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I just opened Wunderlist (the one from the Windows store) and the top half is off-screen. Right-clicking the icon in the task bar and selecting move no longer works, since it's not there. Accessing the move command in the menu bar through the keyboard as suggested here doesn't work.

How do I get it back on screen? (and why is this still an issue, so many years later?)

Filip Haglund
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  • Screenshot plz? – Stackcraft_noob Jul 10 '16 at 12:19
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    Generally *Alt+Space then R* (restore) or *Alt + Space then X* (maximize) should bring things in focus. – Jedi Jul 10 '16 at 13:40
  • Try Nirsoft's WinLister which is mentioned in the linked post. In WinLister, select the window you want to center and press Ctrl + F6. Or right-click the entry and click "Center Selected Windows". – w32sh Jul 10 '16 at 14:16
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    So at work i have two monitors. The window in question was in the right monitor when i left work (close laptop lid). Working from home today, the window would fly to the right. Only thing that worked was Alt + Space then X (maximize) .. thx Jedi! – robnardo Mar 28 '18 at 12:41
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    Alt+Space then M will let you move the window around using the arrow keys. That helped me get out of this situation. Also once you start moving with the arrow keys, you can continue moving with the mouse until you click the left button to release. – PlantationGator Jun 29 '18 at 14:14
  • winlister is the best.. I tried the other tricks before, but this one works all of the time.. alt-space, etc. only works on some windows – Mikey Feb 24 '20 at 13:43
  • For some reason nothing worked, but I solved it by changing monitor oriantation from landscape to portrait and back again. – Hudson Sep 22 '21 at 16:14

3 Answers3

63

Sometimes it is impossible to right click the runaway window so none of the other solutions here work. The only foolproof method that I found ALWAYS helps is to find the process in task manager, click on the arrow to expand the application dropdown, then right-click the process and select "maximize window".

codemon
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  • Selecting what, @Rup? :) – Filip Haglund Mar 27 '17 at 18:34
  • Woops, no idea why it truncated my last few words, sorry! – codemon Mar 27 '17 at 23:20
  • Do you not have a taskbar? – BryanOfEarth Aug 07 '17 at 19:56
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    In Win 10 task manager, you may have to click a small arrow to expand the process and then right-click the lost window and maximize. – CyberMonk Oct 11 '17 at 03:27
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    Hm, I don't have the "maximize window" option. [This](https://superuser.com/a/53590/64962) worked for me though. – Peter Oct 27 '17 at 10:09
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    In the current windows 10, there is no "maximize window" in the task list, via process, or in the start menu. For me. – Brian Bulkowski Mar 21 '18 at 22:46
  • @Peter and Brian, did you click on the arrow next to the app in the "processes" tab? – foobarbecue Jun 03 '18 at 00:17
  • @foobarbecue yes, all I have as options is: End Task, Resource values, Debug, Create dump file, Go to details, Open file location, Search online, and Properties. – Peter Jun 04 '18 at 05:22
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    To get the maximize option, holding shift, click on the icon of the running application in your taskbar. You'll see the options for minimize, maximize, move, etc. – Jon L. May 11 '20 at 02:44
  • There are some extra smart apps (LogiTune, looking at you) which don't offer either of these options. Still looking, how to get that window to become visible... Maybe Window Explorer can help me. – Rick Moritz Jun 17 '21 at 15:52
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First activate the window by clicking on it on the taskbar and then press the Windows logo key on your keyboard together with the left or right arrow key.

If the window was minimized, you have to press Windows logo + arrow up key.

0

Resizing the window from the bottom and dragging it to the edge of the screen to activate the snap function worked.

Filip Haglund
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