I have limited screen place, and I'd like to know how I could remove the title bar.
I use hotkey to close, maximize, etc. anyway.
Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. It only takes a minute to sign up.
Sign up to join this communityI have limited screen place, and I'd like to know how I could remove the title bar.
I use hotkey to close, maximize, etc. anyway.
A newer answer notes that a built-in XFCE setting is now available.
Try the Maximus package? Here's the package description:
A desktop daemon which will automatically maximize and, optionally, un-decorate windows. Has to support for exclusion lists and will work with any EWMH specification compliant window-manager.
Install with:
sudo apt-get install maximus
I believe you'll need to add the Maximus command to your startup programs, as it does not automatically run at boot on its own.
gconf-editor
. To blacklist windows, add the class name returned by xprop | grep CLASS
to the exclude_class
parameter (further reading).
Recent versions of XFCE have this built-in. Check out Settings Manager
> Window Manager Tweaks
> Accessibility
> Hide title of windows when maximized
.
Maximized windows will not have the title bar then, while non-maximized windows will have it. Tested on ArchLinux, xfce version 4.12.0-4.
close/restore/minimize
buttons? Absence of those in the panel when there is no title bar is definitely design lack.
I had the same issue with the titlebar and I solved it to a good level this way:
This way, the titlebar is just hidden below the panel. Benefits of such approach:
The bad thing is that it feels like a hack. I searched this topic because I wanted to find an xfce setting for this (failed yet).
xfconf-query -c xfce4-panel -p /panels/panel-1/disable-struts -s "true"
- just change the true/false (the panel-number may also need to be changed)