Menus are hidden by default

Bug #732653 reported by Matthew Paul Thomas
850
This bug affects 187 people
Affects Status Importance Assigned to Milestone
Ayatana Design
Confirmed
Undecided
Unassigned
Unity
Confirmed
Medium
Unassigned
unity (Ubuntu)
Confirmed
Medium
sharath

Bug Description

Ubuntu 11.04, Ubuntu 11.10, Ubuntu 12.04

1. Log in to Unity, and try to connect to a server: "File" > "Connect to Server".
2. Launch Firefox, and try to select an item from the "Bookmarks" menu.

What happens:

1. The "File" menu, and the rest of Nautilus's menus, are hidden by default.
- Unless you mouse over it, the menu bar is blank.
- When you mouse over it, the menus appear.

2. The "Bookmarks" menu, and the rest of Firefox's menus, are hidden by default.
- Unless you mouse over it, the menu bar contains only the text "Firefox Web Browser", which isn't useful at all (especially, but not only, since the real name of the application -- "Mozilla Firefox" -- is already present in the window title bar).
- When you mouse over it, the menus appear, partly but not completely replacing the previous text: "Firefox W File Edit View…".

What should happen: Menus should be visible by default, so that you can know that they exist without scrubbing the screen, and so that you can see where a menu is each time you aim for it.

The current behavior has led some people (including, this week, one of my design colleagues) to conclude that Ubuntu applications don't have menus when they do. For example <http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/opensource/gnome-shell-vs-ubuntu-unity-which-desktop-wins/2291>: "One of the most handy menu entries in GNOME (for me at least) is the Connect to Server entry in the Places menu. This allows the user to connect to nearly any type of server quickly and easily. The user can even connect to a Windows Share from here. In Unity - you won’t find that. In fact, you will be hard pressed to find any means to connect to a server in Ubuntu Unity."

In bug 720424, Jono Bacon reported that "when we did some developer tools usability testing last week and on some other occasions when I have had someone use Unity, I have noticed that some folks don't realize there is a menu there as it is not visible."

This was confirmed by usability testing of Ubuntu 11.04, where 2 out of the 10 people who needed to use a menu item could not find the menus at all -- and of the 8 who did find them, 7 did so only when the window was maximized. https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-desktop/2011-April/002970.html (Usability testing results of Ubuntu 11.10 or 12.04 have never been published, but this part of the design did not change.)

Do not confuse this bug with bug 682788, which is about adding an option for visibility. Adding any options would not fix this bug, which is about menus being hidden *by default*.

-------------------------------------
Desired change:

Implement the 'Enhanced Menu' project for 12.10. This project will address the issues described in this bug and also issues described in the duplicates of this bus. Note the 'official' bug that tracks the implementation of this project is bug #682788

The following options will be added to 'System Settings/Appearance':

-------
Menus
Location: Global/Local
Visibility: Hidden/Always displayed
-------

More details to follow during the 12.10 cycle... ;-)

Tags: lim exbacklog udp
tags: added: sniffles
description: updated
Alex Launi (alexlauni)
Changed in unity:
status: New → Incomplete
tags: added: needs-design
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: New → Incomplete
Revision history for this message
John Lea (johnlea) wrote :

Marked as invalid as this change request contradicts the design, see http://docs.google.com/View?id=dfkkjjcj_1776g5ztgbc3

To discuss this design, please use the Ayatana-design mailing list https://launchpad.net/~ayatana

Changed in ayatana-design:
status: New → Invalid
Changed in unity:
status: Incomplete → Invalid
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: Incomplete → Invalid
John Lea (johnlea)
tags: removed: needs-design sniffles
Revision history for this message
Paul Sladen (sladen) wrote :

Making "Won't Fox". I think if we're not going to do anything about the lack of discoverability , we need to be honest about that.

Changed in ayatana-design:
status: Invalid → Won't Fix
Revision history for this message
Vish (vish) wrote :

Hiding the menubar and only showing the menu on hover basically makes the most important benefit "A menu bar at the top of the screen. .... It has several benefits, most importantly being quick to use because of the large virtual target area..." a moot point, from <http://design.canonical.com/2010/05/menu-bar/> !

