> Hmmm... It works for me on both CentOS 7 (Firefox 60.2.1) and Fedora 28
> (Firefox 62.0.3).
>
> As per the linked documentation - What happens if you SHIFT-CLICK on the
> scroll bar? On my systems I find that SHIFT-CLICK on the scroll bar
> produces
> the "warp speed" behavior, exactly as
On Friday, October 12, 2018 1:24:25 PM CDT Elliott Balsley wrote:
> > I agree that issue with the scroll bar jumping all over is really
> > annoying!
> > It is actually a feature of Gnome and GTK. It can be changed by editing a
> > file:
> >
> > ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini
> >
> > [Settings]
>
> I agree that issue with the scroll bar jumping all over is really
> annoying!
> It is actually a feature of Gnome and GTK. It can be changed by editing a
> file:
>
> ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini
>
> [Settings]
> gtk-primary-button-warps-slider=0
>
>
I also find this behavior annoying. I
Leroy Tennison wrote:
> From: CentOS on behalf of mark
>
> Sent: Friday, October 12, 2018 10:11 AM
> Valeri Galtsev wrote:
>
>> On 10/12/18 8:40 AM, Leroy Tennison wrote:
>>
>>> And I thought it was a Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE desktop for those who
>>> aren't familiar) thing! Apparently it's a
Leroy Tennison
Network Information/Cyber Security Specialist
E: le...@datavoiceint.com
2220 Bush Dr
McKinney, Texas
75070
www.datavoiceint.com
TThis message has been sent on behalf
of a company that is part of the Harris Operating Group of
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Valeri Galtsev wrote:
> On 10/12/18 8:40 AM, Leroy Tennison wrote:
>
>> And I thought it was a Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE desktop for those who
>> aren't familiar) thing! Apparently it's a KDE thing. I haven't
>> experienced the scrollbar aspect (or maybe I just haven't done what you
>> do) but my
On 10/12/18 8:40 AM, Leroy Tennison wrote:
And I thought it was a Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE desktop for those who aren't familiar)
thing! Apparently it's a KDE thing. I haven't experienced the scrollbar aspect (or
maybe I just haven't done what you do) but my arrows are missing too. I'm
Leroy Tennison
Network Information/Cyber Security Specialist
E: le...@datavoiceint.com
2220 Bush Dr
McKinney, Texas
75070
www.datavoiceint.com
TThis message has been sent on behalf
of a company that is part of the Harris Operating Group of
Constellation Software Inc. These companies are listed
Leroy Tennison wrote:
> And I thought it was a Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE desktop for those who
> aren't familiar) thing! Apparently it's a KDE thing. I haven't
> experienced the scrollbar aspect (or maybe I just haven't done what you
> do) but my arrows are missing too. I'm thinking this is a
Hmmm.
I have only tested in FireFox. What application are you using? REboot should
not be required. Perhaps logout/login if Gnome is your desktop, but as I
recall in my testing, a mere restart of the application was all that was
needed.
It should affect GTK applications, but probably
And I thought it was a Kubuntu (Ubuntu with KDE desktop for those who aren't
familiar) thing! Apparently it's a KDE thing. I haven't experienced the
scrollbar aspect (or maybe I just haven't done what you do) but my arrows are
missing too. I'm thinking this is a KDE Blasted Ugly Gotcha
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 5:34 AM Rob Kampen wrote:
> Hi list,
>
> Did an update to firefox last night and rebooted over night.
>
> Today I find firefox started without asking for master password - funny
> me thinks.
>
> Try to log in to a web service I use and find that my password does not
>
On Friday 12 October 2018 12:19:40 Bill Gee wrote:
> I agree that issue with the scroll bar jumping all over is really annoying!
> It is actually a feature of Gnome and GTK. It can be changed by editing a
> file:
>
> ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini
>
> [Settings]
>
Restarting one of our named services produces this entry in the system
log file:
Oct 12 08:47:45 inet08 setroubleshoot: SELinux is preventing
/usr/sbin/named from search access on the directory . For complete
SELinux messages. run sealert -l 9eabadb9-0e03-4238-bdb8-c5204333a0bf
Checking the
I agree that issue with the scroll bar jumping all over is really annoying!
It is actually a feature of Gnome and GTK. It can be changed by editing a
file:
~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini
[Settings]
gtk-primary-button-warps-slider=0
You may have to create this file. Firefox is a good GTK
I have done some Googling on this but everything I've found appears to be at
least 2 years old and mostly refers to Gnome
TBH, I'm surprised nobody else has mentioned it - maybe it's only happened to
me.
At some point over the last few months the behaviour of the scroll bars
changed and I'm
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