We actually tried a wide variety of solutions to make f-f-m work with the application menu, and landed one that tested well. See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=678169
On Sun, Jul 7, 2013 at 10:30 AM, Michael Catanzaro <[email protected] > wrote: > On Sun, 2013-07-07 at 15:05 +0200, Tomasz Torcz wrote: > > > > This seems backward. F-f-m was here first, and is still being used by > some > > minority (me included). Current designs break f-f-m functionality. > Your comment > > about ”finding creative solutions” sounds like F-f-m was something new. > > Designs were made in total ignorance of f-f-m. The requirement should > be > > restated as ”finding creative solutions for things that used to work”, > i.e. things > > that were already working, were ”solved”. > > Concept for a shell extension: > > Show the app menu not based on which window currently has focus, but > which window most recently had focus for X amount of time." (I guess 1 > second would be good?) When set to 0, that would degrade to "which > window is currently focused," the current behavior. > > That way you could mouse over a window briefly, and while that window > would gain focus, the shell would still be showing the app menu for the > original window you were working with. > > _______________________________________________ > desktop-devel-list mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list > -- Jasper
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