Even if user realizes that the menubar is hidden in the top panel, there would be no possibility of "quick use" (Fitts law ).
User can not know which menu item to hit, It will slow down the user in getting to the target menu. And hiding the menu for large screens just to save space is a very odd! ;-)

description: updated
Changed in unity-2d:
status: New → Invalid
Revision history for this message
Alex Launi (alexlauni) wrote :

Perhaps a quick peek when a shortcut is hit, similar to OSX. Ctrl + W/Q, Copy, Paste, etc. are all well known keyboard shortcuts that people use, probably over the menus. Doing a small peek of the menu, or some other momentary animation in the spot where the menu should be would help enormously, as well as give those keyboard shortcuts some tangible effect.

Revision history for this message
Danielle Foré (danrabbit) wrote :

If the goal is to save space by removing menubars from applications it should be done in the proper way: re-designing these applications such that menubars are not necessary.

The only advantage I can see of doing it like this is to irritate users and developers into using/creating applications that don't rely on a menubar (such as those provided by elementary, the new U1 control panel, Google Chrome, etc). But I don't think this is the proper way to achieve that result.

To continue this course of action, an alternative method for displaying certain common actions the menubar supplies should be proposed so that developers have a sane alternative. In elementary we call this the AppMenu (the little cog on the right side of the toolbar). It holds actions that don't necessarily belong in the other parts of the UI such as the "About" "Preferences" "Report a Problem" and other entries that we've found are necessary to carry over from the menubar.

Revision history for this message
FERNmann (fernmann-deactivatedaccount) wrote :

I suggest that menus should only be hidden when the window is maximized (so you can read the window title). Otherwise the menu bar should always be visible to avoid confusing the users.

Revision history for this message
Michael Sharman (msharman) wrote :

I agree, this is a major usability regression IMHO from previous versions of Ubuntu, I spent ages trying to find the menu before I thought of mousing over the title at the top of the screen. Can we at least have an option to turn it off!! I'm a Mac OS X user so menus at the top of the screen are not unfamiliar to me, but hiding it by default is a design flaw, it detracts significantly from the usability compared to a traditional desktop machine, IMHO it would be better to obscure the window title than to hide the menu.

Revision history for this message
Michael Sharman (msharman) wrote :

Perhaps more constructive.... in most of the apps I use there is ample space for the menu to sit beside the window title, why not simply make the menu permanently visible but sit next to the window title. If either gets too large then add a "..." indicator and then a mouse over can reveal the complete menu. (or ">>" or whatever to indicate there are more options).

Revision history for this message
Bracken (abdawson) wrote :

This is one of my major gripes with unity, there's far too much move mouse, wait, see, move mouse again, click. I want move, click.

Revision history for this message
Dag Ågren (paracelsus) wrote :

This issue really is absurd on desktop machines. The menu is hidden for absolutely no reason - the space left behind after it is hidden is not actually used for anything! This does not save any space, it actually wastes it!

As for the design document,

> Menus are an essentially awkward way of presenting functionality and
> options to the user of an application. Many modern applications are being
> designed without substantial menus.

Be that as it may, most applications DO use menus, right now. This is not going to change in the short or medium term.

> The top edge of the screen has some advantages for fine mouse pointer
> targeting.

As somebody pointed out, IF you can see what you are targeting! Hiding the menus ruins this advantage of the edge of the screen, so this is really an argument AGAINST the current design.

> The top level of the menu rarely shows significant information (it is not
> an indicator) - it consists essentially of category headings, like "File"
> and "Edit" and "View". None of those add any relevant information to the
> task at hand, or wider awareness.

This is entirely incorrect. After a short time of usage, the user will learn in which menu a certain option is, and aim for it. This is certainly "wider awareness". Furthermore, applications tend to (and should) place similar items in similar menus, so this knowledge is useful across applications.

Menu headings ARE very significant information.

> The name of the focused application is less relevant when there is only
> one visible application (maximised) and more relevant when there are many
> applications on screen (windowed).

True, and not relevant to this issue. The menus should be placed to the right of the application name, as they are on OS X.

> Screen space is extremely valuable, and we prefer to use pixels for
> content that is unique to the focused task, or wider awareness, than for
> chrome.

With the current system, the pixels in question go UNUSED. This, too, is an argument against the current design.

