Difference between revisions of "MATE"
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(Created page with "==Notes== To restart a crashed window-selector (aka taskbar, though I think "taskbar" is understood to refer to something else): * <code>mate-panel --replace > /dev/null&</cod...") |
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
− | To restart a crashed window-selector | + | To restart a crashed taskbar (the panels which typically contain the menu, window-selector, and various widgets): |
− | * <code>mate-panel --replace > /dev/null&</code> | + | * <code>[[mate-panel]] --replace > /dev/null&</code> |
− | ** | + | ** The {{fmt/code|/dev/null}} part seems redundant; all that does is suppress output. |
+ | ** The {{fmt/code|&}} allows the command to return without waiting for mate-panel to close. If omitted, you won't be able to use that terminal session or close it without also closing mate-panel. | ||
+ | ** Summary: this can be simplified to {{fmt/code|mate-panel --replace&}}, or just {{fmt/code|mate-panel&}} if it's already not running. |
Latest revision as of 12:46, 23 June 2022
Notes
To restart a crashed taskbar (the panels which typically contain the menu, window-selector, and various widgets):
mate-panel --replace > /dev/null&
- The «/dev/null» part seems redundant; all that does is suppress output.
- The «&» allows the command to return without waiting for mate-panel to close. If omitted, you won't be able to use that terminal session or close it without also closing mate-panel.
- Summary: this can be simplified to «mate-panel --replace&», or just «mate-panel&» if it's already not running.