Created attachment 166402 [details] Screenshot showing the problem SUMMARY The settings dialog for the Folder View applet doesn't have a large enough minimum (and default) size, causing parts of the controls to be cut off. STEPS TO REPRODUCE 1. Add Folder View applet to panel 2. Right click, Configure Folder View 3. Go to Icons tab OBSERVED RESULT The bottom part of the settings is cut off. There is no way to access these settings unless you make the window larger. EXPECTED RESULT The window should not be allowed to be this small (or have another way of accessing the settings without resizing the window, such as a scroll view) SOFTWARE/OS VERSIONS Operating System: NixOS 24.05 KDE Plasma Version: 6.0.0 KDE Frameworks Version: 6.0.0 Qt Version: 6.6.2 Kernel Version: 6.6.18 (64-bit) Graphics Platform: Wayland Processors: 24 × 13th Gen Intel® Core™ i7-13700F Memory: 62.7 GiB of RAM Graphics Processor: AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
There's something wrong with the styling you're seeing. There should be a scrollbar and a line separating the footer buttons from the content. This is what I see when I open the dialog and make it small. Are other applet config dialogs also not scrollable? If not, I suspect a packaging issue is involved here and would recommend you talk with the NixOS people about it. In Plasma 6, we changes applet config dialogs to use KCM components, and perhaps some packaging needs to be adjusted to make sure everything gets installed properly.
Interesting. No, it seems to only be the Icons tab for this specific applet, actually (I can't resize the window to be small enough for the other tabs except About). Folder View's About tab does get the line and scrollbar when the window is too small, and so does everything in the settings for Application Menu, Icons-only Task Manager, and Digital Clock. I haven't tried any others.
Can reproduce when I actually follow the original steps and add a Folder View widget to the panel. I don't see this for the Folder View desktop mode, though. How strange.