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110 of 32 results
18.
<p><h1>Window Behavior</h1> Here you can customize the way windows behave when being moved, resized or clicked on. You can also specify a focus policy as well as a placement policy for new windows.</p> <p>Please note that this configuration will not take effect if you do not use KWin as your window manager. If you do use a different window manager, please refer to its documentation for how to customize window behavior.</p>
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Located in main.cpp:169
68.
Wheel
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Located in mouse.cpp:691
72.
In this row you can customize behavior when scrolling into an inactive inner window ('inner' means: not titlebar, not frame).
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Located in mouse.cpp:707
75.
Scroll
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Located in mouse.cpp:756
76.
Activate & Scroll
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Located in mouse.cpp:757
77.
Activate, Raise & Scroll
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Located in mouse.cpp:758
87.
Here you can customize KDE's behavior when scrolling with the mouse wheel in a window while pressing the modifier key.
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Located in mouse.cpp:885
88.
Mouse wheel:
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Located in mouse.cpp:888
96.
<p>This option specifies how much KWin will try to prevent unwanted focus stealing caused by unexpected activation of new windows. (Note: This feature does not work with the Focus Under Mouse or Focus Strictly Under Mouse focus policies.)<ul><li><em>None:</em> Prevention is turned off and new windows always become activated.</li><li><em>Low:</em> Prevention is enabled; when some window does not have support for the underlying mechanism and KWin cannot reliably decide whether to activate the window or not, it will be activated. This setting may have both worse and better results than normal level, depending on the applications.</li><li><em>Normal:</em> Prevention is enabled.</li><li><em>High:</em> New windows get activated only if no window is currently active or if they belong to the currently active application. This setting is probably not really usable when not using mouse focus policy.</li><li><em>Extreme:</em> All windows must be explicitly activated by the user.</li></ul></p><p>Windows that are prevented from stealing focus are marked as demanding attention, which by default means their taskbar entry will be highlighted. This can be changed in the Notifications control module.</p>
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Located in windows.cpp:130
103.
The focus policy is used to determine the active window, i.e. the window you can work in. <ul> <li><em>Click to focus:</em> A window becomes active when you click into it. This is the behavior you might know from other operating systems.</li> <li><em>Focus follows mouse:</em> Moving the mouse pointer actively on to a normal window activates it. New windows will receive the focus, without you having to point the mouse at them explicitly. Very practical if you are using the mouse a lot.</li> <li><em>Focus under mouse:</em> The window that happens to be under the mouse pointer is active. If the mouse points nowhere, the last window that was under the mouse has focus. New windows will not automatically receive the focus.</li> <li><em>Focus strictly under mouse:</em> Only the window under the mouse pointer is active. If the mouse points nowhere, nothing has focus.</li> </ul>Note that 'Focus under mouse' and 'Focus strictly under mouse' prevent certain features such as the Alt+Tab walk through windows dialog in the KDE mode from working properly.
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Located in windows.cpp:134
110 of 32 results

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Contributors to this translation: Ravishankar Shrivastava.