remove "focus" effect of clock applet
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GNOME Panel |
New
|
Medium
|
|||
gnome-panel (Ubuntu) |
Triaged
|
Wishlist
|
Ubuntu Desktop Bugs |
Bug Description
Bug happens in two scenarios:
A: The brown background of the clock applet has to be a bug. Tell me, if i'm wrong! Reboot your system, don't click anything and hover your mouse cursor over the gnome-panel to reproduce (take a look at the screenshot attached below). You will notice a brown mouse over effect of the clock applet although the mouse cursor is located at a different position of the panel. The first time you click on something this won't happen anymore.
B: To reproduce:
1. Boot Ubuntu.
2. right-click on the clock applet (makes the calendar appear)
3. right-click again on the clock applet (make the calender disappear again)
4. In the panel, click either of the icons of the indicator applet
5. result: the "button" of the clock is getting an orange/rose background colour
The clock applet is focused in both the scenarios causing this "false focus" to be noticeable
affects: | anton → hundredpapercuts |
Changed in hundredpapercuts: | |
assignee: | Dilomo (ankere) → Benedikt Klus (benii89) |
status: | Invalid → New |
affects: | hundredpapercuts → anton |
Changed in anton: | |
assignee: | Benedikt Klus (benii89) → Dilomo (ankere) |
status: | New → Invalid |
affects: | anton → gnome-panel |
Changed in gnome-panel: | |
status: | Invalid → New |
Changed in gnome-panel: | |
assignee: | Dilomo (ankere) → nobody |
affects: | hundredpapercuts → null |
Changed in gnome-panel: | |
importance: | Unknown → Medium |
status: | Unknown → New |
no longer affects: | null |
Thank you for reporting this issue. It is probably something with the focus of buttons I use on panel buttons too. So when you load your system the focus goes to that widget(date button). I suggest you could reproduce this by clicking on the date button and then mouse over the panel. Can you check that? Is it happening with other themes Dust, Human with their dotted focus rectangles?