Maximising Every Window
Thread Starter

Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 440
Likes: 0
From: England.
Maximising Every Window
Hi guys and gals.
Something doing my head in at the mo and I'd be grateful for any advice that works, please.
All I'm trying to do is to set up all windows to instantly be at maximum size every time I open them (by which I mean filling the screen, but not 'full screen' -- 'full screen' chops of some menus, which is annoying). Having to click the 'maximise' button every time I open a window is very annoying.
Done a Google and tried every suggestion. Searched PPRuNe and done the same. No consistent success. Sometimes works, sometimes not, sometimes works for a while, then not. Done all the suggestions - alt key, shift key, file exit, control panel-folder options-view-advanced-remember, open one, open two, maximise, close one, close two, etc etc etc etc etc etc.........
Good old Micro flippin soft.

PS - Using Windows 2000 and XP at the moment.
Something doing my head in at the mo and I'd be grateful for any advice that works, please.
All I'm trying to do is to set up all windows to instantly be at maximum size every time I open them (by which I mean filling the screen, but not 'full screen' -- 'full screen' chops of some menus, which is annoying). Having to click the 'maximise' button every time I open a window is very annoying.
Done a Google and tried every suggestion. Searched PPRuNe and done the same. No consistent success. Sometimes works, sometimes not, sometimes works for a while, then not. Done all the suggestions - alt key, shift key, file exit, control panel-folder options-view-advanced-remember, open one, open two, maximise, close one, close two, etc etc etc etc etc etc.........
Good old Micro flippin soft.


PS - Using Windows 2000 and XP at the moment.
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 3,443
Likes: 1
From: Cambridge, England, EU
Erm ... why do you think this is Microsoft's fault?
An application can start up how it likes. It may or may not choose to take any notice of the user's wishes as to how it is to start up, communicated by any one of numerous different means. If an application developer decides that he's going to ignore the user completely and always start up at the top left hand corner of the screen then that's what' it's going to do - this has been a bug registered against the Java RTE for years and they're not interested in fixing it, hardly Microsoft's fault, it's not their software.
An application can start up how it likes. It may or may not choose to take any notice of the user's wishes as to how it is to start up, communicated by any one of numerous different means. If an application developer decides that he's going to ignore the user completely and always start up at the top left hand corner of the screen then that's what' it's going to do - this has been a bug registered against the Java RTE for years and they're not interested in fixing it, hardly Microsoft's fault, it's not their software.
Thread Starter

Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 440
Likes: 0
From: England.
Yes, tried dragging and ctrl+close. Elsewhere advises trying alt if ctrl doesn't work. Others advise using ctrl+File/Exit instead of Close button. etc etc etc. None of those work. Many other 'solutions' don't work, as per my previous post. I see others on the forums advising these methods report that suggestions don't work (though some posters report that they do work, so it ain't consistent).
All this started after I bought a new hard drive, due to mechanical issues with the previous drive. Same Windows installation discs as before, same computer, same make, type and (even!) size of drive. Windows is displaying reduced default window size on window opening and refuses to play any other game. Previous hard drive displayed full window size (using the method -> opening a window within a window, drag the second window to max and close the first. That method isn't working on this new drive).
All this started after I bought a new hard drive, due to mechanical issues with the previous drive. Same Windows installation discs as before, same computer, same make, type and (even!) size of drive. Windows is displaying reduced default window size on window opening and refuses to play any other game. Previous hard drive displayed full window size (using the method -> opening a window within a window, drag the second window to max and close the first. That method isn't working on this new drive).
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 366
Likes: 0
From: Earth
Try this
Solution 1.
Start IE, right click any URL and select "Open in a New Window".
Go back to the first IE window you opened and close it.
Return to the second window and manually drag it to fill the screen. DO NOT USE THE MAXIMISE BUTTON.
Close this second window using the close box.
All IE windows should now open maximized.
Solution 2.
Go to the South Bay Software website and download the TOTALLY FREE AutoSizer 1.71:
Automatically Resize Your Programs - AutoSizer
Quote: "AutoSizer automatically resizes programs for you, keeping them at a specific size or keeping them maximized. One popular use is to keep Internet Explorer maximized when you go on the web."
Start IE, right click any URL and select "Open in a New Window".
Go back to the first IE window you opened and close it.
Return to the second window and manually drag it to fill the screen. DO NOT USE THE MAXIMISE BUTTON.
Close this second window using the close box.
All IE windows should now open maximized.
Solution 2.
Go to the South Bay Software website and download the TOTALLY FREE AutoSizer 1.71:
Automatically Resize Your Programs - AutoSizer
Quote: "AutoSizer automatically resizes programs for you, keeping them at a specific size or keeping them maximized. One popular use is to keep Internet Explorer maximized when you go on the web."
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 366
Likes: 0
From: Earth
Forgot to mention...
If you start your programmes from a shortcut off the desktop, try right-clicking the shortcut, select Properties and in the shortcut tab there is an option to Run, which is set at Normal Window. Change it to Maximised.
Thread Starter

Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 440
Likes: 0
From: England.
I've tried your suggestions Spurlash2 (except the link, which I'd already got from another forum and it didn't work). Not sure which of your other procedures had the effect, but on restarting my PC just now I'm getting maximum windows every time (so far anyway, fingers crossed).
Stilll confused, but something's done the trick, just wish I knew what it was.
Wonder if it's one of those Windows thingies that eventually responds to repetition?
Many thanks to Tarq57 and Spurlash2 for the much appreciated input.
Stilll confused, but something's done the trick, just wish I knew what it was.

Wonder if it's one of those Windows thingies that eventually responds to repetition?
Many thanks to Tarq57 and Spurlash2 for the much appreciated input.
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,170
Likes: 0
From: Abroad
Well, window presentation is the window manager's responsibility.
Don't know a thing about Windows, but in the Linux (and more specifically, KDE) philosophy, the application may request to start up how it likes, but it's up to the higher layers to decide whether to honour any of the application's requests.
Again, not in KDE, where the user can choose to override any aspect of window behaviour for a single window, window class, application, or the whole desktop. It is the Advanced -> Special Window Settings and Advanced -> Special Application Settings menus in the window's actions button.
In KDE all it would take is six clicks to dissuade the application from doing that.
I'm not trying to sell you in on KDE (amazing as it is
), just pointing out that it's not quite correct to say that it is
It's their window manager. It was their design decision not to let the user override the application's behaviour. Therefore, I disagree that it is not "Microsoft's fault", in a way.
Note: this is not meant to be gratuitous MS bashing, just discussing a technical point.
An application can start up how it likes.
It may or may not choose to take any notice of the user's wishes as to how it is to start up
If an application developer decides that he's going to ignore the user completely and always start up at the top left hand corner of the screen then that's what' it's going to do - this has been a bug registered against the Java RTE for years and they're not interested in fixing it
I'm not trying to sell you in on KDE (amazing as it is
), just pointing out that it's not quite correct to say that it is
hardly Microsoft's fault, it's not their software.
Note: this is not meant to be gratuitous MS bashing, just discussing a technical point.
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 3,443
Likes: 1
From: Cambridge, England, EU
Don't know a thing about Windows
Windows tells the application what the user has asked for, then the application tells Windows what to do, usually, but not necessarily, by telling the OS to do its default thing. This is a sort-of OO philosophy - you can pass an object a "maximise" message, you can provide a default ("base class") behaviour, but at the end of the day it's up to the object to know how to "maximise" itself.
This means you can, just to pick the first example that came into my head, write kiosk applications even if there's no explicit support for kiosk applications in your window manager. Your application can open full screen and stay full screen and ignore startup parameters and messages telling it to do other things.
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,170
Likes: 0
From: Abroad
I'm glad there is one point we can agree on. 
...and then the OS blindly follows the application's orders? If so, that was my understanding, and my point is that Windows could and should provide a mechanism for the user to override this behaviour. I suspect the internals allow this, but where is the UI?
Windows tells the application what the user has asked for, then the application tells Windows what to do, usually, but not necessarily, by telling the OS to do its default thing.
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 3,443
Likes: 1
From: Cambridge, England, EU
...and then the OS blindly follows the application's orders?
Windows could and should provide a mechanism for the user to override this behaviour
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,170
Likes: 0
From: Abroad
Hi Gertrude,
Do you write Window applications by any chance? I guess that would explain an awful lot! 
That's quite an interesting philosophy you have... and there I was thinking the computer's job was to help its owner get useful stuff done with a minimum of interference.
The owner of the current session.
Which kiosk are you talking about???
The only prior mention of kiosk mode I can see is in your previous post, and I'm not quite sure what it's there for. You said
Apart from not knowing where you're coming from or of what that is an example, how does the ability to override window settings prevent you from having kiosk applications? The answer is: it doesn't (and e.g., KDE is there to prove it). Please understand that in a kiosk scenario, the bloke in front of the screen is not the session owner.
I'm sorry if I misunderstood you, but I get the impression you're trying to make the point that the OS should give the application writer complete control over the user's resources, regardless of that user's wishes. I do not agree with that, and I do not even think that is a Windows design policy either (regardless of deficiencies in the actual product). I'm happy to be corrected on that last (or any other) point, however.
An operating system provides facilities to applications, thus making it easier for application writers than programming to the bare metal would be. An operating system that thinks it knows best and randomly refuses to do what it's told is a right pain to all concerned

