What does it mean? Well, when you're on 1ns/div, you get 40000x length worth of data than what is on your screen (10ns to 400us) if you stop it. If you are at 20us/div you get only 2x (200us to 400us).
And from that point on sample rate goes down, and game repeats, changing ratio "screen/stopped capture length" all the time. I guess table could be compiled. It's just I couldn't care less.
I'm not going to base my work based on side-effects of sample engine architecture..
So if you captured something and then thought "gee I wonder what's either side of that, and you knew your scope worked like this, you'd actually rather re-capture instead of just changing the timebase?
That's kinda, well, silly.
If your answer is yes I would, then what happens if your capture was infrequent and wasn't easy to reproduce?
Sorry but I can't see a way to successfully argue this isn't a potentially useful feature.
It's so interesting it's probably worthy of a video.
You probably didn't read through all the text, to see that I said that i occasionally use that when it's there. And, no I'm not idiot to deliberately recapture something if it's already there, out of some stupid "principle". I'm saying that if you adopt proper practice, you will rarely get into situation to depend on unspecified behaviour of scope (yes on Keysight 3000T it is unspecified. All numbers I wrote I had to measure and test myself). But I will make sure to think in terms "I want to capture long capture, so I'm going to capture a long time period, and then I will zoom into details at will" instead of "I want to capture long capture, so I'm going to set scope on long memory, put it to short timebase to see only trigger point, and then zoom out to see all other stuff that long memory got". It's just backwards way of thinking to
me. And on the scope that works like my Keysight and Pico do, my way guarantees I will see everything. Nico's way might (or might not, depending on scope setting) give me more data outside screen on my Keysight 3000T, and on Pico (and Lecroy and Siglent) won't give me squat. And because of that, it is exactly wrong way to use on infrequent and not easy to reproduce events, for which I use method that guarantees I will get first time every time.
So, yes, my method (not really my method, but industry standard method) is better general purpose method to recommend to those that learn things.
People with experience will do whatever they do and have their own tricks.
I agree it's worthy of a video. And if you think about it a bit further, you will see that its one of those "you can do it this way too if planets are aligned..." but not really something to rely on.