[opensuse] 12.1 and re-arranging icons in Quicklaunch
Does anyone know, or point me to where I can read about, how to re-arrange/move the icons in the Quicklaunch "area" on the Taskbar? It was simply a matter of drag-and-drop in 11.4 with KDE4.7.3 installed but this does not seem to work under 12.1 32-bit (with KDE4.7.3 installed). Thanks for any hints/references. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Basil Chupin wrote:
Does anyone know, or point me to where I can read about, how to re-arrange/move the icons in the Quicklaunch "area" on the Taskbar?
It was simply a matter of drag-and-drop in 11.4 with KDE4.7.3 installed but this does not seem to work under 12.1 32-bit (with KDE4.7.3 installed).
Thanks for any hints/references.
BC
I have also found this flakey (pardon the technical jargon ;-) with 12.1. Sometimes it works, sometimes not. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 18/11/11 14:03, James Knott wrote:
Basil Chupin wrote:
Does anyone know, or point me to where I can read about, how to re-arrange/move the icons in the Quicklaunch "area" on the Taskbar?
It was simply a matter of drag-and-drop in 11.4 with KDE4.7.3 installed but this does not seem to work under 12.1 32-bit (with KDE4.7.3 installed).
Thanks for any hints/references.
BC
I have also found this flakey (pardon the technical jargon ;-) with 12.1. Sometimes it works, sometimes not.
I think I discovered on how to proceed with this. Mind you, it does not solve the problem because once the icons are in place I cannot re-arrange them :-( . What I just did was to "Add to panel" the icons to the Taskbar in the order I want to see them in. By installing KDE4.7.3 there were some files which had dependency problems and I therefore had to make choices about how to resolve these problems. I suspect that this may have a great bearing on not being able to re-arrange them as i could in 11.4. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 11/17/2011 10:31 PM, Basil Chupin pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
On 18/11/11 14:03, James Knott wrote:
Basil Chupin wrote:
Does anyone know, or point me to where I can read about, how to re-arrange/move the icons in the Quicklaunch "area" on the Taskbar?
It was simply a matter of drag-and-drop in 11.4 with KDE4.7.3 installed but this does not seem to work under 12.1 32-bit (with KDE4.7.3 installed).
Thanks for any hints/references.
BC
I have also found this flakey (pardon the technical jargon ;-) with 12.1. Sometimes it works, sometimes not.
I think I discovered on how to proceed with this. Mind you, it does not solve the problem because once the icons are in place I cannot re-arrange them :-( .
What I just did was to "Add to panel" the icons to the Taskbar in the order I want to see them in.
I think the correct method is: right click on task bar and unlock widgets right click on task bar and click on "panel options" and then "panel settings" At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content. When finished right click on the task bar and lock the widgets again. -- Ken Schneider SuSe since Version 5.2, June 1998 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 18/11/11 15:22, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/17/2011 10:31 PM, Basil Chupin pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
On 18/11/11 14:03, James Knott wrote:
Basil Chupin wrote:
Does anyone know, or point me to where I can read about, how to re-arrange/move the icons in the Quicklaunch "area" on the Taskbar?
It was simply a matter of drag-and-drop in 11.4 with KDE4.7.3 installed but this does not seem to work under 12.1 32-bit (with KDE4.7.3 installed).
Thanks for any hints/references.
BC
I have also found this flakey (pardon the technical jargon ;-) with 12.1. Sometimes it works, sometimes not.
I think I discovered on how to proceed with this. Mind you, it does not solve the problem because once the icons are in place I cannot re-arrange them :-( .
What I just did was to "Add to panel" the icons to the Taskbar in the order I want to see them in.
I think the correct method is:
right click on task bar and unlock widgets right click on task bar and click on "panel options" and then "panel settings"
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
When finished right click on the task bar and lock the widgets again.
AHA! Many thanks, Ken! Works on all the added icons - except for the one which was in place by default, namely the Dolphin icon: trying to move it results in moving a whole strip of the taskbar. Thanks again. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 15:04:28 Basil Chupin wrote:
On 18/11/11 15:22, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote: [..]
I think the correct method is:
right click on task bar and unlock widgets right click on task bar and click on "panel options" and then "panel settings"
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
When finished right click on the task bar and lock the widgets again.
AHA! Many thanks, Ken! Works on all the added icons - except for the one which was in place by default, namely the Dolphin icon: trying to move it results in moving a whole strip of the taskbar.