Revision history for this message
chrone (chrone81) wrote :

make the menu turn on all the time or at least put an option to make it turn on all the time would be a great addition.

if we're gonna copy mac osx, at least we have to do it right! :D

Revision history for this message
GonzO (gonzo) wrote :

This is my #1 complaint about Unity.

And I actually *like* the GlobalMenu idea.

At least with the Launcher, I could turn the hiding behavior off (I hate it when my shell hides things from me by default. I don't mind a switch to *allow* me to hide things, if I want, but I never generally want anything hidden, ever.)

Revision history for this message
Normunds (Alistek) (3pm) wrote :

This behavior is NOT acceptable in real daily work, slows down significantly. This is my #1 complaint about Unity as well.
Is there any patch for showing menus?

Revision history for this message
Samuel Dellicour (smd) wrote :

For me too, the hide and show of the menus slows down my work, and I would really prefer to have them visible at all times.

Revision history for this message
mach (j-mach-wust) wrote :

While I understand the design decision, I would also much appreciate options:

1. Default behaviour (Unity behaviour)
2. No global menu (Windows behaviour, clumsily settable by removing indicator-appmenu)
3. Always show global menu (OS X behaviour, not settable at the moment)

Revision history for this message
Mark Shuttleworth (sabdfl) wrote : Re: [Bug 732653] Re: Menus are hidden by default

Yes, I thought that range was what was planned too. What's the status?

Revision history for this message
OneEyedMan (belligeratiref) wrote :

 One of the things that I find particularly annoying about this auto-hide behavior is that it makes it hard to aim for a particular sub-menu. Essentially, you grab the mouse, hit the top of the screen, then slide along it until you hit what you want. Without auto-hide (IIRC this is how it works on OS X) you can see it the whole time, so you can aim for the target you want without slowing down or correcting course. My understanding of the motive for Apple's choice with these menus is that they are much easier to hit then the windows-style menus because they have an infinite effective depth (infinitely above the monitor). But if you cannot see the menu and you have to hit the top and then slide over, you have to slow down anyway to avoid hitting a neighboring menu. So you've lost much of what makes global menus great.

One almost tolerable workaround I have for this is to hold down the alt-key with my left hand as I reach for the mouse. That means that the menus are showing by the time I move the mouse to hit the top of the screen. Please add my vote to those wanting this feature to be tweak-able. In terms of specification, I would be happy to have it fully displace the current top level menu that show the application name / what page you are on when the delay is tweaked. Another possibility is to have an option where the global menu shows up as soon as the mouse starts to move rather than when it hits the top.

Revision history for this message
Rachel Greenham (rachel-strangenoises) wrote :

Unhide on first mouse movement would have it flickering on and off the whole time, given it can't tell which mouse movements are going to end with it over the menu. Surely that's going to be way more distracting than just having it permanently visible, which I think is all that most of us actually want anyway, to try to put a brake on all the overcomplicated stuff being discussed.

Revision history for this message
OneEyedMan (belligeratiref) wrote :

A delay in hiding the menu for a few seconds after movement would prevent flickering. I prefer a permanently visible option too. I simply wanted to provide another option in case it was easier to implement.

Revision history for this message
Ken (kkinder) wrote :

Interesting how this is a massive usability problem, and it's marked as "invalid" and "won't fix". That's a microcosm of Canonical's attitude toward its users.

Revision history for this message
Aleve Sicofante (sicofante) wrote :

@Ken: I see it marked as "Undecided" not "Invalid". Maybe there's some hope for the final realease?

I'd be happy if it could be possible in Unity 2D only for now.

I vote for the suggestion by Mach, and since that is supposed to be the way (according to Mark), I'll keep my fingers crossed.

Revision history for this message
Mark Shuttleworth (sabdfl) wrote :

I heard today that this was not likely to land for 12.04, it might be an
SRU candidate, but the code isn't ready for the LTS given we're in beta
already.

Mark

John Lea (johnlea)
Changed in ayatana-design:
status: Won't Fix → Confirmed
Changed in unity-2d:
status: Invalid → Confirmed
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: Invalid → Confirmed
Changed in unity:
status: Invalid → Confirmed
description: updated
tags: added: udp
Changed in ayatana-design:
assignee: nobody → John Lea (johnlea)
importance: Undecided → High
status: Confirmed → Fix Committed
Changed in unity:
status: Confirmed → In Progress
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: Confirmed → In Progress
Changed in unity:
milestone: none → backlog
Revision history for this message
Launchpad Janitor (janitor) wrote :

Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.

