On 22/08/2022 18:02, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:02:22AM +, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Any applications using standard decorations (Firefox, MATE Terminal,
Google Chrome etc).
It's worth pointing out, perhaps, that Google Chrome does *not* use
the standard window manager dec
Bret Busby wrote:
>
> And, after all of that, in looking in my Appearance -> Themes, through
> the Yaru stuff, and noticing that the YaruGreen looks like the
> TraditionalGreen, I also noticed that the YaruOk looks like the
> TraditionalOkBrave.
I've tried all the Yaru* themes and none of them
Curt (12022-08-22):
> What about 'gtk3-nocsd'?
>
> Description-en: Disable Gtk+ 3 client side decorations (CSD)
> gtk3-nocsd LD_PRELOADs a small library to disable the client side
> decorations (CSD) of Gtk+ 3.
>
> ...
>
> Or maybe this isn't the remedy to the ills referred to in the thread.
On 8/22/22 4:07 AM, Nicolas George wrote:
. . . A manifestation of the “we know better than you” mindset of the
GNOME people. . . .
*JUST* the GNOME people? I've found that, in general, the "we know
better than you" mindset is even worse with Apple and M$. And getting
worse still, especially wi
Victor Sudakov (12022-08-22):
> > # Gtk+3 sucks
> > Style "Application Class" !MWMDecor
> > Style "Gajim" !MWMDecor
> Where do you put this magic? Hopefully it could help me fix Lens and
> Teams? I hate applications to bring their own decorations.
In ~/.fvwm2rc, so I doubt it will be useful for yo
Nicolas George wrote:
>
> It is, I have found, a problem with most Gtk+3 applications. A
> manifestation of the “we know better than you” mindset of the GNOME
> people. I have not found a solution to disable it globally, short of
> patching Gtk+3 itself. The best I have found is to force my WM to
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:02:22AM +, Victor Sudakov wrote:
> > Any applications using standard decorations (Firefox, MATE Terminal,
> > Google Chrome etc).
>
> It's worth pointing out, perhaps, that Google Chrome does *not* use
> the standard window manager decorations
On 2022-08-22, Nicolas George wrote:
>
> It is, I have found, a problem with most Gtk+3 applications. A
> manifestation of the we know better than you mindset of the GNOME
> people. I have not found a solution to disable it globally, short of
> patching Gtk+3 itself. The best I have found is to fo
On 22/8/22 18:46, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Bret Busby wrote:
[dd]
I use the Theme named "TraditionalOk", with the panel at the bottom of
the screen, and it is the most like MS Windows 95, and, gives my the
interface that I prefer.
I don't have any "TraditionalOk" theme there, just countless var
Greg Wooledge (12022-08-22):
> It's worth pointing out, perhaps, that Google Chrome does *not* use
> the standard window manager decorations by default. There is, however,
> an option you can toggle to make it do so.
It is, I have found, a problem with most Gtk+3 applications. A
manifestation of
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 10:02:22AM +, Victor Sudakov wrote:
> Any applications using standard decorations (Firefox, MATE Terminal,
> Google Chrome etc).
It's worth pointing out, perhaps, that Google Chrome does *not* use
the standard window manager decorations by default. There is, however,
a
Bret Busby wrote:
[dd]
> >> I use the Theme named "TraditionalOk", with the panel at the bottom of
> >> the screen, and it is the most like MS Windows 95, and, gives my the
> >> interface that I prefer.
> >
> > I don't have any "TraditionalOk" theme there, just countless variants of the
> > Yaru
On 22/8/22 18:02, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Bret Busby wrote:
On 22/8/22 16:03, Victor Sudakov wrote:
The titlebar colors of active and inactive windows are the same which
is very inconvenient. In the previous version of Ubuntu/Mate, the
color of the active window's titlebar was distinct.
Hello
Bret Busby wrote:
> On 22/8/22 16:03, Victor Sudakov wrote:
> >
> > The titlebar colors of active and inactive windows are the same which
> > is very inconvenient. In the previous version of Ubuntu/Mate, the
> > color of the active window's titlebar was distinct.
Hello Bret!
>
> 1. The Ubuntu u
On 22/8/22 16:43, Bret Busby wrote:
On 22/8/22 16:34, Bret Busby wrote:
On 22/8/22 16:03, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
Sorry for asking a Ubuntu-specific question. Please redirect me to a
better mailing list if you feel it right.
I was using ubuntu-mate 20.04.4 with MATE 1.24.0. Now
On 22/8/22 16:34, Bret Busby wrote:
On 22/8/22 16:03, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
Sorry for asking a Ubuntu-specific question. Please redirect me to a
better mailing list if you feel it right.
