|
|
|
|
|
by gord288
1946 days ago
|
|
Yes I feel your pain in that one. There’s a way to turn this off in the settings... one of the first things I do with any new Windows setup. Another major peeve of mine: Windows lets you drag a window so that its top edge goes outside the bounds of your display. It should stop when the top edge “bumps into” the upper bound of the display: I prefer to have most windows full-height, and I have to be extremely finicky and careful when dragging documents around in Windows. On Mac this is not an issue: I can “slide” full-height windows from side to side by dragging them slightly upwards as I drag them horizontally. |
|