18.2 The Panel
The panel is
the control bar across the bottom of the screen, used to find and
launch applications and navigate among windows and desktops. It
contains the K menu (identified by the KDE K logo), which organizes
the installed KDE applications into submenus; the Desktop Access
button, which minimizes all open windows to display a clean desktop;
and the desktop pager and the taskbar. Additional buttons that open
applications, directories, and URLs can be added to the panel.
18.2.1 The Desktop Pager
Like most window managers, kwin (KDE's window manager)
can divide your workspace into multiple desktops. Different
application windows can be open on each desktop, reducing the amount
of clutter on your screen. You can switch among desktops by using the
desktop buttons on the panel. The panel displays a grid of buttons
called the pager. The pager has one button for each
virtual desktop, and shows images of the open windows or their names
(1, 2, 3, etc., by default). Clicking on a button switches your
screen to the corresponding desktop.
Clicking the wider vertical bar to the left of the pager opens a
Desktop Pager window. If your version of KDE does not have that bar,
right-click on the pager itself and select Launch Pager. The Desktop
Pager has larger buttons for each desktop and an actual icon for each
application running on that desktop, making it easier to tell what
applications are running.
You can configure the number of virtual desktops and their names in
the Control Center by selecting Look & Feel
Desktop and clicking the Number of Desktops tab.
18.2.2 The Taskbar
The
taskbar runs in the panel and helps you keep track of running
applications. It contains buttons to identify each open application
window. If the button for an application is clicked, that becomes the
current active window. When you iconify a window, you can raise it
again by clicking its button on the taskbar. If a window has been
iconified, its taskbar button contains a parenthesized text label. If
multiple instances of one type of window are running, they are
represented by a single button in the taskbar, with a small up-arrow
on the right. Click the button to display a list of the instances and
select the one you want.
Clicking the wider vertical bar to the left of the taskbar displays a
menu divided into sections for each desktop and items for each window
they contain. (This window list is also accessible by middle-clicking
on the desktop background.) For example, if desktop 2 contains an
open Konqueror window, you can click on its entry in the window list,
and the window manager switches you to desktop 2 and activates the
Konqueror window.
You can add an external taskbar to the desktop, either in place of or
in addition to the one running in the panel. The external taskbar
runs along one edge of the desktop, usually the top or bottom. You
can configure the location and other settings of the external taskbar
in the Control Center by selecting Panel
Extensions.
18.2.3 Adding an Application Link to the Panel
The simplest way to add an application
button to the panel is by dragging an icon from the desktop to the
panel. This copies the link from the desktop. Any application listed
in the K menu can be easily added to the panel. From the K menu,
choose Panel Add Application, then select from the
submenus or items that are listed. The choices you have are the same
items that appear on the K menu.
To remove a button from the panel, right-click on an empty place on
the panel to bring up the panel menu, and select Remove. That
displays another menu that lets you remove applets such as the pager
or taskbar, buttons that start applications, or special buttons such
as the K menu or the Desktop Access button. You can also right-click
on an icon and select Remove.
18.2.4 Running an Application on the Panel
A swallowed application, or applet, is a program that runs on the
panel instead of in a desktop window. A swallowed application can be
a small utility that monitors network activity or provides mail
notification, for example. The lock/login applet, the klipper clipboard applet, and the clock are
examples of swallowed applications, as are the pager and the taskbar
when they're running in the panel. Add other applets
by selecting Add Applet from the panel menu and
selecting the applet you want.
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