Changed in unity-2d (Ubuntu):
status: New → Confirmed
description: updated
John Lea (johnlea)
Changed in ayatana-design:
assignee: John Lea (johnlea) → nobody
importance: High → Undecided
status: Fix Committed → New
Changed in unity:
status: In Progress → New
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: In Progress → New
Changed in unity-2d (Ubuntu):
status: Confirmed → New
Changed in unity-2d:
status: Confirmed → New
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: New → Confirmed
Changed in unity-2d (Ubuntu):
status: New → Confirmed
description: updated
John Lea (johnlea)
description: updated
tags: added: lim
description: updated
Omer Akram (om26er)
Changed in unity-2d:
status: New → Confirmed
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
importance: Undecided → Medium
Changed in unity-2d (Ubuntu):
importance: Undecided → Medium
Changed in unity:
importance: Undecided → Medium
Changed in unity-2d:
importance: Undecided → Medium
Changed in unity:
status: New → Confirmed
Revision history for this message
GM Kavi (kavi) wrote :

If anybody comes up with a workaround for this until the checkbox which should have shipped with the initial release is added, please post it here. If there's some config file I can tweak or a patched package I can download (especially if something is backported from 12.10) I'd like to know. I absolutely loathe the disappearing menus.

Revision history for this message
Isaac Joseph (ikarosdev) wrote :

@GM Kavi: Yes, I have a PPA with a patched version of Unity. One of the options I've added is the ability to disable global menu hide. You can see my PPA here: https://launchpad.net/~ikarosdev/+archive/unity-revamped/

For more information, visit this link and view the last answer. It will show you where I added the option in CCSM: http://askubuntu.com/questions/25785/can-auto-hide-for-the-application-menu-be-turned-off-in-unity

Tim Penhey (thumper)
Changed in unity:
milestone: backlog → none
Tim Penhey (thumper)
tags: added: exbacklog
Revision history for this message
Soltész András (soltesz-andras) wrote :

This is a massive usability problem an it is assigned to NOBODY ????

This is the biggest usability problem on 12.04 and a massive deterrent for anyone upgrading from 10.04 and have a userbase which is used to Gnome2. Less computer savvy users simply don't find the menu this way.

If Unity want to become a viable desktop, it should support configuring this and ship with allways-visible settings.

Revision history for this message
Adam Strzelecki (nanoant) wrote :

Hey guys, common, how long we need to wait till this gets fixed? All we see are just some ticket status changes, nothing more, no reponse from Ubuntu team or whatsoever.

Right now I am working both on Mac OS X and Ubuntu, and I find default disappearing menu completely useless, just to show empty space.

Luckily there're some nice patched unity builds at: ppa:iaz/unity
Why just not taking this patch and putting it into mainstream. Having stashes option to zero fade-out time is much better than nothing.

Revision history for this message
drx (drx) wrote :

This thread shows how bug tracking tools are not appropriate for discussing glitches in the design of an application.

Revision history for this message
JsquaredZ (jsquaredz) wrote :

I really hope something is happening with this in 13.04. Please... its not that hard. Just give users a choice.

Revision history for this message
Piedro Kulman (piedro) wrote :

I am on Raring Ringtail now - still no change?
What am I missing?

thx, piedro

Revision history for this message
Dr Alistair Lane (alistair-2) wrote :

The auto-hiding of the menu causes a lot of usability problems for us, to the extent that some have ditched Unity altogether. Making choice available is clearly very important but the default should definitely be to show the menus always for the reasons already given in the report. No-one in our office likes the useless blank space and the need to keep unhiding to see what is available.

Revision history for this message
Matthew Frost (padatika) wrote :

Any chance of this getting looked at? Been a couple years now and it's pretty annoying.

Revision history for this message
JoeR (wallydallas) wrote :

I converted Grandma to Ubuntu 12.04. I thank the whole linux communit for an amazing product. This bug of hidden menus is perhaps the worst bug I have ever seen. Grandma worked on IBM systems in the '70's and she's used DOS, and Eudora on Windows 3.1 and on up. Grandma says this is, quote "the most frustrating part of any computer I have ever used". It seems that someone with power has abused it, and made their personal agenda of hidden menus more important than basic UI testing. While this bug is about hidden menus that should be on by default, it is also about the diminishing importance of users in the direction of Ubuntu.

