Then don't try to be so nice.  From your OP:

"When I click in the scroller and move my mouse, whenever the mouse leaves the scroll bar area the display snaps back to where it was before the scroll operation.  I initially tried to carefully keep the mouse within the scroll bar area, and that does prevent the display from snapping back - but my new ephiphany is this:  If I do manage not to stray from the bounds of the scroll bar before releasing the mouse button, then the display stays where my scrolling action left it BUT, the moment I subsequently move the mouse out of the scroll bar area, the display snaps to its previous position."

I followed your precise instructions above in MS Excel on Windows 10 a few seconds ago and it behaves EXACTLY as you are describing above.

My impression of your OP is that you seek to blame GNUcash for some unique behavior that is unseen anywhere else. Am I misunderstanding your OP?


On 2/5/2019 10:54 AM, Steve Cohen wrote:
I'm trying to be nice but you're making it hard.  I have never experienced such behavior in Windows or in Linux except with Gnucash.  I don't know what you're experiencing but it's not what I am experiencing.  Your input is less than helpful here.

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