Hello,
I have a couple of questions.
1. Is there a better way to access the layout menu than trying repeatedly
to right click on the narrow bit of border between windows?
2. Is the a way to save these setting, to make them persistent across
sessions?
3. Is it just me or does everyone get
On Sat, 24 May 2014 08:13:04 -0700 (PDT)
Chris George technat...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello,
I have a couple of questions.
1. Is there a better way to access the layout menu than trying
repeatedly to right click on the narrow bit of border between windows?
No, partly because the context
On Sat, 24 May 2014 11:37:20 -0500
'Terry Brown' via leo-editor leo-editor@googlegroups.com wrote:
Just because it's easy, I'm going to add a
free-layout-context-menu
command to open the free layout context menu using the first border in
the top level splitter as the context, that will
Thanks Terry,
Is there a way to increase the thickness of the clickable border?
Chris
On Saturday, May 24, 2014 9:53:17 AM UTC-7, Terry wrote:
On Sat, 24 May 2014 11:37:20 -0500
'Terry Brown' via leo-editor leo-e...@googlegroups.com javascript:
wrote:
Just because it's easy, I'm going
On Sat, 24 May 2014 10:22:00 -0700 (PDT)
Chris George technat...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks Terry,
Is there a way to increase the thickness of the clickable border?
myLeoSettings.leo
@settings
@data qt-gui-user-style-sheet
QSplitter::handle:horizontal {
width: 20px;
}
I was thinking a little more about this. Would it not make sense to split
off all of the functions that do not require the context into their own
gui? For example, everything below zoom pane could be on the main menu as a
settings item. Zoom pane itself should be part of the context menu for
On Sat, 24 May 2014 16:31:11 -0700 (PDT)
Chris George technat...@gmail.com wrote:
I was thinking a little more about this. Would it not make sense to
split off all of the functions that do not require the context into
their own gui? For example, everything below zoom pane could be on
the main