If app start-up is impacted that it does not open as expected, then the user should still be able to switch to Tablet Mode to force the app to start in full-screen mode without user intervention. If the expected feature within the app functionality is broken, then the user mitigation is to place the app into full screen mode (by using the “go full screen button” in the upper right corner of the title bar).To mitigate this for Windows 8.0 and 8.1 apps: Today instead when the user drags the window by the bottom corner (or other border location) it is a continuous resize, and the app receives resize messages in a row, rather than size change. This is different from Windows 8.0 or Windows 8.1, where the act of resizing a window was a discrete action (users resized a thumbnail of the window, which then caused the window to resize once the user committed the action). A user can continuously resize the app window to their liking (down to the app’s minimal window size). The most noticeable change now is that you can get sized to arbitrary sizes that are not just the size of the screen/height of the screen. In Windows 10, Windows apps are no longer full-screen by default – instead, they are windowed and operations like minimizing, restoring, maximizing, resizing (and any other operation that you’ve always been able to do to any other Classic Windows application window) is now possible.
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