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." <n1ea arrl net> wrote:They do, but I forget those keyboard shortcuts, brain injury!DavidOn Tue, May 7, 2013 at 1:33 PM, Roland Orre <roland orre 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. <n1ea 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--
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