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4.
Panel applets can be started in two different ways: internally or externally. While 'internally' is the preferred way to load applets, this can raise stability or security problems when you are using poorly-programmed third-party applets. To address these problems, applets can be marked 'trusted'. You might want to configure Kicker to treat trusted applets differently to untrusted ones; your options are: <ul><li><em>Load only trusted applets internally:</em> All applets but the ones marked 'trusted' will be loaded using an external wrapper application.</li> <li><em>Load startup config applets internally:</em> The applets shown on KDE startup will be loaded internally, others will be loaded using an external wrapper application.</li> <li><em>Load all applets internally</em></li></ul>
(no translation yet)
Located in applettab_impl.cpp:59
5.
Here you can see a list of applets that are marked 'trusted', i.e. will be loaded internally by Kicker in any case. To move an applet from the list of available applets to the trusted ones, or vice versa, select it and press the left or right buttons.
(no translation yet)
Located in applettab_impl.cpp:70
8.
Here you can see a list of available applets that you currently do not trust. This does not mean you cannot use those applets, but rather that the panel's policy using them depends on your applet security level. To move an applet from the list of available applets to the trusted ones or vice versa, select it and press the left or right buttons.
(no translation yet)
Located in applettab_impl.cpp:81
19.
<h1>Panel</h1> Here you can configure the KDE panel (also referred to as 'kicker'). This includes options like the position and size of the panel, as well as its hiding behavior and its looks.<p> Note that you can also access some of these options directly by clicking on the panel, e.g. dragging it with the left mouse button or using the context menu on right mouse button click. This context menu also offers you manipulation of the panel's buttons and applets.
(no translation yet)
Located in lookandfeeltab_kcm.cpp:86 main.cpp:333
56.
Also apply to panel with menu bar
i18n: file advancedOptions.ui line 293
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Located in rc.cpp:81
57.
Normally if you have the desktop's or current application's menu bar displayed in a panel at the top of the screen (MacOS-style), transparency is disabled for this panel to avoid the desktop background clashing with the menu bar. Set this option to make it transparent anyways.
i18n: file advancedOptions.ui line 296
(no translation yet)
Located in rc.cpp:84
70.
If this option is selected, the only way to hide the panel will be to click on the hide buttons that appear on either end of it.
i18n: file hidingtab.ui line 113
(no translation yet)
Located in rc.cpp:124
78.
If this option is selected, the panel will automatically hide after a period of time and reappear when you move the mouse to the screen edge where the panel is hidden. This is particularly useful for small screen resolutions, such as on laptops.
i18n: file hidingtab.ui line 216
(no translation yet)
Located in rc.cpp:151
80.
When this option is selected, moving the pointer to the specified edge of the screen will cause the panel to appear on top of any windows that may be covering it.
i18n: file hidingtab.ui line 238
(no translation yet)
Located in rc.cpp:157
90.
Show panel when switching &desktops
i18n: file hidingtab.ui line 319
(no translation yet)
Located in rc.cpp:187
110 of 48 results

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Contributors to this translation: Ravishankar Shrivastava.