Hi, I replied this one (with images attached) but it seems to need approve. Would anyone please help me? Thanks. Franklin 在 週二 17 八月 2010 14:42:57,Duncan 寫道: > Frank Weng \(a.k.a. Franklin\) posted on Tue, 17 Aug 2010 13:15:57 +0800 > > as excerpted: > >> I just upgrade to KDE 4.5 (Mandriva package) > >> > >> Then after re-login I found that there are two more items on my task > >> bar. > >> > >> Then I found that these two item, one is gcin, which should just > >> minimize to tray only, and the other is plasma-desktop, which would > >> make my plasma desktop disappear after killing it. > >> > >> Even if I rename my .kde4 to initialize a new KDE environment, there is > >> still one item exist (but I didn't see if it is gcin or plasma-desktop. > >> I guess it should be gcin). > >> > >> Would anyone please give me a hint that how can I make it not appear on > >> my taskbar? > >> > >> The screenshot is attached. > > > > Does anyone have the same problem? > > I'm not seeing it here. Gentoo, 4.5 from the gentoo/kde overlay. Thanks > for attaching the screen shot, BTW, or it'd have been difficult to believe > that plasma-desktop would be showing /itself/ -- it certainly doesn't do > so by default. FWIW, I've no idea at all what gcin is. > > Why it's doing it, I don't know, but provided you're using kwin as your > window manager at least (not something like compiz fusion), you SHOULD be > able to tell it not to. You certainly can with normal windows, but as > this is behavior I've not seen, I can't be sure exactly what sort of > windows these are, or that the below will work. > > Open the window behavior dialog (available from the window-menu in any > title bar), scroll to the bottom of the pic-list on the left and choose > window rules. If you don't already have an entry for the apps you want to > modify the behavior of (you probably won't, unless you set one up at some > point, tho there have been a few default rules from time to time), choose > new, and a new dialog will popup, this one for a specific app. > > Now ensure that the target window is displayed somewhere (not minimized), > and hit the detect window properties button. The pointer should turn into > a pair of cross-hairs. Aim it at the window in question and click. You > should get a third dialog, listing a bit of information about the window > you clicked. Make the appropriate choice (probably specific window, you > can adjust later if desired) and hit OK. > > That should return you to the specific window settings dialog, now with a > bit of info about the window you picked filled in on the first and second > tabs. Again adjust these as appropriate. You want to always match the > window in question, but not match too much... perhaps other windows of the > same app, etc. So if the title changes, you can't use exact match on > that, tho you might be able to use contains, or simply ignore that. > Similarly with the other items, except they shouldn't be as likely to > change. On the top of the first tab, be sure to fill in an appropriate > description, as this is what it'll be listed with in the window rules > dialog. > > When you're finished adjusting the settings on the first two tabs, which > describe the window and determine how it matches, move on to the next > three, which describe window behavior that you might wish to change. > > In this case, what we're looking for is on the preferences tab. The items > you're interested in are the "Skip..." items. You obviously want to skip > the taskbar, and may wish to skip the pager and app-switcher, I'm not > sure. Select the left-hand checkbox to activate that line, change the > drop-down box from do not affect to either force, or possibly, apply > initially. Be sure and select the checkbox on the right as well, or it > negates the instruction (do NOT skip...). > > Set anything else that might be of interest, and hit OK. Then hit Apply > in the window behavior dialog, and see if it worked... If it didn't, you > may have to go back and fiddle with things a bit. > > With gcin I think it should work, at least if you can get a window to > show, for you to click on. With the plasma-desktop window... I really > don't know, as I'm not sure what part of it is showing up in the taskbar > that shouldn't be, and thus, am not sure exactly how it's going to work. > Certainly, you can click anywhere on the desktop or panels, and that's > plasma-desktop. No problem there. But the question is, is that the > window that's showing in the task manager? Or is there something else > going on, some other window associated with plasma-desktop, showing up? > > I hope that helps...
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