On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 17:25:09 -0400
wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 21:53:36 +0100
> Joe wrote:
>
>
> > I use the Third Option, the deskbar, which gives vertical panels at
> > the side and as far as I can see, no spaces between anything, unless
> > you actually place a separator. I use 36 pixels fo
pa...@quillandmouse.com wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 17:20:01 +0100
> Joe wrote:
>
> I believe The XFCE panel will go vertical, but it doesn't work right. I
> just want a row of icons, period. But I can't figure out how to make
> that happen; I get huge spaces between the icons. If you know how
>
On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 21:53:36 +0100
Joe wrote:
> I use the Third Option, the deskbar, which gives vertical panels at
> the side and as far as I can see, no spaces between anything, unless
> you actually place a separator. I use 36 pixels for the launcher
> panel and 44 pixels, on the other side,
On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 14:58:48 -0400
wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 17:20:01 +0100
> Joe wrote:
>
> > Is this a matter of principle for the OP, or does the panel
> > interfere with something else? I have three panels, and for me they
> > are the main point of running a DE rather than just a window
>
On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 17:20:01 +0100
Joe wrote:
> Is this a matter of principle for the OP, or does the panel interfere
> with something else? I have three panels, and for me they are the main
> point of running a DE rather than just a window manager. But one of
> them contains an analogue clock and
On Tue, 3 Oct 2023 16:39:11 +0300
Roland Mueller wrote:
> XFCE4 panel ca be manually recreated by (as far as I remember)
> right-clicking into empty desktop space and then opening settings.
>
> Other option is mentioned here:
> https://docs.xfce.org/xfce/xfce4-panel/getting-started:
>
> Quote:
XFCE4 panel ca be manually recreated by (as far as I remember)
right-clicking into empty desktop space and then opening settings.
Other option is mentioned here:
https://docs.xfce.org/xfce/xfce4-panel/getting-started:
Quote: "The panel will usually be started automatically as part of your
Xfce se
I just tried this in a VM and it seemed to work.
>From a command line:
xfce4-panel -q
find ~/.config | grep panel
Remove the xfce4-panel.xml (I also removed the empty directory just
named panel.)
The lack of panels seems to have survived a reboot.
I don't know if it is sufficient for every va
Folks:
I'm trying to run XFCE4 with no (XFCE4) panels. I prefer polybar and
tint2. I've searched the internet high and low, and all the advice I
can find is old and doesn't work for the current (Debian 12) version.
Settings > Session and Startup etc. doesn't provide a way, and the
XFCE4 panel app
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