Questions tagged [snap-windows]

Questions about using the snap-window feature in Ubuntu.

Snap-window is a feature that is both present in Ubuntu and Windows 7 or later. This feature lets you to maximize the window by dragging it to the top of the screen, and making the window occupy 50% of the screen by dragging the window to the left or right edge of the screen.

In Windows 7 the feature is known as "Aero Snap".

25 questions
25
votes
2 answers

Can Snap-Windows be set up for 4 windows instead of just 2?

The title might need some adjusting but what I am trying to say is that, when one drags a window to the left or right side of the screen, it resizes to fill that half of the screen. So if I drag 2 windows, one to the left and one to the right, I can…
Luis Alvarado
  • 209,003
  • 167
  • 543
  • 707
15
votes
4 answers

Window snapping in Ubuntu MATE

I know how to enable window snapping in MATE Desktop, and it works. My problem is this. By default, Window A fills half the screen, and Window B fills half the screen, and you can't click and drag the edges of the window to resize without unsnapping…
5
votes
1 answer

How to "snap-split" windows top and bottom?

One can share screenspace neatly in left and right portions by dragging the window until the cursor touches the left or right edge of the screen, and the window will automatically 'snap' to that half of the screen. How do I achieve this same…
DBinJP
  • 1,299
  • 3
  • 14
  • 29
5
votes
2 answers

GNOME 3.26 - Clicking one window brings another in the foreground (Ubuntu 17.10)

I'm on Ubuntu 17.10 with GNOME 3.26. Often I have windows tiled on the left and right side of the screen. A typical setup is to have a browser and text editor on the left, a PDF reader and terminal on the right. Something I've seen happen very…
Bar
  • 304
  • 2
  • 11
4
votes
3 answers

Xubuntu - Maximize window instead of top half on snap up

I want to maximize window instead of making it fill the top half of the screen on snap up. I can't find how to change it in settings.
filiparag
  • 41
  • 3
4
votes
1 answer

Windows that are snapped to one side freeze the computer when I drag them to make them full screen

When I have a window snapped to one side, and I drag it to the top of the screen to make it go full screen, it displays the area that it will be, stops at about 4/5s of the way there, and freezes the computer, forcing me to reboot to start using…
user155708
  • 297
  • 2
  • 4
  • 13
3
votes
0 answers

Ubuntu snap-windows feature very slow in VirtualBox guest OS

I'm running Ubuntu Gnome 14.04 in VirtualBox 5.0.6. My host OS is Windows 10. I have Guest Additions installed, 3D acceleration enabled, and a number of other settings tweaked to maximize performance. I've been using this OS in an older version of…
3
votes
0 answers

How do I disable two half-screen windows from resizing left-right together?

I am using Ubuntu 18.04.5 I commonly snap two windows to the edges so that they both take up half a screen. Then I will take one of those windows and make it a little bigger, so that it overlaps the other window. I am not sure what this feature is…
Cameronc56
  • 31
  • 2
3
votes
1 answer

Pair side-by-side windows in GNOME 3

This one is hard to explain. So basically, when I have two windows in GNOME 3 and make them side by side, so every window fits to one half of the screen, the behavior is not like I experienced it in the past and actually I miss it. The thing that is…
verpfeilt
  • 2,844
  • 2
  • 27
  • 47
2
votes
1 answer

How do I make a second window snap to the opposite side of the screen?

I'm coming from Windows 10, although I've started (and accepted) the way Ubuntu works, their are still a few things that I love about Windows 10, the feature in question here is the way If I snap one windows to the extreme right side of display it…
Sumeet Deshmukh
  • 8,628
  • 11
  • 55
  • 93
2
votes
0 answers

Set window size and position

With screens getting larger and/or wider (some with aspect ratios over 21:9 nowadays), the typical way to snap windows to half the screen on the left or right becomes pretty useless. That is, none really wants to have a text editor window that is…
Juan Antonio
  • 1,554
  • 1
  • 16
  • 36
2
votes
1 answer

Create custom keybinding to snap window

There is a shortcut to snap window to either half of the screen Ctrl + Super + Left or Ctrl + Super + Right. My first question is how this shortcut is defined in the system? All default shortcuts are defined in gsettings but this is not there. Now…
2
votes
2 answers

Windows+arrow equivalent on linux

In Windows if you are in a program and press Super+← for example the program would take up half of the left side of the screen. Extremely useful when wanting two programs to sit side by side. Super key being the special key in Linux then. And the ←…
Karl Morrison
  • 9,116
  • 22
  • 58
  • 91
2
votes
1 answer

Disable keyboard shortcuts for window snapping

I think my question is related to this post but I don't have ccsm installed at the moment, and I don't want to unless I have to (some of the things you can change in there can cause quite a lot of mess). I am using Unity Tweak Tool, in particular to…
Jonathan H
  • 667
  • 9
  • 27
2
votes
1 answer

Redefine screen split ratios

I'm not sure of the best way to ask this question because I don't know the correct terminology for what I'm asking about. When I drag a window to the edge of my screen it automatically resizes to occupy half the width of the monitor. Same with the…
user258458
  • 43
  • 1
  • 5
1
2