JTB3 Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 (edited) Chrome was recently updated to version 74 and appears to no longer support native W10 title bars (and the AeroGlass effect). The #windows10-custom-titlebar flag is also no longer available along with the ability to 'Disable' it. Does anyone know of an alternative/workaround to re-enable AeroGlass support for the new Chrome 74 title bars? Edited April 24, 2019 by JTB3
UCyborg Posted April 24, 2019 Posted April 24, 2019 The workaround relies on the codepaths still in place for Windows 7/8.x. When the support for those systems is dropped, they'll probably dump that code as well...
JTB3 Posted April 24, 2019 Author Posted April 24, 2019 (edited) 23 minutes ago, UCyborg said: Thank you soooo much, @UCyborg! The compatibility mode setting (for Win 8) worked like a champ! Edited April 24, 2019 by JTB3
JTB3 Posted April 24, 2019 Author Posted April 24, 2019 @UCyborg The (Win 8) compatibility setting almost worked, now these annoying black borders are appearing below the Chrome top frame (see screenshot - border bars circled in green). Do you have any suggestions on how to remove these border bars introduced by the compatibility setting? Many thanks! -JT
JTB3 Posted April 25, 2019 Author Posted April 25, 2019 @UCyborg 24 minutes ago, JTB3 said: @UCyborg The (Win 8) compatibility setting almost worked, now these annoying black borders are appearing below the Chrome top frame (see screenshot - border bars circled in green). Do you have any suggestions on how to remove these border bars introduced by the compatibility setting? Many thanks! -JT I just solved the window border issue by using "Winaero Tweaker" and adjusting the Customize Windows Borders "Border Padding" slider down to 0 (initially it was set to 4, the exact width of the problematic new borders highlighted in the image above). I hope this info helps anyone else attempting to work around these annoyances! -JT
UCyborg Posted April 25, 2019 Posted April 25, 2019 (edited) Apparently my assumptions were incorrect, and so is this thread's title. I searched through Chromium's commit history and found out only the option in chrome://flags was removed, the functionality is still intact and can be invoked using a command line parameter, see here. So one must add --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar parameter to Chrome's shortcut properties, at the end of the Target field on the Shortcut tab. This method doesn't have any undesired side effects like running in compatibility mode has. Edited April 25, 2019 by UCyborg 5
andy_h Posted April 26, 2019 Posted April 26, 2019 (edited) Thanks UCyborg, works fine but if you pin Chrome to the Classic Shell task bar once started and then use use the pinned Chrome, the transparency doesn't work (it did using the previous method) ! Managed to fix this by right clicking on the taskbar pinned Chrome and then right clicking on Google Chrome on the pop up menu. Select "properties" on the new pop up menu and reedit the "Target" to append "--disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar" Edited April 26, 2019 by andy_h Using Classic Shell 1
UCyborg Posted April 26, 2019 Posted April 26, 2019 @andy_h Yes, pinning it there creates a separate shortcut in some other place, so you have to setup that shortcut properly as well.
gitit20 Posted April 29, 2019 Posted April 29, 2019 (edited) How can I add this? no clear instructions on how to? that I could find? Thanks Edited April 29, 2019 by gitit20
gitit20 Posted April 29, 2019 Posted April 29, 2019 Ok so I got it to work using this --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar added to the shortcut however I would like to know how I can re-add this to the flags section so I can just enable it there? thanks for any help on this... not sure why they had to remove that in the first place
lolylol Posted April 30, 2019 Posted April 30, 2019 Can confirm that the parameter also works in Edge Chromium: 1
JTB3 Posted May 9, 2019 Author Posted May 9, 2019 1 On 4/25/2019 at 1:36 PM, UCyborg said: Apparently my assumptions were incorrect, and so is this thread's title. I searched through Chromium's commit history and found out only the option in chrome://flags was removed, the functionality is still intact and can be invoked using a command line parameter, see here. So one must add --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar parameter to Chrome's shortcut properties, at the end of the Target field on the Shortcut tab. This method doesn't have any undesired side effects like running in compatibility mode has. OMG @UCyborg !!! I'm just seeeing this awesome solution now!!! You are a shooting star!!! ★★★ Thank you sooooo much! -JT
JTB3 Posted May 9, 2019 Author Posted May 9, 2019 (edited) Here's a solution for one remaining issue with the new command-line fix... @UCyborg If your Chrome browser is set to start in the background automatically with Windows (for certain extensions like Hangouts, etc.), Here's how one can edit the Chrome AutoLaunch command line in the registry: Open Regedit.exe and navigate to the following key : HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run Find the string named: "GoogleChromeAutoLaunch_......" and right-click to modify the text/command line to add the new parameter: (Here's what mine looked like when finished:)"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --no-startup-window --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar /prefetch:5 Now Chrome will autostart in the background with the AeroGlass compatible title bars. -JT Edited May 10, 2019 by JTB3 Typos 1
Wolfshadow Posted May 9, 2019 Posted May 9, 2019 9 hours ago, JTB3 said: Here's a solution for one remaining issue with the new command-line fix... @UCyborg If your Chrome browser is set to start in the background automatically with windows (for certain extensions like Hangouts, etc.), Here's how one can edit the Chrome Registry AutoLaunch Command Line: Open Regedit.exe and navigate to the following key : HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run Find the Sting Named: "GoogleChromeAutoLaunch_......" and right-click to modify the command line to add the new parameter: (here's what mine looked like when finished)"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --no-startup-window --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar /prefetch:5 Now Chrome will autostart in the background with the AeroGlass compatible title bars. -JT Also another issues is in html short cuts. By editing this key, it will allow aero when you double click any site shortcuts you may have saved. HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\ChromeHTML\shell\open\command (default) REG_SZ "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar -- "%1" 1
Wolfshadow Posted May 9, 2019 Posted May 9, 2019 On 4/25/2019 at 4:36 PM, UCyborg said: Apparently my assumptions were incorrect, and so is this thread's title. I searched through Chromium's commit history and found out only the option in chrome://flags was removed, the functionality is still intact and can be invoked using a command line parameter, see here. So one must add --disable-features=Windows10CustomTitlebar parameter to Chrome's shortcut properties, at the end of the Target field on the Shortcut tab. This method doesn't have any undesired side effects like running in compatibility mode has. If I read the link info correctly, the functionality of the flag will end with chrome version 76. hopefully someone will figure out a registry hack to use like the "allow flash always on" that allows not having to shoose ecery time you need flash on a site. 1
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