gnome-terminal's setting Show menubar by default in new terminals
appears to work now with gtk+ 3.3.6-0ubuntu3 for Ubuntu 12.04 Precise
in GNOME Shell.
I'll leave this bug open for the issue of ViewShow Menubar not making
sense when Unity's appmenu is being used.
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solution #24 seemed the cleanest one to me and works perfectly, thanks,
i love unity, but on this box, due to crappy drivers, i use wmii, this
menu showing up in each and every new terminal was very irritating.
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** Description changed:
- Binary package hint: gnome-terminal
-
If you click on the global menus the View-Show MenuBar and (un)check
it, it won't work, the menu will stay at the 'global menus panel' or
whatever it is. In my opinion this option shouldn't exist now,
considering that global
Daniel:
Oh I'm sorry! I'm confusing this bug with the possibly related bug where
gnome-terminal itself doesn't obey its own show menubar setting.
Good thing you asked me specifically. :-) Sorry for the confusion.
I'm using gnome-shell, so I'm not suffering from this behavior at all,
and I don't
@Dan Bolser: Gnome Terminal uses only Ctrl+Alt+* shortcuts, so Ctrl+F/B
should work normally, and menu presence should not matter. If any Gnome
Terminal shortcuts conflict with bash/mc/… ones, please file a separate
bug.
I personally can't see why this is a bug in appmenu, it works as
expected
My fix-list was much shorter:
xbase-clients
nautilus-sendto-empathy
telepathy-indicator
One installing one of those fixed the problem for me. gnome-terminal now
correctly does not display the menubar when told to do so by saved settings.
Thanks, Daniel! This issue has been driving me insane
Running `sudo apt-get install --fix-policy --install-recommends' does
not fix gnome-terminal's behavior for me. It installed a few packages, I
rebooted the computer, but gnome-terminal does not appear to adhere to
its own settings after that.
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I have still experienced this buggy using gnome-terminal and its menubar
after upgrading to Ubuntu Precise.
I have fixed it now by installing any missing recommends, using sudo
apt-get install --fix-policy --install-recommends.
One or multiple of the packages this installed appears to have fixed
Installing Oneiric from scratch is what I did, yet I am experiencing
this issue.
Although I did install it a day or two after its release, so it might be
different now -- I don't know.
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Victor, what are you experiencing? This bug is so messed up already and
there are quite some dupes which I and others do not consider to be
dupes really.
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Just wanted to note that using Gnome Classic (no unity plugin or global
menubar app) and launching `gnome-terminal --window-with-profile=trans
--hide-menubar` briefly shows the terminal without a menubar, then the
window flashes, the prompt moves down to make room, and the menubar
appears with
Ugh. I loathe global menus, but I don't want a menubar on my terminal.
Could we maybe just have a dialog box pop up when you uncheck show menu
bar explaining that if you remove the menu, you'll have to get it back
by alt-clicking, or running something in the command line, or whatever?
I think
Please don't disable this...
When using gnome terminal, I like to move around the CLI using ctrl-f/b.
To do this, I need to turn off the menu, so that my keystrokes don't get
interpreted as menu commands.
This is the only reason I turn off the menu.
It doesn't matter where the menu is... I want
Dan:
The emacs-style shortcuts you refer to are part of bash, so I don't
think removing anything in gnome-terminal would be removing that
functinality in bash, unless that was intentional, which would be very
very mean. :(
There already is an option available via gconf-editor, that has to do
with
I can confirm that markb's solution (#24 above) fixes the problem with
gnome-terminal and the menu sluggishness in other programs (gedit,
nautilus, etc.) when using gnome-shell.
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mdpoole: That should probably be a separate bug.
jfinkels: ... because I think that's what it is -- a bug. Using emacs
style shortcuts in bash is a must for me, but I also want to use
mnemonics to access the menu. This is currently not possible because of
poor choices for menu mnemonics.
If
My suggestion will be to add a patch to hide those options (in menus and
settings window) on ubuntu and ubuntu-2d sessions.
Does anybody know a better solution?
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For gnome-shell users that want a workaround for this bug but want to
preserve global menus in Unity then perhaps a better solution is to
create a file /etc/X11/Xsession.d/81ubuntu-menu-proxy with the single
line content:
[ $DESKTOP_SESSION != ubuntu ] unset UBUNTU_MENUPROXY
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Whatever resolution is chosen for this bug, please restore the ability
for more Alt+key combinations to pass through to the terminal's
application. It is quite frustrating to have Emacs-style Alt+F and
Alt+B -- to pick the two I keep running into -- open the File and
Tabs menus rather than move
@mdpoole: there is a solution to that problem here:
https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-
terminal/+question/176160
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Possibly merge with Bug #728040
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/787465
Title:
View-Show MenuBar isn't working in 11.04 and later in gnome-terminal
To manage
The workaround is to uninstall/purge appmenu-gtk and appmenu-gtk3 (if present).
This package also contains the /etc/X11/Xsession.d/80appmenu* files.
@Jeremy: when appmenu-gtk is uninstalled, gnome-terminal behaves
properly (regarding the Show menubar by default setting), at least for
me.
**
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