
On 11/03/2014 12:47 AM, Basil Chupin wrote:
On 03/11/14 01:10, Anton Aylward wrote:
On 11/02/2014 08:57 AM, Basil Chupin wrote:
Could someone please remind me what I did to be able to push the cursor into the top-left corner of the screen to be able to do the above? For the life of me I cannot remember what I did. At the moment all I can do is to push the cursor to either the left- or right-hand SIDES of the screen and move to the next desktop - but that's not what I want. systemsettings Workspace behaviour Screen edges
After I read the above and went there I realised that I have been there at half-a-dozen times - so your comment was nothing new :-) .
Nothing new UNTIL I accidentally pressed the right-hand mouse button and.....VOILA! Memories came flooding back! :-)
I navigate there and click on the blobs on the little screen diagram screen edges. An ordinary click works for me. A right click works exactly the same. I'd be interested in what other members of the list find. Perhps you have some oddity in your mouse setup.
I can clearly see why some people dislike KDE because having to press the R-H button to get a drop-down menu to achieve the result one wants is not intuitive.
I would agree with you in principle, but I note two things. The first is "it isn't so". The second is that you are quick to criticise. I also wonder about your configuration/machine setup. There seem to be many anomalies. Linux/openSuse&KDE doesn't seem to work for you the way it works for me. Perhaps I'm more forgiving. Perhaps the software is psychic and senses your antagonism and, childishly, digs its heels in and becomes uncooperative for you, whereas I treat it with respect and don't bully it or badmouth it. Yes, I know, its hard to believe in psychic software, but there you are. How else to explain that things work for me and they don't work for you?
While I do understand and have tried this myself, in the long run I found it an annoyance and preferred hot keying or using the rotating cube.
I tried the rotating cube many, many moons ago but found that to be distracting and "bling" rather than being practical. But, then, whatever floats your boat, right? :-)
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