That response was slightly more helpful than your previous one, which really wasn't helpful at all.

On 20 June 2016 at 21:25, Allin Cottrell <cottrell@wfu.edu> wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jun 2016, Clive Nicholas wrote:

My responses inline:

On 20 June 2016 at 08:03, Allin Cottrell <cottrell@wfu.edu> wrote:

Here's what I'm seeing:

1. Open a built-in data file, e.g. data 4-10 from Ramanathan.

*Fine. *

2. Go to the model menu and Estimate a model (e.g. OLS with ENROLL as
dependent, CATHOL, PUPIL and WHITE as independent).

*Fine.*

3. The model output window appears. I move the mouse pointer into that
window, and click on (say) "Analysis": the Analysis menu drops down.

*This is where it breaks down, as I thought I'd explained in the OP.*

You said "results output window". I was trying to determine if you meant the model output window or something else. Gretl can produce lots of "results" of various kinds.

*The "Analysis" tab lights up as I point the cursor over it, but clicking
on it doesn't bring down the drop-down menu. What about that wasn't clear?

You didn't mention that the tab "lights up"; that's relevant information. It indicates that the window does have focus, so my first hypothesis was wrong. I'm just trying to figure out what's happening here since I've never seen anything resembling the problem you described. (Until today, when Jack was able to demonstrate it on
his Mint/MATE laptop.)

Anyway, this appears to be a MATE or Mint or Compiz bug. Apparently what's happening is that the menu is indeed "dropping down", but _behind_ its parent window, so you can't see it. That's obviously pathological, but it's not a gretl bug, it's a bug somewhere in your stack of Desktop, window manager, compositor. So please take the bug report there -- and you might try being a little nicer about it if you want a helpful response.


Allin Cottrell
_______________________________________________
Gretl-users mailing list
Gretl-users@lists.wfu.edu
http://lists.wfu.edu/mailman/listinfo/gretl-users



--
Clive Nicholas

"My colleagues in the social sciences talk a great deal about methodology. I prefer to call it style." -- Freeman J. Dyson