On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 05:54, Duncan 1i5t5.dun...@cox.net wrote:
FWIW, always-on-top is a togglable (binary-state) window flag. A panel
set to cover windows has that flag set, as does an app set to always-on-
top. Thus, while both the window and the panel with the always-on-top
flag set
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 13:53, Alex Schuster wo...@wonkology.org wrote:
What about a workaround: Start a 2nd desktop session with a
lightweight window manager. Run VirtualBox there, and switch with
Ctrl-Alt-F7/8.
Thanks Wonko, but then I cannot cut and paste between the VM and the real OS.
Dotan Cohen posted on Sun, 04 Mar 2012 18:53:09 +0200 as excerpted:
Manual hiding of panel https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=158556
This is relevant too:
Screen corners to un-hide panels
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=185318
Thanks. I CCed the screen-corners bug, and
Dotan Cohen writes:
KDE panel showing above some fullscreen applications, namely Virtual
Box in full-screen mode. I therefore set the panel as Windows Can
Cover but this quickly becomes annoying with other applications. I
therefore tried giving Virtual Box full-screen capability from the KDE
KDE panel showing above some fullscreen applications, namely Virtual
Box in full-screen mode. I therefore set the panel as Windows Can
Cover but this quickly becomes annoying with other applications. I
therefore tried giving Virtual Box full-screen capability from the KDE
Configure Window
On Thursday, 2012-03-01, Dotan Cohen wrote:
KDE panel showing above some fullscreen applications, namely Virtual
Box in full-screen mode. I therefore set the panel as Windows Can
Cover but this quickly becomes annoying with other applications. I
therefore tried giving Virtual Box full-screen
On Thu, Mar 1, 2012 at 18:10, Kevin Krammer kevin.kram...@gmx.at wrote:
Try always stay on top instead.
Thank you Kevin. In KDE 4.7 that seems to be called Keep above
others and it does in fact place the window above the panel. I
actually use this feature for entering information into Anki from