> By default, when a GNOME application pops up a dialog, it gets glued to > (one of?) the application's window: the dialog sits in front of the > Window, glued in place. If you move the dialog, the window moves with it.
Yes, this is annoying. GIMP has a way of putting a pop-up right over the part of the image I'm intending to edit. But most of their pop-ups can be moved, and if one can't, I can usually scroll the image out from under the pop-up, so it's tolerable. > > I'm not sure why this is considered useful behaviour. Perhaps because if > you misplace the dialog, you might not know that the application is > waiting for a response (I've had that happen in Windows). But it means > that the dialog might hide something you need to see on the main window to > fill in the dialog. The opposite is annoying too. Frequently I'm caught with a window that refuses to respond to keys and mouse action. Turns out some combination of clicks has hidden a modal dialog behind the window, so until I've stripped away all the windows one-by-one and discovered the modal dialog, I'm stalled. My own programs mostly use wxPython, which seems to give the modal dialogs this little bit of independence, so that's what I'm used to, and what I prefer. > > At least on Fedora, you can change this behaviour using "GNOME Tweeks". > Under Windows, set Attach Modal Dialogs to "off". > > Does anyone else like this default? > > <https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-shell/-/issues/443> > --- > Post to this mailing list [email protected] > Unsubscribe from this mailing list > https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk > --- Post to this mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe from this mailing list https://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
