W/7 desktop: Where is this behavior set on/off?

A

Al Dykes

On the W/7 desktop, when I drag a panel part way across the screen it
snaps open to fill the entire screen which is not what I want.

What check box controls this behavior?

Thanks.
 
T

Trev

Al Dykes said:
On the W/7 desktop, when I drag a panel part way across the screen it
snaps open to fill the entire screen which is not what I want.

What check box controls this behavior?

Thanks.
When you Move a window to left or right edge It locks open to that size so
that you can have 2 windows open one at each side you can also do this by
pressing the window key and left or right arrow key presint them again will
unlock. If you don't want this to happen don't drag the window over That
far. I have To drag it half of the screen to do it.
 
R

R. C. White

Hi, Al.

In Win7, when we drag a window to either the left or right edge of the
screen, it snaps to fill that half of the screen. This lets us quickly show
two open windows side by side. Dragging an open window to the top of the
screen snaps it to Maximized, filling the entire screen. After either such
maneuver, we can use the Restore down button in the upper right corner to
return that window to its previous size.

That is not exactly what you described. Is it what you meant?

For more details, search for "snap" in Help and Support. (Start | Help and
Support)

RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
(Retired. No longer licensed to practice public accounting.)
(e-mail address removed)
Microsoft Windows MVP
(Using Quicken Deluxe 2010 and Windows Live Mail in Win7 x64)
 
C

Char Jackson

Hi, Al.

In Win7, when we drag a window to either the left or right edge of the
screen, it snaps to fill that half of the screen. This lets us quickly show
two open windows side by side. Dragging an open window to the top of the
screen snaps it to Maximized, filling the entire screen. After either such
maneuver, we can use the Restore down button in the upper right corner to
return that window to its previous size.

That is not exactly what you described. Is it what you meant?

For more details, search for "snap" in Help and Support. (Start | Help and
Support)

RC
I wonder what tiny percentage of people will find that snap feature
useful? I've seen the commercials, and it looks downright annoying to
me. Now you guys seem to say there's no easy way to disable it and
that we have to work around it. :-(
 
D

Dave-UK

Char Jackson said:
I wonder what tiny percentage of people will find that snap feature
useful? I've seen the commercials, and it looks downright annoying to
me. Now you guys seem to say there's no easy way to disable it and
that we have to work around it. :-(
You disable it in:
Ease of Access Center
Make the mouse easier to use
Prevent Windows from being automatically arranged.
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

I wonder what tiny percentage of people will find that snap feature
useful? I've seen the commercials, and it looks downright annoying to
me. Now you guys seem to say there's no easy way to disable it and
that we have to work around it. :-(
I use it all the time (translation: maybe once or twice a week) and find it
useful.
 
J

Jeff Layman

Al Dykes said:
It's just another one of the new "feetchas" that most people never use.

The main problem is not that these exist, but that Microsoft hides their
enabling/disabling in the most unobvious places. What has this do do with
ease of access, and what has this ease of access to do with making the mouse
easier to use?
 
D

Dave

Char Jackson said:
I wonder what tiny percentage of people will find that snap feature
useful? I've seen the commercials, and it looks downright annoying to
me. Now you guys seem to say there's no easy way to disable it and
that we have to work around it. :-(
Speaking for myself only, I've found the side-to-side snap useful when
working with Word, Excel or other documents, when I need to reference
another document at the same time. I do a lot of Power Points for church,
and found it very useful when creating them. I've also found it handy when
working with files and have two Windows Explorers running at the same time.
Dave
 
S

Scott

Dave said:
Speaking for myself only, I've found the side-to-side snap useful when
working with Word, Excel or other documents, when I need to reference
another document at the same time. I do a lot of Power Points for
church, and found it very useful when creating them. I've also found it
handy when working with files and have two Windows Explorers running at
the same time.
Dave
It will also be of more use on a widescreen monitor.
 
D

Dave

Scott said:
It will also be of more use on a widescreen monitor.
Point well taken, I didn't consider this. I do have a widescreen 19" and
have to admit it could make a difference.
 
R

R. C. White

Hi, Char.

Count me as one of that "tiny percentage". ;^}

I don't use the Snap feature of Win7 every day, but, like Gene and Dave and
cj, I find it very handy sometimes - even on my 17" non-widescreen 1280x1024
LCD monitor. I've used it for comparing figures in an Excel spreadsheet to
numbers in Quicken, and for comparing Explorer lists to look for duplicate
files. And I've rarely - if ever - Snapped windows accidentally.

RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
(e-mail address removed)
Microsoft Windows MVP
Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8089.0726) in Win7 Ultimate x64)
 
M

Mad Ad

Dave said:
Speaking for myself only, I've found the side-to-side snap useful when
working with Word, Excel or other documents, when I need to reference
another document at the same time. I do a lot of Power Points for church,
and found it very useful when creating them. I've also found it handy when
working with files and have two Windows Explorers running at the same
time.
Dave

Its troublesome, expecially those with fast mouse settings. Why not use a
modifier key to press if you want to lock it like that and leave it as
normal otherwise.

Is it used so much that 1 extra keypress would be intolerable?
 
J

John Morrison

You disable it in:
Ease of Access Center
Make the mouse easier to use
Prevent Windows from being automatically arranged.
I have Windows 7 with a 1680 x 1050 resolution monitor and when I drag a
Window it has never snapped to fill the screen. I can drag a Window
vertically and/or horizontally to exactly where I want it to be.

In my Control Panel the box next to the above setting wasn't ticked.
I've ticked the box now to see what happens next. :)
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

I have Windows 7 with a 1680 x 1050 resolution monitor and when I drag a
Window it has never snapped to fill the screen. I can drag a Window
vertically and/or horizontally to exactly where I want it to be.

In my Control Panel the box next to the above setting wasn't ticked.
I've ticked the box now to see what happens next. :)
Then either you have disabled snap-to, or you have never really dragged the
window to the top of the screen. Do it as though you are trying to push the
window off of the top of the monitor. Pull it back to restore it.
 
C

Char Jackson

You disable it in:
Ease of Access Center
Make the mouse easier to use
Prevent Windows from being automatically arranged.
Excellent, thanks!
 
B

bettablue

R. C. White said:
Hi, Al.

In Win7, when we drag a window to either the left or right edge of the
screen, it snaps to fill that half of the screen. This lets us quickly
show two open windows side by side. Dragging an open window to the top of
the screen snaps it to Maximized, filling the entire screen. After either
such maneuver, we can use the Restore down button in the upper right
corner to return that window to its previous size.

That is not exactly what you described. Is it what you meant?

For more details, search for "snap" in Help and Support. (Start | Help
and Support)

RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX
(Retired. No longer licensed to practice public accounting.)
(e-mail address removed)
Microsoft Windows MVP
(Using Quicken Deluxe 2010 and Windows Live Mail in Win7 x64)
urn off "snap"
 

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