Here is how it should work. Fire up Open Office. Now open the help screen. You now have an open document window and the help window on the same desktop. Now click in the very top left part of the help screen. Or you may have to right click it, I forget exactly how Gnome does it. You should be offered a choice to move it to a different desktop. So pick one and put it there.
Now you have the help open in one desktop and the document open in another, and you move from one desktop to another, and have all the space available on each for the windows you are using on them. You should also be able to drag the application windows from one desktop to another by using the little icons on them, in the control panel. Again, not sure if you have those little windows in your control panel on Ubuntu by default; if not, add them from the Gnome selection by right clicking on the panel and then adding the virtual desktop display applet. Now do the same thing with Rev. Open up a couple of windows, the dictionary would be a good one, then move the dictionary to a different desktop. Or move, for instance, the editor to a different desktop. Now do something. Type into the editor, for instance, or look something up in the dictionary, or add a new object to your stack. You'll find that all the windows instantly return to one desktop. Open Office on the other hand will allow you to keep whichever windows you want on whichever desktop you want, and that is how it should work. -- View this message in context: http://runtime-revolution.278305.n4.nabble.com/RunRev-Script-Editor-and-Linux-tp2286440p2289196.html Sent from the Revolution - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
