I know google-chrome isn't a fedora product, but it is probably using fedora libraries, so I thought I'd ask about this weirdness:
On fedora 18 the folder names in the bookmarks bar are randomly truncated (it can spell out "Computer" in full, but truncates "Food" to just "Fo..." as an example of the wackyness :-).
Does this ring any bells for anyone?
I've submitted an issue (with screenshot) to chrome:
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=171117&thanks=171117&...
El sáb, 19-01-2013 a las 12:40 -0500, Tom Horsley escribió:
I know google-chrome isn't a fedora product, but it is probably using fedora libraries, so I thought I'd ask about this weirdness:
On fedora 18 the folder names in the bookmarks bar are randomly truncated (it can spell out "Computer" in full, but truncates "Food" to just "Fo..." as an example of the wackyness :-).
Does this ring any bells for anyone?
I've submitted an issue (with screenshot) to chrome:
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=171117&thanks=171117&...
Hello!
How weird... It doesn't happen to me. May be a desktop issue? I have Mate and you?
Cheers, Lailah
On Tue, 22 Jan 2013 10:22:50 -0200 Lailah wrote:
How weird... It doesn't happen to me. May be a desktop issue? I have Mate and you?
It gets weirder. I have near identical f18 installs on my system at home and at work, and it only happens on my home system. I'm now suspecting I've changed some default font setting differently on the two systems, but I haven't gotten a chance to check it yet.
On 01/20/2013 01:40 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
I know google-chrome isn't a fedora product, but it is probably using fedora libraries, so I thought I'd ask about this weirdness:
On fedora 18 the folder names in the bookmarks bar are randomly truncated (it can spell out "Computer" in full, but truncates "Food" to just "Fo..." as an example of the wackyness :-).
Does this ring any bells for anyone?
I've submitted an issue (with screenshot) to chrome:
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=171117&thanks=171117&...
I've had this for the longest time. It hadn't bothered me. I don't know what causes it. But I can tell you how I "fixed" it. For each label which is truncated I simply renamed the label using all UPPER CASE.
On 01/22/2013 08:16 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 01/20/2013 01:40 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
I know google-chrome isn't a fedora product, but it is probably using fedora libraries, so I thought I'd ask about this weirdness:
On fedora 18 the folder names in the bookmarks bar are randomly truncated (it can spell out "Computer" in full, but truncates "Food" to just "Fo..." as an example of the wackyness :-).
Does this ring any bells for anyone?
I've submitted an issue (with screenshot) to chrome:
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=171117&thanks=171117&...
I've had this for the longest time. It hadn't bothered me. I don't know what causes it. But I can tell you how I "fixed" it. For each label which is truncated I simply renamed the label using all UPPER CASE.
I have a folder, "Research" that now shows up as "Resear...". If I rename it to "R esearch" I see the entire thing. ON the other hand, there are entries on the bookmark bar that display in full! Definitely wacky.
On 01/22/2013 07:58 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
On Tue, 22 Jan 2013 10:22:50 -0200 Lailah wrote:
How weird... It doesn't happen to me. May be a desktop issue? I have Mate and you?
It gets weirder. I have near identical f18 installs on my system at home and at work, and it only happens on my home system. I'm now suspecting I've changed some default font setting differently on the two systems, but I haven't gotten a chance to check it yet.
In addition to my earlier message, I'm using XFCE, not Gnome.
It gets weirder. I have near identical f18 installs on my system at home and at work, and it only happens on my home system.
I take that back. Once I swapped back in my old home directory at work, the truncation started again. So obviously all I need to do is binary search all the funky settings stashed in various ~/.whatever directories to find which one is causing it :-).