On Sep 23, 2011, at 7:07 PM, Mick wrote:

> On Friday 23 Sep 2011 22:58:34 darken K wrote:
>> Hello everyone,
>> I've just installed enlightenement on my debian. It looks nice, but I have
>> one issue. I want to have conky on left top part of my screen, but i have
>> the shelf on top right of my screen with property above everything. When
>> conky starts it's placed on left side of screen, but below the shelf. What
>> should i do to have conky in the same row as enlightenments' shelf?
> 
> I have the same problem with Gkrellm on the bottom right of the screen and 
> shelf on the bottom (middle) of the screen.
> 
> It used to be the case many moons ago that Gkrellm would stay at very bottom 
> right of the screen and not interfere with or be affected by the shelf.  
> However, developments of how the desktop is now rendered meant that the shelf 
> pushes up away from the edge that it occupies any other applications (desktop 
> objects).  This means that the shelf reserves the full length of the edge 
> just 
> in case it expands with additional content and pushes out of the way any 
> other 
> desktop objects.
> 
> A dev explained it to me in this M/L some time ago now, only in a more 
> articulate way.  I tried different settings on the Gkrellm window to make it 
> remember the position, etc. but nothing works as it used to with the new code.
> 
> Now I just move Gkrellm manually at the bottom right corner (I drag it with 
> the mouse) but a reboot pushes it up again.  Of course, you can't do this 
> with 
> Conky.  Unless someone else has a better idea I suggest that you position 
> Conky on another edge not affected by the shelf, e.g. bottom left.
> -- 
> Regards,
> Mick

I have no problem with GKrellM's opening at any particular location. Go to the 
Gkrellm Configuration setting, General, Options, and then tick the box labeled 
"Remember screen location at exit and move to it at next startup." Click ok. 
Works fine here, even after a reboot. GKrellM 2.3.5.

mh




------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All of the data generated in your IT infrastructure is seriously valuable.
Why? It contains a definitive record of application performance, security
threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes
sense of it. IT sense. And common sense.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy2
_______________________________________________
enlightenment-users mailing list
enlightenment-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-users

Reply via email to