I have a similar problem if I go into fullscreen mode, whilst running Pianoteq on Debian 9, with an Xfce4 window manager. The midi controls almost vanish off the top of my screen and there is a reasonable gap between the bottom of the piano keyboard and the bottom of my screen. When I initially go into the fullscreen mode, I can see the zone with the midi controls and no gap below the piano keyboard but then the application image jumps up the screen, seemingly to restore that gap below the application image.
If I press Alt+left click, I can grab the image and move it around the screen, so I can re-centre the application image on the screen ie with the midi controls visible and no gap below the piano keyboard. I found that it is not so much the case that the application image is moving relative to the screen but rather the fullscreen image is moving relative to the physical screen. If I drag the fullscreen image down a slight bit more it starts to reveal the underlying desktop wallpaper at the top of the screen.
That boundary between the desktop wallpaper and the top of the displaced fullscreen image is sensitive to cursor movements. If you move the cursor slowly across the boundary you activate the control panel with "File Edit Window Help" and their associated drop down menus. It is a rather finicky boundary and I haven't learnt how to control it with a first cursor movement as yet. If you know how to activate the "Detachable Window" boundary in Pianoteq then you will have a fair idea how to summon the control panel from the boundary. Both seem to be speed sensitive ie a slow traverse will activate it, whereas a fast traverse does nothing.
With these couple of tweaks the fullscreen mode becomes fully operational with all the controls that you would ordinarily need. However, they are tweaks and one should not need to resort to them to make the mode work for you.
From looking at how the application behaves as it moves into fullscreen mode ie the later jump up screen after the application image has appeared, it would seen that the problem lies with the area that is defined beneath the bottom of the Pianoteq keyboard and the bottom boundary of the fullscreen mode. This portion of the image does not seem to serve any purpose, other than aesthetic, which it does by providing a dark border to the application image. However, it means that the overall defined image depth is greater than the depth of my screen and whilst I have a nice border, I lose access to some important functionality. It could also be said that the defined dimensions for the full screen mode are larger than the defined dimensions of my physical screen. Something is not being read properly obviously.
We don't need the bottom border, but we do need access to the midi controls and the control panel in fullscreen mode. It would be better, in this case, to sacrifice an aesthetic gloss for mere utilitarian functionality.
Pianoteq, however, in full screen mode, without the bottom black boundary, still looks extremely elegant and is efficiently functional; the essence of good French design.
Michael
EDIT : Sorry I was typing late at night and should have typed "ALT+LEFT click" to activate the move function not "ALT+right click". Apologies for any confusion, but typing at midnight is always prone to error unfortunately and this was a silly one.
Mea Culpa! Mea Culpa!
Michael
Last edited by mprimrose (23-01-2022 02:21)
Pianoteq 8 Studio plus all Instrument packs; Organteq 2; Debian; Reaper; Carla