After an evaluation, GNOME has moved from Bugzilla to GitLab. Learn more about GitLab.
No new issues can be reported in GNOME Bugzilla anymore.
To report an issue in a GNOME project, go to GNOME GitLab.
Do not go to GNOME Gitlab for: Bluefish, Doxygen, GnuCash, GStreamer, java-gnome, LDTP, NetworkManager, Tomboy.
Bug 558352 - Evolution: Appointments reminder window does not remember the "always on top" setting.
Evolution: Appointments reminder window does not remember the "always on top"...
Status: RESOLVED WONTFIX
Product: evolution
Classification: Applications
Component: Calendar
2.26.x (obsolete)
Other All
: Normal minor
: ---
Assigned To: evolution-calendar-maintainers
Evolution QA team
evolution[kill-bonobo]
Depends on:
Blocks:
 
 
Reported: 2008-10-29 08:29 UTC by Nick Jenkins
Modified: 2017-08-31 04:52 UTC
See Also:
GNOME target: ---
GNOME version: 2.25/2.26



Description Nick Jenkins 2008-10-29 08:29:48 UTC
* Initially the Evolution appointments reminder window is set to be "always on top" by default.
* I click the top-left of the reminder window and untick "always on top".
* I close evolution, log out, and reboot.
* The next day, I get a reminder for another appointment, and the window is set to be "always on top" again.

What happens:
* The appointments reminder window does not remember the "always on top" setting.

What should happen:
* The appointments reminder window should remember the "always on top" setting.

Other information:
Comment 1 Milan Crha 2017-08-28 16:04:50 UTC
Thanks for a bug report. I'm afraid that no application is even capable of such setting, because it's managed by the desktop environment you use. There are properties for developers to instruct the desktop environment to show the window on top, but I still doubt it's saved by the application; I'm not aware of any such at least.

Evolution 3.24.0+ also contains commit [1], which improves the situation, I believe.

[1] https://git.gnome.org/browse/evolution/commit/?id=bb5c7b6001b434
Comment 2 Nick Jenkins 2017-08-31 04:52:32 UTC
> because it's managed by the desktop environment you use

Ah! Understood, and thank you very much for explaining.