Activity log for bug #84254

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2007-02-09 19:30:56 HaMF bug added bug
2007-02-09 19:30:56 HaMF bug added attachment 'Dependencies.txt' (Dependencies.txt)
2007-02-09 19:30:56 HaMF bug added attachment 'ProcMaps.txt' (ProcMaps.txt)
2007-02-09 19:30:56 HaMF bug added attachment 'ProcStatus.txt' (ProcStatus.txt)
2007-02-09 19:46:47 Áron Sisak gnome-panel: status Unconfirmed Confirmed
2007-02-09 19:46:47 Áron Sisak gnome-panel: importance Undecided High
2007-02-09 19:46:47 Áron Sisak gnome-panel: statusexplanation Confirmed.
2007-02-11 15:12:25 Sebastien Bacher description Binary package hint: gnome-panel English: Steps to reproduce: 1) Left click on "System" (e.g.) in the panel to bring up the menu 2) Right click on any other icon in the panel -> The right-click-menu opens at the very left side of the panel instead of where you pointed with your mouse 3) Choose "Remove from Panel" -> The menu-bar is removed instead of the icon you pointed as you did the right click Expected behaviour: The right-click menu should be opened near the mouse-pointer and the icon you clicked on should be removed. Eventually the "Menu" you opened before should be closed on a right click. (Feisty Herd 3) [If you can't understand some part of the description, try to translate the german version below. Sorry for the bad english] --- German: Schritte zum Nachvollziehen: 1) Öffne ein Menü (z.B. das Menü "System") per Linksklick 2) Klicke mit der Rechten Maustaste auf ein anderes Symbol im Panel -> Das Poup-Menü öffnet sich ganz links anstatt direkt unter dem Mauszeiger 3) Klicke auf "Aus dem Panel entfernen" -> Die Menüleiste wird entfernt anstatt des Symbols, über dem sich der Mauszeiger befand. Erwartetes Verhalten: Das Popup-Menü sollte sich unter dem Mauszeiger öffnen, dabei sollte das zuvor geöffnete Mnü ("System") evtl. geschlossen werden. Das ausgewählte Symbol sollte anstatt der Menüleiste geschlossen werden. (Feisty Herd 3) ProblemType: Bug Date: Fri Feb 9 20:09:33 2007 DistroRelease: Ubuntu 7.04 ExecutablePath: /rofs/usr/bin/gnome-panel Package: gnome-panel 2.17.90-0ubuntu1 ProcCmdline: gnome-panel --sm-client-id default1 ProcCwd: /home/ubuntu ProcEnviron: PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash SourcePackage: gnome-panel Uname: Linux ubuntu 2.6.20-6-generic #2 SMP Wed Jan 31 20:53:39 UTC 2007 i686 GNU/Linux Binary package hint: gnome-panel Steps to reproduce: 1) Left click on "System" (e.g.) in the panel to bring up the menu 2) Right click on any other icon in the panel -> The right-click-menu opens at the very left side of the panel instead of where you pointed with your mouse 3) Choose "Remove from Panel" -> The menu-bar is removed instead of the icon you pointed as you did the right click Expected behaviour: The right-click menu should be opened near the mouse-pointer and the icon you clicked on should be removed. Eventually the "Menu" you opened before should be closed on a right click. Package: gnome-panel 2.17.90-0ubuntu1
2007-02-11 15:12:25 Sebastien Bacher title right click > "remove from panel" always removes the menu bar if a menu was open right click apply to the open menu and not the selected item
2007-02-11 15:13:32 Sebastien Bacher gnome-panel: importance High Low
2007-02-11 15:13:32 Sebastien Bacher gnome-panel: assignee desktop-bugs
2007-02-11 15:13:32 Sebastien Bacher gnome-panel: statusexplanation Confirmed. Thanks for your bug report. This bug has been reported to the developers of the software. You can track it and make comments here: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=406717
2007-02-11 15:13:53 Sebastien Bacher bug assigned to gnome-panel (upstream)
2007-02-12 07:49:23 Bug Watch Updater gnome-panel: status Unknown Unconfirmed
2008-05-08 13:08:54 Sebastien Bacher gnome-panel: status Confirmed Triaged
2010-01-24 06:42:49 Omer Akram gnome-panel (Ubuntu): status Triaged Fix Released
2010-09-16 13:59:40 Bug Watch Updater gnome-panel: importance Unknown Low
2022-06-22 08:45:55 Áron Sisak removed subscriber Áron Sisak