On Mon, Jun 1, 2015 at 2:04 AM, Ross Vandegrift <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 05/31/2015 04:21 AM, Daniel Kasak wrote:
>> On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 8:28 AM, Ross Vandegrift <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> And changing the look of the decorations won't fix the awful focus bugs
>>> that client-side decorations seem to cause - I can never raise a CSD
>>> window if it was lowered when I switched virtual desktops.
>>
>> I'm not sure what CSD stands for, but if you're referring to dialogs
>> that go missing, I've found that using CTRL+ALT+Down to push each
>> window to the bottom of the stack will eventually uncover Gtk3
>> dialogs.
>
> Sorry - CSD == "client-side decoration".
>
> Are you able to use the windows after you lower things on top?  I can
> lower them to see the hidden GTK+ windows, but I can't get them to
> receive input focus.  Clicks and keypresses get passed to windows
> underneath.

Generally, yes. I develop Gtk3+ apps, and so if I had any major
issues, it would be fairly prominent in my memory :)

>From memory, windows that are maximised cause more problems than those
that aren't ... and ones that use a GtkHeaderBar are even worse.
Restarting E ( CTRL+ALT+End ) can also help get focus & input
behaviour working again.

I understand what people are saying about this being an issue that
Gtk3 / Gnome people are thrusting upon everyone else. Have they been
approached about these issues? It seems to go against the spirit of
openness and interoperability that I've gotten used to with
open-source software. Certainly Gtk2 apps worked consistently across
the range of window managers.

Dan

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