On Wednesday, April 20, 2022 1:37:32 AM EDT Duncan wrote: > Mike Diehl posted on Fri, 01 Apr 2022 10:43:02 -0400 as excerpted: > > On Thursday, March 10, 2022 5:30:58 PM EDT Frank Steinmetzger wrote: > >> Am Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 05:11:03PM -0500 schrieb Mike Diehl: > >> > Hi all, > >> > > >> > I was using kontact's calendar module and managed to make the date > >> > navigator and calendar manager disappear by resizing the panel. How > >> > can I reset the screen layout? > >> > >> There should be a vertical grip handle right next to the Kontact icon > >> sidebar. Actually, there are two on my machine. One for the iconbar > >> itself and one for those panels. > > > > I was able to get back on my wife's machine and confirm that there are > > no handles to grab. I can find the resizing area, but when I drag it > > out in either direction, nothing happens. > > > > So, I need to find where the layout is stored and "reset" it. Any > > ideas? > > [Manually reset to standard nested quote/reply order.] > > With the caveat below forcing a general answer which I never-the-less hope > you find useful, kde configuration files are normally reasonably named and > found in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME (~/.config/ by default if that var isn't set). > Look for a kontact subdir if it exists, and if you don't find it there, > kontactrc or other kontact* or possibly kalendar* or similar. > > With fresh backups just in case, these should be text-editable. > > The files should be normal *.ini format files for the most part, plain > text with [] enclosed section titles and setting=value lines. > > (Unfortunately, a few "state=" values are apparently base64-encoded binary > or some such -- toolbar state being the thing I remember finding stored > this way. But that's reasonably easy to reconfigure if deleting the rather > opaque line whole is required, certainly easier than having to redo an > entire heavily customized configuration from scratch.) > > Caveat: I've never needed the full kontact suite and have never run it. > After a decade on kmail without a lost mail that I recall, I started > losing emails when they jumped the akonadi shark, and migrated away when I > realized they were needlessly complexifying simple text-based email into > easily corrupted binary database crap. Since then, having broken my > trust, anything kdepim or akonadi related is not allowed anywhere even > close to my systems. Of course YMMV and you may have never had such > problems and with luck never will, but that's why, not seeing anything > more specific posted yet, I'm posting the rather general answer based on > kde norms, hoping it's still helpful. Very useful information! Thank you. Mike.