Hmmm..... I have only tested in FireFox. What application are you using? REboot should not be required. Perhaps logout/login if Gnome is your desktop, but as I recall in my testing, a mere restart of the application was all that was needed. It should affect GTK applications, but probably nothing else (KDE/Plasma, for example). -- Bill Gee On Friday, October 12, 2018 8:10:03 AM CDT Gary Stainburn wrote: > On Friday 12 October 2018 12:19:40 Bill Gee wrote: > > I agree that issue with the scroll bar jumping all over is really > > annoying! > > It is actually a feature of Gnome and GTK. It can be changed by editing a > > file: > > > > ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini > > > > [Settings] > > gtk-primary-button-warps-slider=0 > > > > You may have to create this file. Firefox is a good GTK application to > > verify that the setting works. I use it on a CentOS 7 system which uses > > LXDE for the desktop. > > > > In Fedora there is an item in Settings which can control this. It is in > > the System Settings application: Appearance - Application Style - Gnome > > Application Style and is called "On left-clicking the scroll bar". > > > > As for your first question, I do not know how to get the arrows back. I > > have not missed them. > > Thanks for this. > > I created the file as described. > > [gary@gary ~]$ cat .config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini > [Settings] > gtk-primary-button-warps-slider=0 > [gary@gary ~]$ > > and rebooted. Unfortunately it's not made any difference :( > > Any ideas what I can try next? > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos