On 16.09.19 01:13, Olly Betts wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 06:47:10PM +0200, Gunter Königsmann wrote:
>>> With GTK3 you can probably work around this by forcing X11, e.g.:
>>>
>>> env GDK_BACKEND=x11 /usr/bin/app
>> For many applications that might be a valuable hint. But it causes
>> hideous
On Sat, Sep 14, 2019 at 06:47:10PM +0200, Gunter Königsmann wrote:
>
> > With GTK3 you can probably work around this by forcing X11, e.g.:
> >
> > env GDK_BACKEND=x11 /usr/bin/app
>
> For many applications that might be a valuable hint. But it causes
> hideous flicker, due to
> https://bugs.debia
> With GTK3 you can probably work around this by forcing X11, e.g.:
>
> env GDK_BACKEND=x11 /usr/bin/app
For many applications that might be a valuable hint. But it causes
hideous flicker, due to
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=934386.
Kind regards,
Gunter.
On Mon, Sep 09, 2019 at 10:04:26PM +0200, Gunter Königsmann wrote:
> Also wxgtk3.0 applications that use gtk2 seem to work fine.
That's not surprising - GTK2 doesn't support Wayland, so GTK2 apps
will actually use X11 even if you're using Wayland.
With GTK3 you can probably work around this by fo
On Mon, 9 Sep 2019, Gunter Königsmann wrote:
Package: libwxgtk3.0-gtk3-0v5
Version: 3.0.4+dfsg-9
Wayland only (X11 works fine): Attempts to do a two-finger scroll using
my synaptic touchpad don't cause applications that use the gtk3 flavour
of wxgtk to scroll. The two-finger scroll seems to be i
Package: libwxgtk3.0-gtk3-0v5
Version: 3.0.4+dfsg-9
Wayland only (X11 works fine): Attempts to do a two-finger scroll using
my synaptic touchpad don't cause applications that use the gtk3 flavour
of wxgtk to scroll. The two-finger scroll seems to be ignored instead.
Ordinary gnome applications seem
6 matches
Mail list logo