Hi all,
I should have mentioned this is Bibledit 4.0, in case that is
relevant for those who may be keeping notes :-)
Paul
On 6/24/2011 12:22 PM, Paul-Jennifer_Schaefer wrote:
Hi all,
When I had the same problem some months ago (in an installation
using Bibledit for Linux in Xubuntu--part of SIL's Low Power
Computing initiative called BALSA), somebody suggested using the
ALT key. But in that version/system, this does not grab the active
window and move it--it rather grabs the whole main Bibledit
window, which doesn't do any good. I tried just now (on the same
system) the Alt F3 plus M (in various configurations) but none of
this worked either.
A fellow user suggested the solution of editing the configuration
file (which I sent separately), but Teus's solution of Control-M
to close the window, and then reopen it; this works nicely (in my
version at least) and is simpler than editing the configuration
file and has the great advantage can be implemented by a local
typist.
Paul
On 6/24/2011 10:56 AM, Birch Champeon wrote:
Are you running in windows? If so you can just
right click the window's button on the taskbar, choose move and
then use the arrow keys and/or the mouse to bring it back on
screen. Press enter to set the position.
If you are in ubuntu (and perhaps other flavors) and if you
can see any part of the window then hold the ALT key and click
inside the window that you can see. Then you can drag the
window anywhere. If you can't see the window at all then
click then make sure that is the active window in the taskbar,
press Alt+F3 then M, then use the arrow keys to move it.
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 11:44 AM, Tim
Beckendorf <address@hidden>
wrote:
Greetings,
Today one of our translators moved one of his windows up
beyond the menu bar and we weren't able to find a way to
be able to grab it and move it back down again. It sounds
like a really silly problem now that I write this but not
having control over the window was really bothersome.
Thanks for any help,
Tim
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