Then I would ask, "Is the Dolphin icon actually in the Quick Launch container, or next to it?" I've been caught on this before - you can drop launcher widgets onto the task bar and not actually have them in another container (quick launch, system tray etc). Try moving Quick Launch and see if Dolphin moves with it. Either way, removing the Dolphin icon and re-adding it *inside* the quick launch container should fix it. -- =================================================== Rodney Baker VK5ZTV rodney.baker@iinet.net.au =================================================== -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 19/11/11 01:26, Rodney Baker wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 15:04:28 Basil Chupin wrote:
On 18/11/11 15:22, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote: [..]
I think the correct method is:
right click on task bar and unlock widgets right click on task bar and click on "panel options" and then "panel settings"
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
When finished right click on the task bar and lock the widgets again. AHA! Many thanks, Ken! Works on all the added icons - except for the one which was in place by default, namely the Dolphin icon: trying to move it results in moving a whole strip of the taskbar.
Then I would ask, "Is the Dolphin icon actually in the Quick Launch container, or next to it?"
I've been caught on this before - you can drop launcher widgets onto the task bar and not actually have them in another container (quick launch, system tray etc). Try moving Quick Launch and see if Dolphin moves with it. Either way, removing the Dolphin icon and re-adding it *inside* the quick launch container should fix it.
Which is what I did :-) but thanks for the suggestion anyway. BTW, the Firefox icon is also an icon which appears by default in the same area but you cannot adjust/amend its preferences (eg, I also have Firefox 11.0 installed and so change the Application parameter to start this rather than the FF installed in oS); the only way to be able to make such changes is to delete this 'default' icon and replace it with the FF icon from Favourites. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am Samstag, 19. November 2011, 15:34:15 schrieb Basil Chupin:
BTW, the Firefox icon is also an icon which appears by default in the same area but you cannot adjust/amend its preferences (eg, I also have Firefox 11.0 installed and so change the Application parameter to start this rather than the FF installed in oS); the only way to be able to make such changes is to delete this 'default' icon and replace it with the FF icon from Favourites.
No, you just have to change your default browser in KDE's systemsettings. Sven -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 20/11/11 03:53, Sven Burmeister wrote:
Am Samstag, 19. November 2011, 15:34:15 schrieb Basil Chupin:
BTW, the Firefox icon is also an icon which appears by default in the same area but you cannot adjust/amend its preferences (eg, I also have Firefox 11.0 installed and so change the Application parameter to start this rather than the FF installed in oS); the only way to be able to make such changes is to delete this 'default' icon and replace it with the FF icon from Favourites. No, you just have to change your default browser in KDE's systemsettings.
Sven
I am not sure if we are talking about the same thing because Firefox is the default browser and it is already showing as the browser in System Settings. (It is Thunderbird which has to be typed in 'cause the default is kmail, if I recall correctly.) BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science. -- Ken Schneider SuSe since Version 5.2, June 1998 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science.
I have used it successfully many times, but some time it just doesn't work. Sometimes it takes 2 or 3 attempts. It did work better in 11.4, but even that isn't as good as in KDE3. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 19/11/11 00:39, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science.
OK, Rocketman :-) how do I overcome this lill hassle? In the Taskbar (in 11.4) I had on left side all the icons in Quicklaunch which were then followed (going from left to right) by the Pager with 6 Workspaces; next I had something (cannot remember its name right now) which showed what applications I had running, and then on the right hand I had the Volume control etc with the Digital Clock on the extreme right. The default appearance of the Taskbar in 12.1 has the Pager on the extreme left followed by the Quicklaunch icons; the right hand side is as in 11.4 (Volume, Clock). Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated? BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 11/18/2011 11:50 PM, Basil Chupin pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
On 19/11/11 00:39, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science.
OK, Rocketman :-) how do I overcome this lill hassle?
In the Taskbar (in 11.4) I had on left side all the icons in Quicklaunch which were then followed (going from left to right) by the Pager with 6 Workspaces; next I had something (cannot remember its name right now) which showed what applications I had running, and then on the right hand I had the Volume control etc with the Digital Clock on the extreme right.
The default appearance of the Taskbar in 12.1 has the Pager on the extreme left followed by the Quicklaunch icons; the right hand side is as in 11.4 (Volume, Clock).
Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated?
BC
Move the pager further left, I think it has precedence over the others. -- Ken Schneider SuSe since Version 5.2, June 1998 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 20/11/11 00:00, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 11:50 PM, Basil Chupin pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
On 19/11/11 00:39, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science.
OK, Rocketman :-) how do I overcome this lill hassle?
In the Taskbar (in 11.4) I had on left side all the icons in Quicklaunch which were then followed (going from left to right) by the Pager with 6 Workspaces; next I had something (cannot remember its name right now) which showed what applications I had running, and then on the right hand I had the Volume control etc with the Digital Clock on the extreme right.
