Tell me more ×
Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. It's 100% free, no registration required.

At home i run Windows 7 with on a widescreen LCD with the taskbar to the left and this works well, but at work i just got upgraded to W7 on a 4:3 LCD and have the taskbar at the bottom.

alt text

So what's with the taskbar icon spacing? Is there any way to change this? I.e. move them closer together? There's gotta be a registry setting or some fancy Tweak UI application that will reclaim some of that elbow room.

That image above represents nearly half the width of my desktop. I know i know, white space is great and it gives it a light, whimsical look. Blah blah. Awesome, but can i get some real estate back please?

share|improve this question
I've been looking for a way to do the same, although on the system tray icons on the right. They are very slightly too far apart, when you have a few of them visible. It does not seem to be possible. – paradroid Oct 13 '10 at 19:26

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Not an answer, only a workaround

Okay, one lackluster workaround that i've found elsewhere is to restore the QuickLaunch Bar. I've done this in the meantime, but it doesn't actually do what i want -- so i'm still looking for a real way to change the taskbar icon spacing. I'm posting this answer with the thought that some may find that it is good enough.

The addition of a QuickLaunch Bar looks it look something like this:

alt text

So what i'm doing is putting the older-style apps (Visual Studio 6, 2005, and 2008, UltraEdit, IrfanView) down in the QuickLaunch, and leaving the W7-aware apps in the taskbar, so i the taskbar integration where implemented. Zune, for example, shows player controls when you hover over the icon and Smart DJ items, etc. in the popup. The downside, as you can see is that some programs (like UltraEdit) show up twice now; once in the QuickLaunch and once in the taskbar.

The benefits to this approach: when not running, the icons are handy and aren't triple-spaced.

But the downside to this approach: when running, the icons are doubled, taking even more space than before; visually it's slightly confusing; nifty taskbar features like Recent Items are not available.

So, this is one option, but doesn't really answer my question.

share|improve this answer
You may want to mark this as the answer to your problem if nobody else offers any advice. – qroberts Oct 14 '10 at 18:00
@qroberts - Possibly, eventually. But it doesn't answer my question, so i'm leaving it open. There has to be a way to adjust the spacing, and that is what i want. – bill weaver Oct 14 '10 at 18:13
1  
I know how you feel. I spent a good couple hours tweaking the Windows 7 taskbar to the way I like it, I'm still not satisfied. I think Microsoft should open it up more and allow more customization, at least in the registry or something. – qroberts Oct 14 '10 at 18:22
@qroberts - i wish they would. To be clear, the main reason i want to tweak it a bit is because it's so dang useful. They did such a great job with it, then left it so rigidly spaced out. – bill weaver Oct 14 '10 at 18:26
One thing that really bothers me is that Windows Live Messenger and Skype have to have their own section in the taskbar and not goto the system tray like they would in earlier operating systems. – qroberts Oct 14 '10 at 18:29
show 1 more comment

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.