they’re the secret fourth and fifth window buttons that the government doesn’t want you to know about (one pins window behind everything when there is a lotta windows, the other pins it on top of everything)
The above user seems to be on Plasma. In which case it’s buried in the settings somewhere (KDE in a nutshell lol). I believe it’s somewhere in the themes section, IIRC.
On Gnome you can access the same functionality by right clicking the header bar. There’s also an option to have a window always move to the workspace you’re on, which is pretty cool.
E: idk who’s downvoting me relaying features that someone asked about, but that’s hilarious. How did that offend you?
they’re the secret fourth and fifth window buttons that the government doesn’t want you to know about (one pins window behind everything when there is a lotta windows, the other pins it on top of everything)
This is very useful actually, how did you get those?
on kde you can edit the top bar
Most distros have something like this, on gnome you just right-click the bar that the other buttons are on
The above user seems to be on Plasma. In which case it’s buried in the settings somewhere (KDE in a nutshell lol). I believe it’s somewhere in the themes section, IIRC.
On Gnome you can access the same functionality by right clicking the header bar. There’s also an option to have a window always move to the workspace you’re on, which is pretty cool.
E: idk who’s downvoting me relaying features that someone asked about, but that’s hilarious. How did that offend you?
on kde it is also accessible with a right click AND in themes
Ok
Wait. What’s the point / practical use of pinning a window behind everything else?
sometimes I wanna have terminal behind an bunch of small windows with documentatiom in front of them