I've been trying to use the IDE without resorting to a mouse and I've been quite successful so far. Except when the IDE identifies an internal problem and a red button blinks at the bottom right of the IDE. And then I need to use the mouse to click there and get to the "IDE Fatal Errors" dialog, so I can submit the bug report.
How can I get there without using a mouse?
PS: I'm on windows
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I have written an application in c++ visual studio 6 that looks for the WM_LBUTTONDOWN message to carry out a certain task. This works fine except when using a touchscreen. The Wm_lbuttondown or any other button message is not sent when the screen is touched. However, the control buttons still operate normally, so they know they are being clicked. I would like to know how the buttons detect the touch. I would like to detect when the screen is touched in a similar way to how I detect a mouse click. Is there a different WM I can use other than WM_LBUTTONDOWN?
My old version of visual studio doesn't seem to recognise WM_TOUCH so I haven't been able to try that.
https://i.imgur.com/M4pgbiw.png[![Android_Studio_overlay][1]][1]
I sometimes get this randomly on top of everything when using Android Studio. These lines show randomly and the only way I have to remove it is by restarting the whole IDE.
Sometimes it's 3 lines, sometimes 6. Sometimes I can double-click on it and it takes me to that part of the code, sometimes it doesn't react at all if I click on it.
Right now, even if I minimize the Android Studio Window, this "overlay" is on top of everything else, even the Desktop.
I've looked online and the only thing that looks like it is the "code lens" option that appears when hovering the scrolling bar, but that's not it.
Does anyone know why does that happen and how to disable it?
follow the steps :
Editor -> General -> Appearance
find : Show Code Lens on scrollbar hover, and disable it
Second option would be : - If you right click on the scroll bar you will see checked the option "show code lens". Uncheck and you are good to go.
Hey there, so I am trying self-teach VBA and I clicked some button on my developer window which caused a grey screen (see screen shot above). How do I restore my developer tab to the way it should be?
You can try opening the project window to see the sheets that are available, it's the 4th button to the right of the play button on the top tool bar. You may also try Cmd+R.
I hope not to be off topic.
I consider Android's logcat window in Android Studio horribly annoying, even working with two monitors.
To open the logcat window, that often needs to be fairly big, my procedure is:
click below on "Android Monitor"
select the current running device (one time only)
click on that tiny and almost invisible icon on the extreme right
reduce again the Android Monitor that I don't need at all
most of the times resize and move the logcat window.
Whenever a change has to be written or something has to be seen on the emulator, the logcat window needs to be moved or closed, because it stands on top of every window, and this leads to perform that same sequence again after maybe few minutes.
Debugging using logcat becomes a pain, made of opening and closing that same window dozens of times.
I want that window to popup or dock automatically with one single icon click or with a key combination from the right, or the left, like for example "Android Model", without getting crazy every time. One click shows it, one click hides it.
Is it possible?
I somehow turned the documentation popup to be manually closed. It's incredibly annoying and I can't find the setting to undo it. Whatever I did adds maximize, minimize buttons and these windows have to be manually closed now.
I actually found out. It's called pinned mode. I got into it by clicking the pin icon on the window at the top right. Of course once you're in pinned mode, and you try to deselect it from the gear, nothing happens.
How to fix
enable toolbars
hit the red X to restore popup