On Mon, Oct 24, 2011 at 21:04, Rolf Campbell <rcampbell-cyg...@dragonwaveinc.com> wrote: > On 2011-10-24 13:10, Kenneth Goldman wrote: >> >> > From: Rolf Campbell <rcampbell-cyg...@dragonwaveinc.com> >> > To: help-emacs-windows@gnu.org, >> > Date: 10/24/2011 12:28 PM >> > Subject: Re: [h-e-w] 23.1.1: Maximize, minimize, maximize leaves >> > emacs under side-taskbar in Windows XP >> > Sent by: help-emacs-windows-bounces+kgold=watson.ibm....@gnu.org >> > >> > On 2011-10-23 18:53, Rolf Campbell wrote: >> > > On 2011-10-22 09:02, Rolf Campbell wrote: >> > >> Steps to reproduce: >> > >> 1) Move your Windows taskbar to the left or right side of the >> screen. >> > >> 2) Maximize emacs using the button in it's title bar. >> > >> 3) Minimize emacs using the button in it's title bar. >> > >> 4) Restore emacs to it's maximized state by clicking on it's button >> it >> > >> the Windows XP taskbar. >> > >> >> > >> Result: The Emacs windows goes *under* the taskbar. >> > >> >> > >> Expected result: The Emacs windows should be in the same location as >> > >> when it was first maximized. >> >> I see both the expected result and the result. The emacs window is in >> the same location (when it's maximized, there is only one location) and >> it's under the task bar. >> >> I tried several other applications (Thunderbird, Firefox, Palm, Explorer) >> and they all work the same way. Further, I expect that, when I click the >> taskbar, it stays on top. > > Wait, when I say "under the taskbar", I mean that part of the Emacs window > is not visible because the taskbar is covering it. > > Non-Emacs application windows go *beside* the taskbar.
It depends on the taskbar settings. But of course Emacs should behave the standard way in this respect.