Hello,

I believe you are referring to edge-tiling.  You will need dconf-editor
(I don't believe it is installed by default). After installation of
dconf-editor, it will appear in the Sundry group of the applications
menu.

Execute dconf Editor.

Select:

gnome
     shell
         overrides

Un-check edge-tiling.

This should disable the effects you are experiencing.

You can install gnome-tweak-tool to enable Maximize
and Minimize buttons for Windows which you will need as
moving a window to or away from the top panel will not
max or min the window when edge-tiling is disabled.

Hope this is helpful.

Norman


On Thu, 2015-12-10 at 03:51 +0100, Mikhail V wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I have a standard Fedora 22 installation with Gnome 3.16.
> I am new here, please correct me if this is wrong topic.
> Question is, how can I disable the snap to window border feature.
> When
> I move the window around the screen, it snaps to ALL underlying
> window's borders, which is annoying and makes the movement jerky,
> when
> I try to position it precisely in a cascade manner, or tile it with a
> narrow space between windows.
> Also I do not understand why I need this feature at all? And what is
> the sense of snapping for example the right border of current window
> to the right border of all background windows?
> 
> Mikhail
> _______________________________________________
> gnome-shell-list mailing list
> gnome-shell-list@gnome.org
> https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-shell-list
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