Firefox/4.0b8pre SeaMonkey/2.1b2pre   
   From: "James J. Weinkam"    
      
   MrG wrote:   
   > On Feb 20, 12:07 am, "James J. Weinkam" wrote:   
   >> MrG wrote:   
   >>> Once a VIO window has been resized, each subsequent invocation of the   
   >>> window is automatically put in the maximised state. Restoring down to   
   >>> non-maximised does absolutely nothing unless you re-maximise it, then   
   >>> it will shoot the window to the top left of the screen. Restore down   
   >>> again and the window returns to the position you put it with the shift   
   >>> +drag operation. Restore down from maximised, close the window then re-   
   >>> open it, it will open again in the maximised state. Restoring down   
   >>> each time you open a window is a bit tedious besides it does nothing   
   >>> for the position of the window when re-appearing from a PM app.   
   >>   
   >> That's not what happens here.   
   >>   
   >> For example if I open an eCS command prompt window, it opens in maximized   
   state at the position   
   >> where all initially maximized VIO windows open and its size is 80x25. If I   
   execute mode 100 50, the   
   >> upper left corner stays in place, the window grows to 100x50, and there no   
   scroll bars. If I then   
   >> click the restore button, the window cahges to restored state but the size   
   and location stay the   
   >> same. If I then execute e d:\config.sys, then exit from e, the command   
   window reappears where it was   
   >> before the command, is still in restored state and the size is 100x50 with   
   no scroll bars.   
   >   
   > That's what is supposed to happen. Close that window in the restore   
   > state, re-open it and it should re-open in the maximised state.   
      
   Right.   
      
   Or,   
   > while that window is open, open another instance of cmd, and the 2nd   
   > cmd window should open in the maximised state while the 1st window   
   > stays in the restored state,   
      
   Right.   
    which is what I was saying.   
      
   That's what I missed in what you said.   
      
   What you are   
   > referring to is session specific and does not affect the default   
   > behavior of a VIO window.   
      
   Right. For better or worse, there is one system wide bahavior. I hesitate to   
   use the word default    
   because I know of no way to specify a different value for the nonce, i.e,   
   there is nothing that I    
   know of that you can put on the command line or in a program object, or even   
   it the parameters of a    
   start command that will cause a particular session activation to differ from   
   the system wide behavior.   
      
   You can of course change the system wide behavior by the shift drag method or   
   by editing the Shield    
   application.   
      
    Same with the mode cmd being session   
   > specific. I was referring to changing the default size of a VIO window   
   > which the values of are stored in os2.ini I think.   
      
   I thought I understood that but I think it's more complicated than I thought.   
   I'll have to do some    
   more experiments, but I don't have time to fool with it at the moment.   
      
      
    Mode does not   
   > change the default size of a VIO window.   
   > Sorry for any confusion.   
      
      
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