Your message dated Sun, 27 Apr 2008 23:47:23 +0100
with message-id <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
and subject line xmms has been removed from Debian, closing #76447
has caused the Debian Bug report #76447,
regarding xmms: unpleasing behavior as it is shaded and unshaded
to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.

(NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what this
message is talking about, this may indicate a serious mail system
misconfiguration somewhere. Please contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
immediately.)


-- 
76447: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=76447
Debian Bug Tracking System
Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] with problems
--- Begin Message ---
Package: xmms
Version: 1.2.3-1
Severity: wishlist

I'm going to resort to a lot of ascii art in this bug report, so I don't
need to include a dozen screenshots. 

So I have started out by deleting .xmms/config. Now I start xmms. I turn on
the playlist. I resize the playlist and move it so it is directly below the
xmms main window, and about as tall as it, and move them so the bottom of
the playlist is flush with the bottom of my screen:

  +------------------------+
  |                        |
  |   xmms main window     |
  |                        |
  +------------------------+
  |                        |
  |        playlist        |
  |                        |
  +------------------------+
==================screen border===================

Now I shade them both by double-clicking on first the titlebar of xmms:


  ########Mini-xmms#########
  +------------------------+
  |                        |
  |        playlist        |
  |                        |
  +------------------------+
==================screen border===================

And then the titlebar of the playlist:

  ########Mini-xmms#########
  ########Mini-playlist#####
==================screen border===================

So they're flush with the bottom of the screen.

Now, I want to get at the playlist, so I double-click on it.


  ########Mini-xmms#########
  +------------------------+
  |                        |
  |        playlist        |
  |                        |
  +------------------------+




==================screen border===================

Whoops, it's moved up the screen! If I unshade xmms too, I'm 
back to the first picture. However, I often just want to change 
something on the playlist and shade it again. If I do that instead, I get:

  ########Mini-xmms#########
  ########Mini-playlist#####









==================screen border===================

This is really unintuitive :-( I'm sure it's a difficult problem and it is
probably rather difficult to figure out what the user is trying to do, but
unshading and then re-shading a window should return it to the position it 
was previously in, I think.

-- System Information
Debian Release: woody
Kernel Version: Linux kite 2.2.17 #1 Tue Oct 31 09:54:30 PST 2000 i686 unknown

Versions of the packages xmms depends on:
ii  libc6          2.1.96-1       GNU C Library: Shared libraries and Timezone
ii  libglib1.2     1.2.8-1        The GLib library of C routines
ii  libgtk1.2      1.2.8-1        The GIMP Toolkit set of widgets for X
ii  xlib6g         4.0.1-1        pseudopackage providing X libraries


--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Version: 1:1.2.10+20070601-1+rm

The xmms package has been removed from Debian testing, unstable and
experimental, so I am now closing the bugs that were still opened
against it.

For more information about this package's removal, read
http://bugs.debian.org/461309 . That bug might give the reasons why
this package was removed, and suggestions of possible replacements.

Don't hesitate to reply to this mail if you have any question.

Thank you for your contribution to Debian.

--
Marco Rodrigues
http://Marco.Tondela.org


--- End Message ---

Reply via email to