The default appearance of the Taskbar in 12.1 has the Pager on the extreme left followed by the Quicklaunch icons; the right hand side is as in 11.4 (Volume, Clock).
Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated?
BC
Move the pager further left, I think it has precedence over the others.
Thanks, Ken, but, No, this does nothing - Volume control etc and the Clock are still in the middle. Try to move them but they return to middle position as if a magnet is pulling them back...... :-( . BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 19/11/11 15:50, Basil Chupin wrote:
On 19/11/11 00:39, Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
On 11/18/2011 08:19 AM, James Knott pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
Ken Schneider - openSUSE wrote:
At this point move the task bar items to your hearts content.
They move but they don't always stay where you put them. KDE3 worked much better for this.
You have to click on the icon you want moved and then click again once you have it where you want it. Come on James this is not rocket science.
OK, Rocketman :-) how do I overcome this lill hassle?
In the Taskbar (in 11.4) I had on left side all the icons in Quicklaunch which were then followed (going from left to right) by the Pager with 6 Workspaces; next I had something (cannot remember its name right now) which showed what applications I had running, and then on the right hand I had the Volume control etc with the Digital Clock on the extreme right.
The default appearance of the Taskbar in 12.1 has the Pager on the extreme left followed by the Quicklaunch icons; the right hand side is as in 11.4 (Volume, Clock).
Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated?
BC
I solved the problem by selecting in System Settings/Workspace Behaviour the option of Different Widgets for each desktop. This moved the Volume etc and the Clock to their original positions (far right) and I was left with the Quicklaunch on the left with the Pager to its right (like the way I like it). I also discovered that doing the above it is now possible to have a different wallpaper for each different desktop/workspace! Luvly :-) . BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am Samstag, 19. November 2011, 15:50:58 schrieb Basil Chupin:
Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated?
There are now at least two types of launchers, thus one has to be more precise when it comes to the topic of "moving icons on the panel". If one adds an app by right-clicking on it in the kmenu the created icon can be moved by unlocking the panel. However, the task-bar, i.e. the bit which shows the running applications, now features "integrated" launchers as well. Those are part of the task-bar and thus always on its left. So if you move them you also move the task-bar – which is what might have happened to you. By default, i.e. if you start with no KDE config, the task-bar shows launchers for whatever you set as your default file manger and default browser. You can add more launchers by right-clicking a running app in the task-bar > advanced
show launcher if app is not running.
Sven -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 20/11/11 03:52, Sven Burmeister wrote:
Following your instructions about moving the icons around I also decided to move the Pager to the right of the Quicklaunch - but in so doing the Volume and the Clock have now moved into the middle of the Taskbar and will not return to their original positions :-( . Any suggestions as to how to get the darn things to stick where they are moved, or is it a matter of deleting the kde4 dir in /home and allow it to be recreated? There are now at least two types of launchers, thus one has to be more precise when it comes to the topic of "moving icons on the panel". If one adds an app by right-clicking on it in the kmenu the created icon can be moved by unlocking the panel. However, the task-bar, i.e. the bit which shows the running applications, now features "integrated" launchers as well. Those are
Am Samstag, 19. November 2011, 15:50:58 schrieb Basil Chupin: part of the task-bar and thus always on its left. So if you move them you also move the task-bar – which is what might have happened to you.
By default, i.e. if you start with no KDE config, the task-bar shows launchers for whatever you set as your default file manger and default browser. You can add more launchers by right-clicking a running app in the task-bar> advanced
show launcher if app is not running. Sven
Thanks for this, Sven. I have now (almost) got back to the default situation re the Taskbar except that I have lost the - as you call it above - "bit which shows the running applications". Is there a way to bring this 'bit' back? Or is there a way to recreate the default Taskbar (so that I can stuff it up again :-) ) other than by creating a new user and then have me take over his identity or rei-installing the whole of 12.1? Thanks for any suggestions. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am Sonntag, 20. November 2011, 17:01:28 schrieb Basil Chupin:
I have now (almost) got back to the default situation re the Taskbar except that I have lost the - as you call it above - "bit which shows the running applications".
If you want to keep your current panel, you can unlock it, click on the cashew-like icon on its far right and then on "add widget". In the top-left corner of the pop-up you can search for "task" and it should show you the widget you have to add to your panel.
Is there a way to bring this 'bit' back? Or is there a way to recreate the default Taskbar (so that I can stuff it up again :-) ) other than by creating a new user and then have me take over his identity or rei-installing the whole of 12.1?