I was using ubuntu-mate 20.04.4 with MATE 1.24.0. Now I have switched
to 22.04.1 with MATE
On 22/8/22 16:03, Victor Sudakov wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
Sorry for asking a Ubuntu-specific question. Please redirect me to a
better mailing list if you feel it right.
I was using ubuntu-mate 20.04.4 with MATE 1.24.0. Now I have switched
to 22.04.1 with MATE 1.26.0 and come across an unfortunat
Dear Colleagues,
Sorry for asking a Ubuntu-specific question. Please redirect me to a
better mailing list if you feel it right.
I was using ubuntu-mate 20.04.4 with MATE 1.24.0. Now I have switched
to 22.04.1 with MATE 1.26.0 and come across an unfortunate thing:
The titlebar colors of active a
On 11/04/2016 2:04 AM, Aero Maxx wrote:
> So what is $PROMPT_COMMAND actually for ? is this the command prompt or
> the windows title.
This from the prior reference page:
PROMPT_COMMAND
Bash shell executes the content of the PROMPT_COMMAND just before
displaying the PS1 variable.
And that
I believe I have the command prompt set correctly as to how I want it.
For this I want it to show at all times, regardless of if I am in a
screen or not.
"[root@localhost ~]# "
For the window title in whatever ssh client I happen to be using I would
like it to be as follows whe
You definitely confused me, and I'm still not entirely sure what you want. But
you can set the window title for a PuTTY session and keep it from changing in
the manner I described in my initial response. I assume you have a different
PuTTY profile for each server to which you connec
On 10/04/2016 11:25 PM, Aero Maxx wrote:
> I've played about with the PS1 line, I wasn't aware of a PS2 line,
http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2008/09/bash-shell-take-control-of-ps1-ps2-ps3-ps4-and-prompt_command/
> I've done as much as I am able to on my own through trial and error.
>
> This is wh
t the
/etc/screen settings are.
Ok well perhaps that was some confusion there as I merely meant that I
was using putty, but the window title would appear in other programs
also, not just putty.
I think your getting confused as what I want to do has nothing to do
with putty.
"Changing Wi
; I think your getting confused as what I want to do has nothing to do
> with putty.
"Changing Window Title in Putty" -- subject line?
> As I can also use terminal on my Apple Mac and it also shows the window
> title different on the two servers which I am comparing, so if one shows
ving each saved session it's own window
title in the manner that you've been given. It's the perfect answer for
you.
Cheers
A.
Actually it's not.
You see I had to change the /etc/screenrc file and turn the hardstatus
line to show that I was in a screen.
I think your ge
The first thing I do with Putty is adjust the "default settings" to my
liking, save it and then use that as a base for new entries for each
server that I need to connect to; I save each server's settings.
That lends itself well to giving each saved session it's own window
titl
maybe the case but it's nothing something in putty that I need to
change.
When I use the same putty client to log into both a debian 8 server and
a fedora server, the fedora one has the window title how I want it, the
debian server has the window title different.
So I must need to cha
On 10/04/2016 6:12 AM, Aero Maxx wrote:
> I only have ssh access to the server, no gui.
Umm, the instruction looks very good for putty as you asked for.
Which version of putty are you using and what type of machine are you
running it from?
A.
I only have ssh access to the server, no gui.
On 09/04/2016 19:05, John L. Ries wrote:
I may be misunderstanding you but:
1. Load the session configuration.
2. Select Terminal/Features. Check "Disable remote-controlled window
title changing".
3. Select Window/Behavior. Fill in
I may be misunderstanding you but:
1. Load the session configuration.
2. Select Terminal/Features. Check "Disable remote-controlled window
title changing".
3. Select Window/Behavior. Fill in the Window title as seems good to
you.
4. Go back to Session. Click on the S
ting in that is now shows
[screen 0: bash] in the title bar so I am able to see that I am in a
screen, as sometimes I forget.
When I am not in a screen the window title shows user@localhost:~ I'd
like this to be able to replace bash with this as this is how it appears
on fedora.
I have played a
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On 07/18/08 09:55, Rick Pasotto wrote:
> Is it possible to set a gnome window title from the command line, for
> example, in a bash script?
Is this what you are looking for?
http://www.linuxselfhelp.com/howtos/Bash-Prompt/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO-
Is it possible to set a gnome window title from the command line, for
example, in a bash script?
--
"When dealing with people, let us remember we are not dealing with
creatures of logic. We are dealing with creatures of emotion, creatures
bustling with prejudices and motivated by prid
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