On Fri, 29 Oct 2010 10:52:20 +0100
Allan Day allanp...@gmail.com wrote:
We need to address is the question of switching order before
concerning ourselves with visual presentation. (I know that this has
been discussed by some of the design folk, though I'm not sure what
the content of those
From: Joseph Scheuhammer cl...@alum.mit.edu
One thing: In JavaScript, one invokes a constructor with the 'new'
operator. That is:
let x = new Atk.Relation(...);
not:
let x = Atk.Relation.new(...);
Well, I was just reading from atk headers, and calling the atk method
available, but you
Hi,
I completely agree with Allessandro
I admit that I've been lost some times, mostly when I forget to put the
two applications I'm switching back and forth on the same workspace. In
this situation, I expect that Alt-Tab brings up the previous used
application, while it brings up other
Le vendredi 29 octobre 2010 à 10:52 +0100, Allan Day a écrit :
Personally speaking, I often find the current alt-tab behaviour to be a
bit confusing. I haven't been able to pin down exactly why, but I seem
to end up in a tangle. It behaves differently from how I expect it to.
It might be the
Le mercredi 27 octobre 2010 à 20:01 -0500, Justin Edwards a écrit :
Hello everyone,
Looking for configuration / administration documentation.
I have searched through all I could find online as far as gnome-shell
administration. I understand that there isn't a 'stable' build yet
for
Yeah, there are a few weird results with Atl+Tab currently, disregarding
the general argument of whether the concept of per-application grouping
makes sense. Personally, I've reported one precise case where we fail:
windows of the same application that are on the same workspace aren't
easily
Le vendredi 29 octobre 2010 à 09:49 -0500, Justin Edwards a écrit :
I think what I've done so far is sufficient, but I will have to verify
later that disabling command line (alt+f2), like in previous gnome,
works in gnome-shell.
So you only lack this feature? I don't think disabling Alt+F2
On Fri, 2010-10-29 at 12:59 +0200, Alessandro Crismani wrote:
Regarding live previews, I definitely prefer large icons. For me, it is
much easier to recognize an app from its icon rather than from a tiny
(usually white) preview :).
I should clarify that what I find useful with live preview is