Revision history for this message
dbailey (duncanbailey) wrote :

I understand that an always-on menu will hide the window title. Here's an idea:

With the always-on menu enabled, maximized windows maximize the old-fashioned way: The title bar doesn't take over the menu bar.

Honestly, this seems to be a problem that Mac and Windows have sorted pretty well. I wish there were a simple toggle between the two behaviors: Ubuntu seems to be reinventing the wheel on this one in a way that's actually less usable.

Revision history for this message
Lonnie Lee Best (launchpad-startport) wrote :

I agree. Any time I installed Ubuntu onto someone's system, I really have to emphasize to them that they must hover at the top to see these menus. This is not very intuitive; it has to be figured out the hard way or shown to you.

New users need to SEE the options available to them, not FEEL AROUND for them.

Revision history for this message
Piedro Kulman (piedro) wrote :

There is a setting in gconf to delay autohide.

But it cannot be set to more than 10 seconds. It should be a very little and minor change to allow this to be set to "infinite" ... The fact that no one at the unity team implements this very simple solution is more than annoying.

piedro

Changed in unity-2d (Ubuntu):
status: Confirmed → Triaged
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: Confirmed → Triaged
Changed in ayatana-design:
status: New → Confirmed
Revision history for this message
Adam Strzelecki (nanoant) wrote :

Would this change be also available as backport in 12.04 LTS? We are using here only LTS versions at university. Also note that this bug was submitted before even 12.04 LTS was released, so I think the fix should also cover 12.04 LTS since it is still supported.

no longer affects: unity-2d
Revision history for this message
Adam Strzelecki (nanoant) wrote :

Since 14.04 LTS was just frozen and this bug hangs "ONLY" for 3 years on the roll, does it mean we cannot expect this to be finally fixed for 14.04 as well? Then what, 16.04, 22.04?

This is such a minimal fix, plenty of patches for previous unity version, but you just refuse to implement it!

Revision history for this message
Chris (iforce2d) wrote :

I don't know what all the fuss is about, it's great not being able to see where things are that you need to click on. I heard that for 15.04 the next phase of this brilliant plan will go into effect - entire windows will be invisible until you mouse over them. Just imagine how slick and stylish your deskop will look, it's gonna be awesome! And that's not all... for 16.04, rumor has it that the whole screen will remain black until you move your mouse. Can you imagine how much space that will save on small screens? I just can't wait, the innovative-thinking of Ubuntu UI designers blows my mind!

But seriously now, this is the worst idea ever (and I've seen many bad ideas since this whole Unity nonsense started). It boggles my mind that menus used to actually be shown all the time, and then somebody sat down and spent the time, going out of their way to implement the auto-hide. It would be fine if we could just agree to disagree by selecting the behavior we prefer (given that the old behavior already existed, my mind boggles even more that such an option was not added at the time this genius made the change).

fwiw I'm still happily using Fedora14, which may seem ancient by many measurements, but when it comes to getting things done efficiently I have no complaints at all. Every now and then I take a look at Ubuntu, but it usually only lasts about 20 minutes before I get sick of having to go along with epic fail decisions like this. In fact right now I am typing this on 14.04, probably the last thing I'll be doing on Ubuntu until next year :-)

Revision history for this message
Nayden (nayyden) wrote :

Seriously, i don't understand how one can find auto-hiding of the global menu useful.
If you say that this is useful when you move windows, think how many times per hour you move your IDE, browser etc,... and how may times you seek an entry in the menu.

And finally, the global menu is similar to the one in Apple's OS X. Does it auto-hide? No. And ... I haven't heard of many people complaining about this.

Revision history for this message
bigbrovar (bigbrovar) wrote :

Personally am not bothered by this issue. Once I figured out about it (I read the review) it was easy to adapt. However I am system administrator for a university that runs completely on ubuntu. We are currently on ubuntu 10.04 on all our administrative desktops (over 800) and I have been looking to upgrading to unity. Most of our users come from windows but have adapted quite easily to ubuntu (gnome2)

While I think many of our users and student should figure out unity quite easily. This whole autohide menu thing is just a bummer. We have people who rely heavily on office and use firefox alot (among other tools) not being able to figure out the menu is just a nightmere I can't even begin to imagine. offering training would be a drain on resources as we get visiting faculties on a weekly basis and we just dont have the support staff to hand it.

