How to make Dash-to-Panel in Ubuntu 18.04 transparent on maximized windows?

Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP up vote
3
down vote
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I've already tried the following: Full transparency on Ubuntu 18.04 dock
But I just need to make the panel transparent, and I can't find any way to do so successfully.
The gray opaque panel doesn't look too good in this image:
themes dock gnome-tweak-tool transparency ubuntu-dock
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I've already tried the following: Full transparency on Ubuntu 18.04 dock
But I just need to make the panel transparent, and I can't find any way to do so successfully.
The gray opaque panel doesn't look too good in this image:
themes dock gnome-tweak-tool transparency ubuntu-dock
yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I've already tried the following: Full transparency on Ubuntu 18.04 dock
But I just need to make the panel transparent, and I can't find any way to do so successfully.
The gray opaque panel doesn't look too good in this image:
themes dock gnome-tweak-tool transparency ubuntu-dock
I've already tried the following: Full transparency on Ubuntu 18.04 dock
But I just need to make the panel transparent, and I can't find any way to do so successfully.
The gray opaque panel doesn't look too good in this image:
themes dock gnome-tweak-tool transparency ubuntu-dock
edited May 14 at 3:16
Eskander Bejaoui
1,0141619
1,0141619
asked May 13 at 19:53
developer067
183
183
yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40
add a comment |Â
yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40
yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The steps you followed are related to the original Dock in Ubuntu 18.04, but you are clearly using Dash-to-Panel GNOME extension which can be made transparent easily using another GNOME extension called Dynamic Panel Transparency.
To specify custom transparency values, all you need to do is:
- Enable the extension from extensions.gnome.org.
- Access the extension's settings and go to
Backgroundtab. - Enable
Enable custom opacityand set your custom values. - Done.
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The steps you followed are related to the original Dock in Ubuntu 18.04, but you are clearly using Dash-to-Panel GNOME extension which can be made transparent easily using another GNOME extension called Dynamic Panel Transparency.
To specify custom transparency values, all you need to do is:
- Enable the extension from extensions.gnome.org.
- Access the extension's settings and go to
Backgroundtab. - Enable
Enable custom opacityand set your custom values. - Done.
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The steps you followed are related to the original Dock in Ubuntu 18.04, but you are clearly using Dash-to-Panel GNOME extension which can be made transparent easily using another GNOME extension called Dynamic Panel Transparency.
To specify custom transparency values, all you need to do is:
- Enable the extension from extensions.gnome.org.
- Access the extension's settings and go to
Backgroundtab. - Enable
Enable custom opacityand set your custom values. - Done.
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The steps you followed are related to the original Dock in Ubuntu 18.04, but you are clearly using Dash-to-Panel GNOME extension which can be made transparent easily using another GNOME extension called Dynamic Panel Transparency.
To specify custom transparency values, all you need to do is:
- Enable the extension from extensions.gnome.org.
- Access the extension's settings and go to
Backgroundtab. - Enable
Enable custom opacityand set your custom values. - Done.
The steps you followed are related to the original Dock in Ubuntu 18.04, but you are clearly using Dash-to-Panel GNOME extension which can be made transparent easily using another GNOME extension called Dynamic Panel Transparency.
To specify custom transparency values, all you need to do is:
- Enable the extension from extensions.gnome.org.
- Access the extension's settings and go to
Backgroundtab. - Enable
Enable custom opacityand set your custom values. - Done.
edited May 18 at 14:39
answered May 13 at 20:10
Eskander Bejaoui
1,0141619
1,0141619
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
add a comment |Â
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
1
1
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
Also clearly is a pun on transparent :) +1 for pun be it intended or not.
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 20:14
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@WinEunuuchs2Unix didn't really think about it like that, I wrote it in italic because he might be using a different fork (who knows?), but thanks for the up :)
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
@developer067 you're welcome
â Eskander Bejaoui
May 13 at 20:34
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
Pomsky used "clearly" in his comment under OP''s question too. Puns galore!
â WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 13 at 21:39
add a comment |Â
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yes, but after following those steps, I still have an opaque dock
â developer067
May 13 at 20:01
Hang on, that doesn't even look like Ubuntu dock. Are you using "dash to panel"?
â pomsky
May 13 at 20:14
That's definitely dash to panel
â dsSTORM
May 13 at 20:40