Also, if needed you can add the normal window buttons (maximize, minimize, etc) with gnome-tweak-tool.
Regards. Trevor On May 7, 2013 10:40 AM, "D.J.J. Ring, Jr." <n...@arrl.net> wrote: > They do, but I forget those keyboard shortcuts, brain injury! > > David > > On Tue, May 7, 2013 at 1:33 PM, Roland Orre <roland.o...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> OK, now I see that I should have read more carefully D.J.J ;-) >> >> Now I got curious, I have to check this on a machine tonight, >> Doesn't even the default keys Ctrl-W or Alt-F4 work? >> >> >> On Tue, May 7, 2013 at 7:23 PM, D.J.J. Ring, Jr. <n...@arrl.net> wrote: >> >>> Forgive me, Roland One, >>> >>> I spoke poorly it seems. >>> >>> I rarely use keyboard short cuts, except for ctrl-a, ctrl-x, ctrl-c, >>> ctrl-v and ctrl-p. >>> >>> I mean the Window buttons that appear in every other program in GNOME >>> are missing. They look just like the Microsoft Windows buttons so it is a >>> good feature if you are converting family members to use Linux, underline / >>> minimize, two overlapping windows /full screen or a smaller window, and X >>> for close window. >>> >>> All other applications you just have to go to the X on the corner of the >>> screen and click the X and you've closed the window and exited the >>> application, with the new nautilus, you have to click on what is the menu >>> and scroll all the way down to the bottom and select "Close". >>> >>> Rather annoying if you do this many times a day. >>> >>> David >>> >> >> > > -- > nautilus-list mailing list > nautilus-list@gnome.org > https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/nautilus-list >
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