I do this, legitimately – but with a very specific application: Firefox. On Windows, I can get firefox top border to a VERY small amount. But for some reason, in the past – every Linux distro I found, when Firefox is maximized, I still get an additional window decoration on the top, above the browser tabs. My Firefox bar on Windows only takes up 64 pixels of height.
For those that like firefox drawing its titlebar instead of using the system one (I can those psychopaths) it’s literally a right click on some part of the ui, customize and at bottom there’s an option about which titlebar to use.
I do this, legitimately – but with a very specific application: Firefox. On Windows, I can get firefox top border to a VERY small amount. But for some reason, in the past – every Linux distro I found, when Firefox is maximized, I still get an additional window decoration on the top, above the browser tabs. My Firefox bar on Windows only takes up 64 pixels of height.
For those that like firefox drawing its titlebar instead of using the system one (I can those psychopaths) it’s literally a right click on some part of the ui, customize and at bottom there’s an option about which titlebar to use.
Psychopath here. I’m so much of a psychopath, I made a custom userChrome css to fix Firefox not using the system gtk decorations when using themes.
github: https://github.com/killjoy1221/firefox-gtk-controls
You need Waterfox! It has that functionality. Your title bar becomes a tab bar.