I wasn't trying to "detract" or "minimize" the OPs observation. I was simply 
stating my experience to see how it related with others. I have not had the 
problem OP speaks of because I always use the "grabber." Historically (prior to 
11.04), I have always HATED how hard it is to resize windows in ubuntu. So I 
turned to the grabber  because it was the only way to reliably get a window 
resized using the mouse. Frankly, I'm still not clear on why using the grabber 
does not solve the problem? It's just that OP does not want to use the grabber? 
Is there drawbacks to using the grabber?  Just wondering if there's negatives 
about the grabber I'm missing.

It does seem like a tough situation because unlike the old-scrollbars, the new 
ones act just like the resize popup function, coupled with Ubuntu's unfortunate 
reality of not using any pixels to create a border around windows creates a 
really tough working environment.

Would adding a visible border around windows (like MS Windows does) help 
improve the situation? Wouldn't it still result in confusion about which popup 
(resize or scroll) should popup?

From: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2011 18:15:59 +0100
Subject: Re: [Ayatana] Overlay scrollbars
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]

2011/10/6 nick rundy <[email protected]>












Have you tried using the lower-right corner to resize your window?

 Using the lower-right "grabber" you can resize the whole window, resize just 
horizontally, or just vertically. The "grabber" that was introduced in 11.04 
was a much appreciated improvement for resizing windows in Ubuntu.



Customer: "Waiter, there is a fly in my pudding."Waiter: "Have you tried the 
potatoes? They are quite good."


The OP raises a valid issue, regardless of whether workarounds exist. I've also 
encountered this issue from time to time, but I can't say it's bothering me all 
that much. However, this doesn't mean there isn't room for improvement.


Two things I'd love to see improved (over the 12.04 video):(a) as, the OP 
suggests, hide the arrows quicker when the mouse moves away. This solves the 
resize vs scroll issue, and makes the GUI feel faster to boot.

(b) make the arrows thicker to compensate. This has the additonal advantage of 
improving support for laptop touchpads and touchscreens.
Android is a good example of both (a) and (b).


Thoughts?                                         
_______________________________________________
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ayatana
Post to     : [email protected]
Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ayatana
More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

Reply via email to