If you unlock the widgets and right-click on an empty space on the desktop the context-menu should show you "add panel" and if you hover it the different types of panels appear. Among them a "standard panel". So you can remove all panels and simply add a new standard one. Sven -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 20/11/11 21:59, Sven Burmeister wrote:
Am Sonntag, 20. November 2011, 17:01:28 schrieb Basil Chupin:
I have now (almost) got back to the default situation re the Taskbar except that I have lost the - as you call it above - "bit which shows the running applications". If you want to keep your current panel, you can unlock it, click on the cashew-like icon on its far right and then on "add widget". In the top-left corner of the pop-up you can search for "task" and it should show you the widget you have to add to your panel.
Is there a way to bring this 'bit' back? Or is there a way to recreate the default Taskbar (so that I can stuff it up again :-) ) other than by creating a new user and then have me take over his identity or rei-installing the whole of 12.1? If you unlock the widgets and right-click on an empty space on the desktop the context-menu should show you "add panel" and if you hover it the different types of panels appear. Among them a "standard panel". So you can remove all panels and simply add a new standard one.
Sven
Once again, Thank you, Sven. I shall do this exercise tomorrow after I am bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. (You know, this KDE stuff is not intuitive to use :-( .) BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
For anyone following this thread here is an update to what Sven suggested as a solution to my little hassle with the Taskbar - see below. On 20/11/11 23:29, Basil Chupin wrote:
On 20/11/11 21:59, Sven Burmeister wrote:
I have now (almost) got back to the default situation re the Taskbar except that I have lost the - as you call it above - "bit which shows the running applications". If you want to keep your current panel, you can unlock it, click on the cashew-like icon on its far right and then on "add widget". In the top-left corner of the pop-up you can search for "task" and it should show you
Am Sonntag, 20. November 2011, 17:01:28 schrieb Basil Chupin: the widget you have to add to your panel.
Is there a way to bring this 'bit' back? Or is there a way to recreate the default Taskbar (so that I can stuff it up again :-) ) other than by creating a new user and then have me take over his identity or rei-installing the whole of 12.1? If you unlock the widgets and right-click on an empty space on the desktop the context-menu should show you "add panel" and if you hover it the different types of panels appear. Among them a "standard panel". So you can remove all panels and simply add a new standard one.
Sven
Once again, Thank you, Sven. I shall do this exercise tomorrow after I am bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
(You know, this KDE stuff is not intuitive to use :-( .)
BC
Here is what I experienced earlier today when I did what Sven suggested above. a) after selecting Add Panel>Default the Default panel does NOT appear on top of the existing Taskbar; b) you need to DELETE the existing Taskbar (with Delete Panel) before the default one will show show - follow what is in f) below; c) after deleting the existing Taskbar and selecting the Default panel the screen may go black and you cannot see or do anything. The way out is to CTRL-ALT-F3, login as root and then do 'halt'. Or simply do a reboot; d) on the Default Taskbar, on the left side, you will see the gecko (?kmenu, is this its name?) then the Pager, then small icons for Dolphin and Firefox. If you want to shift the Pager to be AFTER the Dolphin and FF icons you have to DELETE these 2 icons otherwise Pager will not shift but will keep returning to its original position. And if you keep fooling around you will probably end up with the mess I did (with the Volume/Clock in the middle of the Taskbar); e) To move the Pager, delete the small Dolphin and FF icons then go to the kmenu and right-click on each of these apps in the Favourites and send them to the panel with 'Add to panel'. Once these are added you can then move the Pager past these 2 icons; f) to actually move the pager, for example, do what Ken stated, namely, unlock the widgets, right-click on an empty space on the Taskbar, select Panel Options>Panel Settings , then left-click on the Pager (if moving Pager or an icon if moving and icon) and move it. After done, lock the widgets; g) I don't know if this is by design or by accident, but if you simply do what is in (a) above and even though no new panel appears at the BOTTOM and above the exsting Taskbar, if you keep adding panels the 3rd addition will appear at the TOP of the screen, the next on the LEFT side of the screen; I don't know what happens if you add another one :-) . Refer to the blog which C provided last month, namely- http://chakra-project.org/wiki/index.php/Advanced_Plasma_Desktop_Features e) and in case some missed this, you can now have different wallpapers for each desktop/workspace - just click on Different widgets for each desktop in System Settings>Workspace Behaviour; f) if you have already done what is in e) and do have the Diff widgets selected then you will need to do a) - g) for each desktop you have; or else undo e) and then apply a( - g) only once and then "create" your separate desktops, if you see what I mean. When you try this process your screen will probably go black - see c) above. BC -- Diapers and politicians should be changed often; both for the same reason. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
participants (5)
-
Basil Chupin
-
James Knott
-
Ken Schneider - openSUSE
-
Rodney Baker
-
Sven Burmeister