I apologize in advance for what must certainly be a basic question, but how in the world do you turn on the "bubble" to push and shove traces? I was battling a via that I couldn't delete (finally fixed that), but somewhere in the process I turned off push and shove and I'd like to get it back. I can see that bubble is off because 1) I'm stepping all over my other traces when I try to shove a trace and 2) while I'm in the process of moving the trace I can see that it's off in the options window...but I lose the ability to change the setting in the options window as soon as I stop moving the trace. I don't know how to navigate through the menus to actually turn it back on.

Thanks for the response. Selecting the trace in question and issuing the slide command on the command line allowed the bubble menu to stay "on" to allow changes to the bubble setting. I'm not typically a command line user - to be honest I didn't know there was a "slide" command - so I would just grab the trace and start dragging (which does not allow the bubble menu under the options window to persist once I would finish moving the trace). Anyway, thanks for the useful tip.


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With Android 11, the developers brought back the bubble interface for more apps. This interface, started by Facebook Messenger, gives you quick access to those conversations you have configured for the bubble interface.

What a bubble does is appear on your home screen as a small bubble that you can tap to open the associated app. The bubble interface can be applied to any application that includes conversations, such as Facebook Messenger, Android Messages and even Slack. If a conversation can be had in an app, chances are strong it can bubble.

To enable auto-binding, we will begin by assigning a 'Type of content' to the parent group of the input element. The field's data type is Item, so we can put the Type of content as Item. You can configure the data source as per your application, but I have set it as the first Item record for this tutorial.

Using the articles below I was able to come up with my own custom widget incorporating the features of each minus the slidenav as I wasn't a fan of the functionality compared to the OOB widget and the window focus. If this was a sidebar instead would have been perfect. The way I have it setup is if a user has no open interactions they will see the bubble/balloon tip, first screenshot. If you hover over the chat button and move away the bubble will disappear. We found the bubble is in the wrong spot on some catalog requests and you can't click submit and the main reason for this change as I have embedded the widget in the portal footer. But in order to get users attention I wanted it to show the bubble on the page loading. If a user has unread messages there will be a red dot, second screenshot. Lastly, if a user has an open interaction the system will automatically open the chat window upon entering the portal or changing pages during an open interaction.

I am using bubble feature in my app for Android 10. So I need to ask permission to enable Bubble feature. If users agree to the permission, then need to go through the exact path of enabling it. How do I achieve that. Thanks in advance.

In your Authoring Settings, go to Macro Initialization > Interactions, and for each action (and separately for Demo Bubble and Practice Bubble) change the (bubble) Style setting. And then do the same thing in your Playback Settings, under Macro Fallback Defaults.

under woocommerce customisation settings for product catalogue, I cant seem to find an option to disable the sale bubble displaying on all my products on the product catalogue page? Also, is there a way to show the sale bubble only a select few products that I choose?

But it just got rid of the on sale text from the bubble, and the bubble itself still remained visible. Also, where would i be able to find the product ID for the products on my site (they are alidropship imported products).

It's called "chat bubbles," and it's basically a copy/paste of Facebook Messenger's "chat head" feature that's been around for a few years. When you get a text, WhatsApp message, or anything else like that, you can now turn that regular notification into a chat bubble that floats on the top of your screen. No matter what you're doing on your phone, chat bubbles ensure you always have easy access to that conversation.

Now that you have a chat bubble on your screen, it's time to start using it. Your chat bubbles are just quick shortcuts for conversations you're having in your various messaging apps, meaning all of the user interface elements for the chat bubble look just like they would if you opened the full application.

Chat bubbles are great for ongoing conversations that you want to stay on top of, but once said conversation ends, there's no need to keep that bubble on your screen. Thankfully, removing it is super simple.

Using chat bubbles in the moment is great, and if you dig a little deeper, you'll find additional settings that allow you to fine-tune your experience with them. To do this, we need to journey into our phone's notification settings.

On this page, you have a few different options for how you want that app to interact with chat bubbles. You can configure it so that it doesn't use chat bubbles whatsoever, only allow certain contacts from the app to trigger a chat bubble, or have all conversations be displayed in bubble format.

For starters, you'll want to ensure that chat bubbles are actually turned on for the app you're using. Yes, it sounds obvious, but it doesn't hurt to double-check. If the app is set to "Nothing can bubble," you've found the culprit. Similarly, it's possible that the app you're trying to use chat bubbles with simply doesn't support the API yet. If that's the case, it's just a matter of waiting for the developer to implement the feature.

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Chat bubbles are available as part of Android 11, and unlike many other phones, the Pixel 4a is already rocking it. Having a Pixel means you're first-in-line for new Android updates as soon as they're available, and that's a benefit you get with the Pixel 4a through 2023.

The first time you change a conversation to Priority, a prompt will appear informing you of the additional benefits, including appearing on the top of the Conversations section, showing the profile picture on the lock screen, and switching the conversation to a bubble. Select "Got it" in the bottom-right corner to reveal the bubble.

The icon will be overlaid on top of any app you open. The first time you create a bubble, another prompt appears titled "Chat using bubbles." Here, it describes what bubbles are and what they can do. Tap on the icon to see your conversations, as well as another prompt informing you that you can turn off this feature using "Manage."

If you turn on Bubbles in multiple apps, only the icon of the most recent message will appear on your screen. However, when you select the bubble, it will show each conversation, where you can switch to using its corresponding icon. This is also true for different conversations within the same app, which will have their own icon.

Select a conversation to configure it, including disabling Priority status or disabling bubbles. Choose "All Bubble settings" to change which conversation can be shown as a bubble, only specific ones or all conversations within an app.

You can also change these settings by opening the app's App info page and choosing "Notifications." Select the specific conversation to manage its settings or choose "Bubbles" to configure whether all or some conversations will appear as bubbles from the same app.

Android is getting worse and worse with every upgrade, so now I have to go through multiple steps to enable something that just used to work without me having to do anything at all. Thanks Android/Google

Helium bubbles are a severe form of radiation damage that has been frequently observed. It would be possible to understand the complex processes that cause bubble formation if suitable interatomic potentials were available to enable molecular dynamics simulations. In this paper, Pd-H-He embedded-atom method potentials based on both Daw-Baskes and Finnis-Sinclair formalisms have been developed to enable modeling of He bubbles formed by the radioactive decay of tritium in Pd. Our potentials incorporate helium into an existing Pd-H potential while addressing two challenging paradoxes: (a) Interstitial He atoms can dramatically lower their energies by forming dimers and larger clusters in Pd but are only bound by weak van der Waals forces in the gas phase. (b) He atoms diffuse readily in Pd yet significantly distort the Pd lattice with large volume expansions. We demonstrate that both of our potentials reproduce density functional theory results for (b). However, the Daw-Baskes formalism fails to resolve paradox (a) because it cannot reproduce the experimental helium equation of state. We resolved this problem through a modification of the Finnis-Sinclair formalism in which a (fictitious) negative embedding charge density is produced by Pd at the He binding sites. In addition to molecular statics validation of static properties, molecular dynamics simulation tests establish that our Finnis-Sinclair potential leads to the nucleation of helium bubbles from an initial random distribution of helium interstitial atoms.

Thank you Sean, this helped a lot with understanding the basics. Is there anyway that the Workflow API can be used to enable app actions? For example, once the app receives a command from the Bubble Workflow API, it switches screen or downloads a file etc.?

Also, I put a highlight on the screen but when I go to "Preview from here" it is not aligned over the object where I put it. See attached. The first is where I added the explanation bubble and highlight. The second is what it looks like when I preview. ff782bc1db

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