All my apps do this, but typically, unless the developer has a bug up his butt 
about the old fullscreen method, if you hold the option key down while clicking 
the green maximize control, it should work like the old way. There is an option 
in preferences too I think to switch back to the old way by default. 

<rant>
Developers will sometimes put in new features in such a way that you have to do 
something to NOT use them. This is a perfect example. Microsoft's Ribbons is 
another. Apple *could* have added the fullscreen feature but informed us that 
you have to hold the option key down to do it. Instead they did the reverse. 
Their thinking is probably that if they don't force people to use a new 
feature, they probably won't. Very likely. On the other hand, I don't feel 
developers should take the liberty of changing how I work on *my* computer, 
without having a really good reason for doing so. 
</rant>

Bob S


> On Sep 8, 2018, at 09:13 , Mark Wieder via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
>> Put the mouse at the top of screen to display menubar or type escape at the 
>> keyboard
> 
> Doh! Thanks. I had tried escape but didn't move the mouse up to the top. I 
> imagine there must be precedent for this, but none of my other osx 
> applications work this way (maximizing while removing the title bar). The 
> stack decorations are set to default.
> 
> -- 
> Mark Wieder
> ahsoftw...@gmail.com


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