![]() Improved browsing of an application’s recent documents to indicate if a document would by default open with a different app.Improved appearance of drag & drop highlight while dragging items onto the LaunchBar window.Renamed image conversion actions from “Recompress Image” to “Convert Image to JPG”.Improved application indexing to also include Xcode’s Simulator.app.Improved Google Chrome Bookmarks and History indexing to support multiple profiles.New built-in actions for converting images into PNG or HEIC format.New built-in “Dark Mode On/Off” action.I thought it may have to do with firefox but other gnome app are affected. I don't remember having this problem before. I included an extra screen shot to show that the top bar extends to the space that resized windows leave. Each case has a before lock and after lock. I'm including 4 cases (two firefox, one terminal and one text editor. Attaching some screenshots to illustrate issue. No window position or size is changed after lock. Only the focused window (before lock) is afected. Also, it looks as if the app "thinks" it is maximized because the shortcut for this doesn't work until you resize and reposition and try maximizing again. Also, you can try when window is moved to the horizontal split position (left right) via shortcut (window takes all vertical space)įirefox (or Terminal or Text Editor)is resized and is not taking all vertical space anymore. Alternatively it could be Terminal or Text Editor. Install and enable the Hide Top Bar gnome extension.Ģ. However, as it affects those important apps (for me) it is a bit annoying (enough to report).ġ. I cannot be certain if this affects other apps cause I couldn't carry out more extensive tests. Tested VSCode, Chrome and Files but that doesn't happen in those cases. I had this happen to Firefox, Text Editor and Terminal. Windows that are maximized or that take all vertical space are resized after lock (and logging back in) so that they "leave space" for top panel, even though panel is set to auto-hide (via Hide Top Bar extension). Hypothesis: the position of the windows is reset every time after a screen unlock, and sometimes it happens that some windows are "left behind". This seems to happen even when the bug does not arise, but it does look suspicious. Every time I unlock the screen, it looks like there's always some flickering under the dock for the first few milliseconds. I'm not sure whether I've experienced the issue when I use the laptop's display.Ĥ. The bug arises even if I boot the system directly with the external display and never use the laptop's display. I'm using a laptop attached to an external HDMI display. It gets worse after a few hours/days of system usage.ģ. On my setup it doesn't happen every time I unlock the screen, and it seems to happen less frequently in the first few unlocks after a full system restart. ![]() Not all windows end up underneath the dock, only some (and I can't identify a pattern).Ģ. I agree that this is a pretty nasty bug for usability on an LTS release, it doesn't give a very professional feeling (which is too bad as otherwise Ubuntu 22.04 is amazing).ġ. UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to kinetic on (79 days ago)Ġ. Tags: wayland-session third-party- packages kinetic RelatedPackageV ersions: mutter-common 43.0-1ubuntu4 RebootRequiredPkgs: Error: path contained symlinks. InstallationDate: Installed on (328 days ago) UserGroups: adm cdrom dip lpadmin lxd plugdev sambashare sudo UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) RelatedPackageV ersions: mutter-common 40.5-1ubuntu3~ 21.10.1 Package: gnome-shell- extension- ubuntu- dock InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 21.10 "Impish Indri" - Release amd64 (20211012) InstallationDate: Installed on (24 days ago) The Dock overlaps the current program on resume from screen blank. Dock should not overlap the current program on resume from screen blank. Not sure (I guess the Dock is part of the Gnome interface?) ![]() ![]() I can't reproduce the bug it every time.ġ) The release of Ubuntu you are using, via 'lsb_release -rd' or System -> About UbuntuĢ) The version of the package you are using, via 'apt-cache policy pkgname' or by checking in Software Center (Note: I have Auto-hide dock turned off.) To get it back to normal I need to click "Restore Down" on the current programs window and then "Maximize" so that the Dock no longer overlaps it. When resuming from a Blank Screen (by moving the mouse or touching the keyboard), the Dock is displayed over the top of the current program. I have Blank Screen set to happen after 2 minutes of inactivity. ![]()
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