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Date:      Sun, 20 Mar 2005 18:38:39 +0000 (UTC)
From:      Christopher Nehren <apeiron+usenet@coitusmentis.info>
To:        freebsd-gnome@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Screenshot
Message-ID:  <slrnd3rgt7.1oo2.apeiron%2Busenet@prophecy.dyndns.org>
References:  <slrnd3q5g0.27to.apeiron%2Busenet@prophecy.dyndns.org> <423DB644.9070304@FreeBSD.org>

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On 2005-03-20, Adam Weinberger scribbled these
curious markings:
> Any chance we could get a shot with your highly customized panel visible?

Of course. http://www.coitusmentis.info/ss210-5.png , and
http://www.coitusmentis.info/ss210-5-tn.png for the thumbnail.

Here's a bit of detail, starting from the bottom left-hand corner of
panel land, in case someone wants to reproduce this setup:

The GNOME foot is the GNOME main menu: the big one that contains Places,
Desktop, etc. Next is the "Hide All Windows" button, then the "Take
Screenshot" button (coming in very handy recently :)), then the logout
button. Only used in dire circumstances like when upgrading Xorg. The
workspace switcher keeps the logout button company, then there's a
horizontal window list. You'll notice by this point that the panel
doesn't fill the whole bottom of the screen. This is a bit tricky to
accomplish with a window list, because it's not immediately obvious.
What you need to do is limit the space of the window list applet itself,
not the panel. After this is the Notification Area, where Rhythmbox and
Gaim store their icons. Next is the clock. Nothing special there, except
a few easily-accessible options.

Up top is a panel that I recently added from my old setup that I hadn't
recreated in the previous shot. There's the Dictionary applet configured
to access my own DICT server, then the Quick Lounge applet configured
with, in left-to-right order: Gaim, Mozilla (modified to execute
mozilla-devel[1]), Anjuta, DevHelp, Glade, gVIM (my own creation), and
Rhythmbox. Next is the most interesting feature of the top panel: the
drawer. It contains a vertically oriented window list. I have this
because I have my Metacity configured to both auto-focus and auto-raise
focused windows, and it's sometimes more convenient to access a window
list at the top of the screen when my cursor is there than to go down to
the bottom and destroy my meticulously-configured window layering. This
is especially relevant when I have Anjuta, Glade, and DevHelp running
(though usually I have them in their own workspaces).  Finishing the
panel configuration is a command line for when starting an xterm is just
not worth it. I changed the colour scheme from the default
black-on-white to a more Unix-like white-on-black.

One more thing about this screenshot is something that I actually
discovered this morning. Take a look at the Gaim conversation window
(and disregard the fact that I said hydrogenated when it should have
been pasteurised), and examine the scrollbar. Observant viewers will
notice the secondary "Up" button on the scrollbar, above the "Down"
button, like as in KDE (at least default KDE, anyway). I found this by
looking through the GNOME Configurator (under the System Tools menu).
Once you have this open, enable the "Scrollbar has secondary backward
stepper" option and you'll have intuitive scrollbars like in KDE.

> Thanks a ton for already taking care of file naming and even thumbnail 
> creation!

Of course. I figured that it'd only take me a few moments, so I may as
well do it to save you guys a bit of work.


[1]: Could the mozilla-devel port possibly also install a .desktop file
for the GNOME menu?

Best Regards,
Christopher Nehren
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-- 
I abhor a system designed for the "user", if that word is a coded
pejorative meaning "stupid and unsophisticated". -- Ken Thompson
If you ask the wrong questions, you get answers like "42" and "God".
Unix is user friendly. However, it isn't idiot friendly.



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