Re. "the world is a rosy place again and I am full of enthusiasm"
======= Glad you are enjoying learning about databases David - I recommend
Joe Celko's books on SQL.
Re. "The screen resolution of 800 * 600 chops off the bottom of the
screen on which columns can be added to a new table"
=======
The window management on Linux is delegated by 'X' to your choice of
'Window Manager'.
It seems likely the Window manager you are using is partly to blame for
the poor layout.
The heavy weight managers KDE and Gnome contain quite a bit of
infrastructure like certain widgets - equivalent to Window's Common
Dialog Boxes and Controls and so applications which target them can make
use of this infrastructure but will become dependent on the standard
libraries. To be 'at home' under a window manager, an application needs
to follow the idioms, the look and feel - and this is particularly true
for KDE & Gnome which support pluggable look and feel.
There are light-weight Window Managers too such as WindowMaker that
basically decorate the window frame and menus but leave the content for
the application to draw.
Perhaps if you give more detail on the Window Manager you are using, the
pgadmin UI can be tuned a bit.
I tested 800x600 on Windows 2000 Pro, and the New Table dialog box does
fit on screen - just, although it first appears with the buttons
off-screen as David describes.
-----Original Message-----
From: David Chapman [mailto:luckydavid@optusnet.com.au]
Sent: 11 March 2005 03:46
To: James Prichard; 'On Behalf Of David Chapman'
Subject: Thanks for your help
Thanks James and Dave,
I had two problems. The screen resolution of 800 * 600 chops off the
bottom of the screen on which columns can be added to a new table.
Dave's reference to a button I could not see made me search for a way of
adjusting the resolution. After that, three buttons appeared, Help, OK
and Cancel.
The Elephant icon had been dragged from the "Applications" |
"Programming" list onto the desk top. James mention of user permissions
led me to right click the icon and find "Properties" | "Permissions". I
am assuming that most distros have a user interface like Fedora has.
After giving myself (as owner of the database), permissions to read,
write and execute, the world is a rosy place again and I am full of
enthusiasm.
Thanks for your help
David