Jerome Yuzyk posted on Mon, 18 Oct 2010 11:23:29 -0600 as excerpted: > In KDE 3 Konqueror file manager I had my toolbars arranged as > > Main toolbar > Location toolbar > Bookmarks toolbar > > In KDE 4 the toolbars are arranged as > > Main toolbar | Location toolbar Bookmarks toolbar > > No matter how I try, I can't move the Location toolbar to its own row - > it always wants to join with the other toolbars. > > How can I give it its own row? Since kde4 is still under rapid development and most distributions tend to be a six-month feature release (plus a number of monthly bugfix releases) behind as shipped, when you're talking about a specific feature, it's generally useful to specify the feature version and sometimes the bugfix version as well. So, for instance, I'm running the latest kde4, 4.5.2, which is kde4, feature release .5, bugfix ..2. Anyway, with 4.5.2 at least, it's possible to unlock the toolbar positions, drag the toolbars where you want them, then lock positions. The caveat is that if you toggle a toolbar on/off it screws up the positions again, and you have to drag them into preferred configuration once more. So make sure you have the toolbars you want shown, put them in the position you want, lock the toolbars, and don't toggle toolbars on and off any more. That works here. One thing that I /have/ noticed, tho, is that if your $KDEHOME dir (~/.kde/ by default as shipped by kde, tho some distributions change that to ~/.kde4/) is a symlink to some other location, stuff like customized toolbar configs, etc, seem to break. I initially (back with 4.2 and 4.3) had mine as a symlink, pointing to ~/kde/ (no leading dot hiding the dir, since I like to see it), and some stuff, including but not limited to toolbar customizations, wouldn't work the way it was supposed to. But along about 4.4 I changed my setup, setting and exporting KDEHOME=~/kde/ so I didn't have to use the symlink, and things work better now. Perhaps you're running into the same symlink issue I had? -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.