How to reduce menu/title bar screen space in 18.04? [duplicate]

Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP up vote
3
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop
3 answers
I just upgraded to Ubuntu 18.04. In my previous version, the title, status, and the "File ..." menu were all bundled together in a neat little bar for every maximized window.
Now they are all separate, and as you can see they are taking up a huge amount of screen real estate. Is there any way to get some of it back?
2 big bars
3 big bars
18.04 titlebar menu-bar
marked as duplicate by pomsky, Fabby, Eric Carvalho, Kevin Bowen, George Udosen Jun 15 at 7:59
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop
3 answers
I just upgraded to Ubuntu 18.04. In my previous version, the title, status, and the "File ..." menu were all bundled together in a neat little bar for every maximized window.
Now they are all separate, and as you can see they are taking up a huge amount of screen real estate. Is there any way to get some of it back?
2 big bars
3 big bars
18.04 titlebar menu-bar
marked as duplicate by pomsky, Fabby, Eric Carvalho, Kevin Bowen, George Udosen Jun 15 at 7:59
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
4
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop
3 answers
I just upgraded to Ubuntu 18.04. In my previous version, the title, status, and the "File ..." menu were all bundled together in a neat little bar for every maximized window.
Now they are all separate, and as you can see they are taking up a huge amount of screen real estate. Is there any way to get some of it back?
2 big bars
3 big bars
18.04 titlebar menu-bar
This question already has an answer here:
Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop
3 answers
I just upgraded to Ubuntu 18.04. In my previous version, the title, status, and the "File ..." menu were all bundled together in a neat little bar for every maximized window.
Now they are all separate, and as you can see they are taking up a huge amount of screen real estate. Is there any way to get some of it back?
2 big bars
3 big bars
This question already has an answer here:
Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop
3 answers
18.04 titlebar menu-bar
edited May 15 at 3:26
karel
49.8k11106127
49.8k11106127
asked May 14 at 18:17
Jimmy Mathews
161
161
marked as duplicate by pomsky, Fabby, Eric Carvalho, Kevin Bowen, George Udosen Jun 15 at 7:59
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by pomsky, Fabby, Eric Carvalho, Kevin Bowen, George Udosen Jun 15 at 7:59
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
2
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
4
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52
add a comment |Â
2
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
4
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52
2
2
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
4
4
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Assuming this issue is only on Firefox, go to the browser's menu and click Customize. At the bottom, there is a dropdown menu called Toolbars. Your menu bar will be selected. Deselect it.
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Assuming this issue is only on Firefox, go to the browser's menu and click Customize. At the bottom, there is a dropdown menu called Toolbars. Your menu bar will be selected. Deselect it.
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Assuming this issue is only on Firefox, go to the browser's menu and click Customize. At the bottom, there is a dropdown menu called Toolbars. Your menu bar will be selected. Deselect it.
add a comment |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Assuming this issue is only on Firefox, go to the browser's menu and click Customize. At the bottom, there is a dropdown menu called Toolbars. Your menu bar will be selected. Deselect it.
Assuming this issue is only on Firefox, go to the browser's menu and click Customize. At the bottom, there is a dropdown menu called Toolbars. Your menu bar will be selected. Deselect it.
answered May 15 at 3:19
hiigaran
775119
775119
add a comment |Â
add a comment |Â
2
Your two screenshots are the same.
â hiigaran
May 15 at 3:20
Please reupload the 2nd screenshot and provide a link to it so that I can embed it.
â karel
May 15 at 3:28
Try PixelSaver Gnome shell extension? See extensions.gnome.org/extension/723/pixel-saver
â mBardos
May 17 at 6:07
4
Possible duplicate of Wasted screen space due to multiple horizontal bars at the top when an application is open in GNOME desktop. See this for a global menubar option, but warning: the solution is pretty buggy.
â pomsky
Jun 13 at 12:52