So, I agree that the over-use of the term Views can be confusing. I think this could, maybe, use a once-over. But it is all tied up in branding and other stuff, so sometimes it is difficult.
Anyway, there are certainly parts of the Wiki that need to be updated, badly, related to this. I haven't had time. But, I've built a bit of a framework there trying to break it down.
View Modeshttp://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/View_ModesFirst of all, there are View Modes. These are the main "modes" of Media Center:
* Standard View
* Mini View
* Display View
* Theater View
* Cover View
I prefer to think of these as "modes" instead of "views" as it distinguishes them from the Media Views discussed before (the things formerly called View Schemes). And, they really are a full "mode" of Media Center itself. Theater View and Standard View completely different user interfaces for MC, changing everything about how it works, and so are the others (except for Cover View which is an oddball, but is still different in its own way).
If you are going to change any names, this is where I'd recommend you look. Unfortunately, changing these names is going to be much more "visible", so...? Not sure it is worth it now.
Media Viewshttp://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Media_ViewsThese are the real "Views" of Media Center, which show you, organize, and filter your files. In Standard View, these are different Views available in the Tree under Audio, Video, and Images (including those top-level Views themselves). They are "views" in the truest sense: in a Computer Science sense and in that they provide you with a "view" of your media database. In much older versions of Media Center, they were called View Schemes (which wasn't a much better name, IMHO). Except for when referring to the modes discussed above, when MC refers to a "View" it almost always means one of these.
There are three main types of Media Views:
* Standard Media Views
* Theater Media Views
* Media Network Views
Unfortunately, these wiki pages really aren't done in this section. The Standard View one links to my (very) old View Schemes page, which conceptually captures it, but which is ancient and wrong about many of the details now. But, the framework for it is there.
Conceptually, Media Views are special saved searches (just like Smartlists), for which you can change the style of the display, and where you can further sub-filter the results on the fly (using some sort of "drill-down" kind of mechanism). When you customize a Standard Media View, and choose from one of the available View Styles (such as Panes or Categories), this changes the way in which you look at those files which match the search, and the way you will later sub-filter the results. The search is controlled by the
Set rules for file display button in the Customize View dialog.
The Media Views can be nested, and when you do this, it also nests the searches. So that a child Media View "inherits" the searches of its parents. You can think of this as sub-filtering, and you can see it easily in the default Views included in MC. The reason only Audio files show up under the top-level Audio view in the Tree is that it contains a search for [Media Type]=[Audio]. Therefore, it only shows Audio files, and any views nested underneath of it, only show Audio files.
Even though Standard, Theater, and Media Network Views are all setup in a different place, they represent conceptually the same idea, and they share all of the above behavior.