I'm using Mate Desktop with plain old Marco. When Tilda is deactivated, it looks like the focus is not properly or fully returned to the app that was active before.
For example, when I use GVim and switch to Tilda and back, the window titlebar is unfocused, but I can still somehow magically send keystrokes to it.
Nearly all other apps behave the same, e.g. Firefox behaves the same way, the window is not focused, there is no text caret visible in any input boxes, but if you start typing, text magically appears where you were last active.
But when using Neovide, titlebar is unfocused, and keystrokes are not going through.
I've had this issue for years now, and was ignoring it because the keystrokes went through somehow, and I could continue working, but now that I'm starting to use Neovide it's getting a bit hard to ignore - after each Tilda switch, I have to hit alt-tab again to get back, which defeats the purpose.
The system is Arch / X / Mate / Marco / Tilda 2.0.0, please let me know if you need any more details.
I'm using Mate Desktop with plain old Marco. When Tilda is deactivated, it looks like the focus is not properly or fully returned to the app that was active before.
For example, when I use GVim and switch to Tilda and back, the window titlebar is unfocused, but I can still somehow magically send keystrokes to it.
Nearly all other apps behave the same, e.g. Firefox behaves the same way, the window is not focused, there is no text caret visible in any input boxes, but if you start typing, text magically appears where you were last active.
But when using Neovide, titlebar is unfocused, and keystrokes are not going through.
I've had this issue for years now, and was ignoring it because the keystrokes went through somehow, and I could continue working, but now that I'm starting to use Neovide it's getting a bit hard to ignore - after each Tilda switch, I have to hit alt-tab again to get back, which defeats the purpose.
The system is Arch / X / Mate / Marco / Tilda 2.0.0, please let me know if you need any more details.