Re: I have realised the problem here

2017-05-03 Thread Alberto Salvia Novella
Awjin Ahn: How I see it... Hahaha! Okay okay, enough for now ;) smime.p7s Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature ___ desktop-devel-list mailing list desktop-devel-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop-devel-list

Re: I have realised the problem here

2017-05-03 Thread Julien Olivier
(snip) > At any rate, it seems the workflow you describe is quite suited to > Gnome. > You could dedicate an entire desktop to a video editing task, and > when you > alt-tab within that desktop, you'd only be shown the windows > dedicated to > that task. If you want to switch to another task,

Re: I have realised the problem here

2017-05-03 Thread Alberto Salvia Novella
Awjin Ahn: > If you want to switch to another task, you'd switch to another > desktop. It's just simpler having a list of opened windows at view, and hiding that is the source of most criticisms to this desktop environment. Hiding unused things is good, but switching between windows is too

Re: I have realised the problem here

2017-05-02 Thread Florian Müllner
On Tue, May 2, 2017 at 11:28 PM Diego Fernandez wrote: > However, there's a simple solution: > https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/15/alternatetab/ > Or simpler: $ gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.keybindings switch-applications "[]" $ gsettings set

Re: I have realised the problem here

2017-05-02 Thread Diego Fernandez
Poor horse . But in all seriousness... I completely agree with you, I use separate workspaces for a reason: to keep tasks separate from each other, and to keep windows related to the task at hand in the same workspace. The standard way to

I have realised the problem here

2017-05-02 Thread Alberto Salvia Novella
After talking with some GNOME users and developers I have realised there's a common misunderstanding. The goal of the GNOME Shell is to focus on one thing at a time, but normally when I have multiple windows or tabs opened all are related with the same task at hand. They are simply different