Pressing super in full screen mode produces a dummy panel #359
Replies: 5 comments 14 replies
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Came here to make a post discussing this, but I guess you've already done that. Always felt like a bug to me not being able switch tabs like that, so I hope this feature is implemented. |
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The menu and the panel are separate applets. Activating the menu with the Super key does not display the panel as well, unless you have that setting enabled in the system settings (a feature that I understand was added to satisfy Windows users who just couldn't cope). In general, however, the point of hitting Super is to open and use the menu, and not to use the panel. If I want to see the panel, it's because I want to click on something, so why not open the panel with the mouse? (I could support the addition of a shortcut to open the panel application with a keystroke combination, but honestly, what would be the point? We'd still need to use the mouse in any case.) The logic of the Windows interface is considerably muddled at this point. After a year and a half of using Linux Mint, I find its logic refreshingly clear and easy to grasp. If I wanted to continue operating exactly the way Windows does, I'd have stayed with Windows. |
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Windows does not have an intelligent auto-hide panel (toolbar) feature like Cinnamon. This is one of many areas where Linux Mint is superior. I understand that the menu and panel are two separate applets, as you say, however when using the intelligent auto-hide panel feature, pressing the super key does indeed bring up both the menu and the panel (which is logical). Since it brings up both, it would only be logical to be able to interact with both. When running programs in full screen mode the panel isn't accessible with the mouse (with intelligent auto-hide panel enabled). And that is as it should be. So ideally, accessing the panel with the super key would allow one to not only see it, but also use it, without having to exit full-screen mode. If you dislike Cinnamon's unique intelligent auto-hide panel feature, that's a different topic. |
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Actually, I just tested it, the behavior is the same whether using intelligent auto-hide panel or the default, always show the panel. So, even in the default panel mode, if you are running a program in full screen mode, pressing 'super' brings up both the menu and the panel, but while you can interact with the menu, you can't interact with the panel. |
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The intelligent auto-hide panel feature in Cinnamon is great, definitely superior to Win. The only issue I see is that if you press 'super' to access the panel/menu (I do this often in full screen mode while teaching) you can select items from the menu, but not from the panel. I'm guessing this is just a little oversight.
EDIT: I updated the title after discovering this issue was universal and unrelated to the intelligent auto-hide panel feature. Original title: Pressing super with "intelligent auto-hide panel" should produce a useable panel
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