Alttraysticky (Slash Command): Difference between revisions
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== Slash Command == | == Slash Command == | ||
{{SlashCommandArticle|command=alttraysticky|note=Cycles through showing the second (AltTray1) | {{SlashCommandArticle|command=alttraysticky|note=Cycles through showing the second (AltTray1) power tray, then the third (AltTray2) power tray, and then hides them both.}} | ||
* This command does not lock the power trays, so the arrow located in the upper right corner of the power tray window will still cycle through the power trays without issue upon click. | * This command does not lock the power trays, so the arrow located in the upper right corner of the power tray window will still cycle through the power trays without issue upon click. |
Revision as of 04:34, 16 June 2022
Slash Command
Cycles through showing the second (AltTray1) power tray, then the third (AltTray2) power tray, and then hides them both.
- This command does not lock the power trays, so the arrow located in the upper right corner of the power tray window will still cycle through the power trays without issue upon click.
- /alttraysticky is the same command that is bound to the arrow in the upper right corner of the power tray window.
- The "sticky" versions of the power tray commands appear to be more stable than the /alttray or /alt2tray commands.
Example
/alttraysticky