That's quite an interesting philosophy you have... and there I was thinking the computer's job was to help its owner get useful stuff done with a minimum of interference.

Who is "the user"?
The writer of the application? No, you clearly don't think it's her. The owner of the kiosk?
The only prior mention of kiosk mode I can see is in your previous post, and I'm not quite sure what it's there for. You said
This means you can, just to pick the first example that came into my head...
I'm sorry if I misunderstood you, but I get the impression you're trying to make the point that the OS should give the application writer complete control over the user's resources, regardless of that user's wishes. I do not agree with that, and I do not even think that is a Windows design policy either (regardless of deficiencies in the actual product). I'm happy to be corrected on that last (or any other) point, however.
More bang for your buck
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 3,513
Likes: 1
From: land of the clanger
A lot of problems are caused by software writers not obeying the rules of the operating system and taking short cuts which of course work fine at the time, then, say a security loophole is found so MS issue an update to fix it and suddenly the short cut exploited by the writer no longer exists and the soft ware is broken, but, had he followed the rules, it would still be working

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 970
Likes: 1
From: Timbuktu
acbus1, first of all, using Windows 2000 is rather a bad idea because Microsoft have stopped providing support for it as of the 13th of July last year. Microsoft Support Lifecycle This means no patches, which means the possibility of a malware free-for-all if you're connected to the Internet.
I think window manager behaviour has been improved in NT6 (Vista and 7), and there are a ton of other good reasons to upgrade.
I think window manager behaviour has been improved in NT6 (Vista and 7), and there are a ton of other good reasons to upgrade.
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 3,443
Likes: 1
From: Cambridge, England, EU
I'm sorry if I misunderstood you, but I get the impression you're trying to make the point that the OS should give the application writer complete control over the user's resources, regardless of that user's wishes.
BTW isn't it just as possible for an X application to choose to disobey the ICCCCC...CCCCCM as it is for a Windows application to choose to disobey the style guide, so actually there's no practical difference between the systems?
(It's a long loooong time since I read that document, I've forgotten how many Cs it has it in, other than it's always one more than you expect.)
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,170
Likes: 0
From: Abroad
Btw, I suspect you're playing dumb, so never mind.
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 3,443
Likes: 1
From: Cambridge, England, EU
And how about being constrained by the user's policies, which is what we're talking about here?
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 1,170
Likes: 0
From: Abroad

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 28
Likes: 0
From: UK
Try this link: How to open all windows maximized all the time on every applications and folders? - Webmaster Forum - post 13, it works with Vista.




