Is there any way to make TortoiseGitMerge highlighted section be same as in TortoiseMerge without resizing window?
Ribbon bars are not customizable by design.
It depends on the window size whether the up and down arrows are displayed as big or small icons.
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I've recently switched over to portrait screens for development so want to make more use of my vertical screen realestate.
But I can't figure out how to get Visual Studio to use more space for the toolbar.
As you can see in the image below there are lots of 'overflow' glyphs on the right, because there isn't enough space to show all the buttons. Want I want is to add extra vertical height (2x or 3x) so that I can show more buttons. Worse than that, it's hiding almost entire toolbar sections.
Doh I worked it out. There is a small resizing 'grab' icon on the left of each toolbar. You can drag that to put it on a new line. I blame the dark theme for not letting me see it :)
As for the vertical space for the toolbar, I still can't figure out how to wrap one toolbar across multiple lines. I'm guessing you can't.
I'm trying to create an application that would be as standard as possible in terms of style.
An image is worth a thousand words: I can't figure out how to make my buttons the same size as in Apple's programs such as Safari or Finder.
As you can see, the sizing I've set in interface builder don't seem to match the size the buttons get when I run the app, but maybe that part doesn't speak in pixels but in points or something? Also, textured rounded button has only width editable, but not height.
In this case, these are NSButtons, but I guess I'll have a similar problem with other control types...
I found it out! The problem was with neither of these two parts outlined in the screenshot, but in the "Toolbar" item, higher in the hierarchy.
There is a Size attribute in the Attributes inspector which defaults to Small, but you can set it to Regular instead, and then the buttons get the same sizing as in Finder and all.
I have two dialogs in my MFC application, I want its to be the same size and I resize them in design view but he dialog's size shown in the status bar is different.
Dialogs has same properties.
How it could be?
The problem was in different font used in dialogs.
Still not understand why font affect on dialog's measurement units.
I am trying to create an interface for my application using Qt Designer. I want it to have a tabbed, ribbon-style set of controls at the top, and a MDI-style area with docked windows which I plan to show and hide depending on which tab of the ribbon is currently selected. I am just beginning with Qt Designer as well as Qt4 itself for that matter so I'm not quite sure how to setup the window, which widgets and layouts should I use etc.
It's quite obvious there should be a QTabWidget at the top, but I'm not sure about the bottom. Should I use a QFrame? A QMdiArea? A dock widget? What layouts can I use to make sure the tab widget has a fixed height, occupies the whole width of the window at all times and the bottom area scales as the window is resized?
I've read in the manual that splitter layouts allow for manual adjustment of the size of the widgets they contain, but I can't drag the box size of a widget after I place them inside a splitter. Thus I'm unable to setup the area below the ribbon. Anyone, help?
You should look into the QMainWindow and check the multiple utilities it can provide you (Toolbar, StatusBar, DockWidgets, CentralWidget, etc...).
The way I understood your case is that you will always have the MDI Area visible, and that the tab bar will only be used to change the dockWidgets. Here's how I would do it.
The centralWidget of the mainWindow would be a QWidget with a QVBoxLayout containing a QTabBar widget first (up) and a QMdiArea under it. The sizes should be handled automatically.
This will allow the user (or you) to dock widgets on the left, bottom, top or right areas of the mainWindow's central widget. Keep pointers to the dockWidgets to be able to move and show/hide them at will.
Hope this helps.
VTK Designer, which is built on Qt, has a Ribbon-ish interface. You might take a look at the source code for reference.
I have a tab control in my main page. When I have it in the Design view in Visual Studio, everything looks perfect, the tab control is set to fill the entire page. However when I run the program, and I have it in a maximized browser window, the tab control is still the same size as it originally was. In other words, the tab control does not resize proportionally to the browser window resize.
So I was wondering if there was a way to change a setting on my tab control or maybe some code that would force the tab control to resize along with the browser window?
(Using C#, Silverlight 4.0 in VS2010)
Ok, so after tinkering with this for the last couple days, I've finally found the answer. I feel like a rookie for not doing this sooner, but I got to looking at the title bar on the top of the page and noticed that it stretched across the screen when the browser window was maximized and when it was resized, the title bar shrunk to fit. So I looked at the properties of the title bar and saw that it's horizontal/vertical alignment was set to "stretch." I know, it's a rookie mistake, but it just never occurred to me that "stretch" was an option in the alignment property.
Long story short, change the horizontal alignment property to "stretch," vertical alignment property to "stretch," and then set the height property of the control to "auto" and the width property to "auto" and you've got yourself an auto-resized control.