Re: Gnome 3, a bug?

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On 05/05/2011 03:30 AM, Magnus Therning wrote:
On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 10:25, Casey Peter<caseyjp1@xxxxxxxxx>  wrote:
On 05/05/2011 03:20 AM, Magnus Therning wrote:
On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 09:17, Casey Peter<caseyjp1@xxxxxxxxx>    wrote:
On 05/05/2011 01:43 AM, Magnus Therning wrote:
On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 07:38, Casey Peter<caseyjp1@xxxxxxxxx>      wrote:
On 05/04/2011 11:56 PM, Magnus Therning wrote:
On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 17:54, Damien Churchill<damoxc@xxxxxxxxx>
  wrote:
You can disable extensions, taken from the Gnome Shell extensions
page
[1]

"Per-user and systemwide extensions can be disabled with the
GSettings
key org.gnome.shell.disabled-extensions"

[1] http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/Extensions
Yes, indeed it does say that, but it doesn't say how to actually
disable them :-)

I've tried to disable AlternateTab without success.  Here's what I've
tried so far:

% gsettings set org.gnome.shell disabled-extensions "@as
['AlternateTab']
% gsettings set org.gnome.shell disabled-extensions "@as
['alternate-tab']

Has anyone else managed to disable extensions?

/M

Yes.  Disabling the extension is pretty simple.  Just go into the
/usr/share/gnome-shell/extensions directory, rename the extension
folder
to
.backup or something like .disabled. (just keep the original folder
name
in
case you want to re-enable later).  You can then do an alt-f2 "lg" and
enter
and go to the extensions tab to verify what is/is not there.  To make
the
change alt+f2 "r" enter to restart the gnome-shell.
I'd very much like to avoid doing something like that, because it's
"icky".  Renaming a system directory, owned by an installed package?
That's not good practice for system administration in my opinion.  The
Gnome 3 docs say it's possible to disable installed extensions on a
per-user basis, I'd much prefer doing it that way.

/M

It might be "icky", but you asked a question...I answered it.  I have it
working and do it that way for now, it works a charm, as some of those
extensions I am not fond of, having gotten used to the defaults during
the
testing phase.  Adding a .xxx to the end of the file disables it and
keeps
the basic folder name structure intact so later if I want it back "on" I
know exactly what to change.

  The package(s) are in AUR anyway, and until we get a better method of
handling the stuff, this works for me.  As for good practice...its my own
machine in my own home, and I know what goes on in exquisite detail on
that
box...so hey.  :D  (not knocking what you are saying for sys admin
purposes.)
Indeed, you answered exactly the question I asked.  In the end I
modified the PKGBUILD to only build the extensions I want.

The packages in AUR (-git) seem to build broken software at the
moment.  Modifying them to build the source tagged 3.0.1 results in
working extensions.

I just hope there's a documented way to control enabled extensions
per-use once there's an extension package in [extra]/[community].

I really do like the looking glass tool though.  That is one nifty little
idsoftware kinda tool.  :-)
Yes, I agree... the only thing that bugs we with it is getting rid of
it.  Pressing 'ESC' to kill the window only works for me when I'm on
the evaluator tab.

/M

I just hope that extensions gets a nice gui to match the look/n/feel of the
desktop itself.  I'm actually a little surprised it didn't from the get-go
as this would have assuaged a LOT of folks who wanted to change said
"defaults" in the first place...but hey, I'm part of the great 'unwashed'.
  heh heh

Off topic:
Yep re: the escape in Looking glass, but apparently that is by design.  I
read the docs online for that and its very specific as to how to leave
it...and the escape in eval is it.  I'm guessing its to avoid leaving the
app prematurely...but just guessing there.
Do you happen to remember the URL for that (unless it's
http://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/LookingGlass I haven't been able to
find anything talking about keyboard short cuts).  It's a developer
tool, so I'm hoping there's some way of navigating between panes
without having to reach for the mouse.

/M

That was it. I checked gnome's main "keyboard cheatsheet" page, but other than what we have, it didn't list anything else either.
https://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/CheatSheet


/C


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