Bug 191977 - Okular jumps to the last page on full screen toggle
Summary: Okular jumps to the last page on full screen toggle
Status: RESOLVED INTENTIONAL
Alias: None
Product: okular
Classification: Applications
Component: general (show other bugs)
Version: 0.8.3
Platform: unspecified Linux
: NOR normal
Target Milestone: ---
Assignee: Okular developers
URL:
Keywords:
Depends on:
Blocks:
 
Reported: 2009-05-07 23:52 UTC by Bartemius Crouch
Modified: 2010-07-11 17:15 UTC (History)
0 users

See Also:
Latest Commit:
Version Fixed In:


Attachments

Note You need to log in before you can comment on or make changes to this bug.
Description Bartemius Crouch 2009-05-07 23:52:51 UTC
Version:           0.8.3 (using KDE 4.2.2)
OS:                Linux
Installed from:    Unlisted Binary Package

As the description explains, Okular will jump to the last page of the document when *exiting* full screen mode. 

- Currently I am using Okular 0.8.3 on KDE 4.2.2/3 but I saw this happen with older versions too. 

- I'm living with this problem for months now, observing and trying to find some rule and reason. But I found none and I'm just tired of it. Problem is, it does not happen every time, but it happens 90% of the time. 

- Every time I want to exit or just toggle full screen I have to remember to set the bookmark so I can click on the "Previous Bookmark" when I want to continue my reading. It's tedious and you can imagine that I forgot to do it numerous times.

- All my searches came up emtpy and I can't belive nobody else reported this. But the problem is serious, finding your way in an 800 pages document is not easy, especially given the fact that all PDF readers including Okular bring systems to a crawl when dealing with big documents.

Thank you.
Comment 1 Pino Toscano 2009-05-07 23:59:42 UTC
Please, next time, use a *real* account, and not a fake disposable email account.
Comment 2 Albert Astals Cid 2010-07-11 17:15:15 UTC
Multiple unreproduceable bugs reported with a dead mailing address, if the user doesn't want to spend 5 minutes answering our mails it makes no sense for us to spend 5 minutes trying to understand what he wrote.