Aug 4th 2011 5:34AM
I had a crash that destroyed my grid settings only twice and yeah it's annoying to rebuild that but it was only grid. My other addons that change the layout are hard coded to do their job. They don't have profiles that can be messed up. The minimap will always stay at the same place as will the oUF layout, the chat boxes, the quest tracker and all those tiny modifications that I have.
cortney Aug 2nd 2011 10:08PM
the thing i really wish, was that my chat window didn't change every character. all my other addons have profiles and stuff that are easily restorable, but i decided to play with ardor's idea of the two chat windows (one for actual talking and one for information) and every time i switch to another character i find myself having to take the time to move the chat frame to the right place and create another window. most annoying!
Heleos Aug 3rd 2011 2:21AM
ICEWALKER? This the same Icewalker from Everquest who was the best mage in game? Also almost as successful on FFXI. That same Icewalker? I wonder...
Raulnor Aug 8th 2011 4:40PM
@Heleos, no, afraid not, but I'm glad I picked a name with a good legacy! I originally picked it due to the Path of Frost spell that Death Knights have. However, if my performance to gear ratio shows much, I'm still doing a good job of carrying on that legacy XD
sigg Aug 5th 2011 6:27AM
I am the maintainer of RDX.
I don't think that your settings are lost due to Blizzard crash or anything.
I remember when I was playing on PTR with massive crash, I've never lost my db.
Personally, I suspect two sources, an addon that do not respect the way how it must use acedb or a bug in the acedb code itself.
Sigg
Heleos Aug 8th 2011 8:43PM
Big shoes but Im sure you're filling them well. lol