Ubuntu is aiming for the enterprise desktop.. but my verdict from all I have seen so far is that it has really failed. I can not consider ubuntu for our upgrade. might just be safer to go MINT MATE. That might be the safest option for us. really sad

Revision history for this message
Adnan (adnan-rauff) wrote :

Personally i am only bothered by the hiding menus once the window is maximized. Then when i click on the title bar, i either get the launcher icons or one of the menu items.

I dont understand why there is no option to always enable menus? I mean in mozilla firefox we are seeing the "page title" on the main menu bar and this information is already present on the current open tab (hover over tab to see page title) , so its duplicate information.

Why not just put the menus instead of the "page title" there?

Revision history for this message
Leonardo Donelli (learts92) wrote :

It's a design decision, get over it. I, and plenty of other people, do not want to waste screen space with ever presents menu when
 - you use them about 0-2% of the application usage time
 - Unity has HUD which is a better alternative to menus
 - it literally takes 0.2 seconds to show them (time you'd have to spend anyway to move the pounter to the menubar) and clicking on a menu item doesn't require any more movement/clicks/actions that doing so in permanent menubar does

If people need technical training to learn they have to move the mouse to where menus usually where to see them (most people get that intuitively or just need to be told /read about it once in their life...), they can use one of the ten thousand other DEs that have menu always visible and leave people who don't want them to THE ONLY DE (at the moment) that sensibly hides them.
Thanks.

Revision history for this message
Leonardo Donelli (learts92) wrote :

Now, adding comment editing functionalities to launchpad so that one can correct his typos, that would be a nice feature.

Revision history for this message
Piedro Kulman (piedro) wrote :

Hi Leonardo!

I am glad that you find the design decision useful. many words to explain how it suits you... but we could just sum it up: you like it that way. Nothing to argue with that.

But now guess: I (and many others) don't like it. So why do you tell me to get over it? Well I don't want to get into this kind of discussion...

You made some good explanation why things should be the way they are now.
I hope you realized that noone wants to take that away from you!

The suggestion, the hope, the plea oe maybe the demand on the table is not:
"Please make changes that Leonardo doesn't like the software anymore."
It is:
"Please add the option for other users than Leonardo (quite many it seems) to swith off the feature they do not like (for also good personal reasons I might add). "

Would you please explain in what way your experience would suffer if there were an option to switch off the hidden menue (which you would not have to use!)?

Seems to me still like a crusade to try to force users to change their way of doing things.
Why? Because someone thinks he or she knows it might suit the complaining users better...
Who knows better what suits me than myself I might ask...

Why not let everyone decide for themselves what suits them? Isn't that essentially what they call freedom after all?

And for the other matter:
Yes I think it woould be a nice addition to the forum if there were editing options.
Though one could argue that it is a rational decision to force people to write more thoroughly in forums.
But I guess we can agree on that it's not a good thing to do: forcing people to do things another way, right?

Revision history for this message
Matthew Paul Thomas (mpt) wrote :

Piedro, in the bug description I specifically said that "Adding any options would not fix this bug, which is about menus being hidden *by default*". So no, this is not about adding options. (Which is why, incidentally, the purported "Desired change" is irrelevant to this bug.) The problem with Leonardo's comment isn't that he likes menus the way they are. The problem is that he made three empirical claims, none of them with any evidence, and all of them probably false; and that he suggested that people switch to another "DE", which is gratuitously unhelpful, because most Ubuntu users don't and needn't know what a "DE" is.

Editing bug comments is bug 80895.

no longer affects: unity-2d (Ubuntu)
Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
assignee: nobody → sharath (sharath-akodli495)
status: Triaged → Confirmed
status: Confirmed → Fix Committed
Revision history for this message
Matthew Paul Thomas (mpt) wrote :

sharath, could you provide a link to the merge that fixed this bug? Thanks.

Revision history for this message
Matthew Paul Thomas (mpt) wrote :

(Reopening after a month since sharath gave no evidence that this is really fixed.)

Changed in unity (Ubuntu):
status: Fix Committed → Confirmed
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