Oh,

I forgot to mention that I deleted the cache before testing and this makes 
pretty much any operation leave the artifact. Closing and opening Leo seems 
to make it less prevalent.

Chris

On Wednesday, August 28, 2019 at 2:09:45 PM UTC-7, Chris George wrote:
>
> Further testing shows that the artifacts only exist transiently but do not 
> persist between sessions.
>
> They seem to be caused by activity that moves, nests, resizes etc. widgets.
>
> Closing Leo and reopening makes them go away and they do not reappear 
> until you move, nest or resize a widget. They appear pretty much wherever 
> you are doing something with the widget.
>
> I suggest opening a Leo file and then moving stuff. Then open another Leo 
> file. It looks like it uses the splitter colour to draw the artifact.
>
>
>
>
>> Please send a screenshot. 
>>
>> This might be a gotcha.  Nesting QMainWindows inside other QMainWindows 
>> might stress Qt beyond the breaking point on some platforms.
>>
>> HTH,
>>>
>>
>> It helps a lot.  Please remind me what platform you are using.
>>
>
> Leo 6.1-devel, devel branch, build 05e1e94daf
> 2019-08-28 02:48:56 -0500
> Python 3.6.8, PyQt version 5.12.3
> linux
>  
>
>>
>> *Summary*
>>
>> I'm a bit surprised by these newly-reported bugs.  Fixing them should be 
>> possible, but I'm not sure how long it will take.
>>
>> Chris, please send a screen shot showing the "artifact", and remind me 
>> what platform you are on.  It's time for me to test on Linux.
>>
>> Edward
>>
>

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