Thanks.
It looks like gnome-shell is generally doing the right thing. It notices
an app is trying to place itself over the full screen and accepts that
as a old-style fullscreen request. Nothing unusual there. Gnome Shell is
behaving correctly for a window manager.
The only problem here is that there's no way to escape (restore and
resize) such automatic fullscreening in gnome-shell. But also I think
that's normal. I'm not aware of any window managers that do offer that.
So I don't think it's reasonable to ask for a gnome-shell enhancement to
work around this problem. It's Spotify's fault for firstly suggesting it
wants to be fullscreen and then not remembering that it requested
fullscreen.
** Changed in: gnome-shell (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Opinion
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1820230
Title:
spotify (snap) starts in fullscreen without windows decorations
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