Stacking Frames
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Stacking Frames
I've noticed that sometimes when I auto-hide docked frames, the tabs they create stack up on each other. I have a situation where this would be useful, but I can't seem the force the behavior. Anyone know how?
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- Dragon
- Posts: 304
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 4:48 pm
Re: Stacking Frames
Moving frames around can be tricky, but if you drag one on top of another, they should stack. It will just require some playing with it.
Re: Stacking Frames
To stack a frame you have to do it manually each session first, but then it saves the setting. To snap, drag frame to top bar. It'll split the stackable frame in half at first then moving up a bit more will show a border with a tab at bottom. This stacks the frame. Unfortunately, the frame location and stackability isn't saved due to a fix that caused frames to appear in the upper left when first created and on some Mac OS machines prevented the frame from being moved.
Downloads:
- Notepad++ MapTool addon
- RPEdit details (v1.3)
- Coding Tips: Modularity and Design
- Videos: Macro Writing Tools
-
- Dragon
- Posts: 304
- Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 4:48 pm
Re: Stacking Frames
I've not found this to be true, or at least not of window frames in general. I've got several windows stacked as my default layout. Certain frames that aren't standard windows, yes, but I didn't think that was what this was about. I could be just wrong about the right terminology.aliasmask wrote:To stack a frame you have to do it manually each session first, but then it saves the setting. To snap, drag frame to top bar. It'll split the stackable frame in half at first then moving up a bit more will show a border with a tab at bottom. This stacks the frame. Unfortunately, the frame location and stackability isn't saved due to a fix that caused frames to appear in the upper left when first created and on some Mac OS machines prevented the frame from being moved.
Re: Stacking Frames
Sorry, I meant to say this is only for custom frames (using [frame:]). The built in frames positions are saved. I was assuming the OP meant custom frames which is where the problem comes in.paulstrait wrote:I've not found this to be true, or at least not of window frames in general. I've got several windows stacked as my default layout. Certain frames that aren't standard windows, yes, but I didn't think that was what this was about. I could be just wrong about the right terminology.aliasmask wrote:To stack a frame you have to do it manually each session first, but then it saves the setting. To snap, drag frame to top bar. It'll split the stackable frame in half at first then moving up a bit more will show a border with a tab at bottom. This stacks the frame. Unfortunately, the frame location and stackability isn't saved due to a fix that caused frames to appear in the upper left when first created and on some Mac OS machines prevented the frame from being moved.
Downloads:
- Notepad++ MapTool addon
- RPEdit details (v1.3)
- Coding Tips: Modularity and Design
- Videos: Macro Writing Tools
Re: Stacking Frames
I don't think either is exactly what I'm talking about. You're talking about tiling visible frames I think. What I meant was the tabs created by auto-hiding frames can sometimes rest atop each other, creating a file cabinet-like effect.
Re: Stacking Frames
You can stack them before you hide. If you want to stack a new window you have to unhide first.
Downloads:
- Notepad++ MapTool addon
- RPEdit details (v1.3)
- Coding Tips: Modularity and Design
- Videos: Macro Writing Tools