How do I remove log out, reboot, and shut down from GNOME shell application list?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP











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I’m new on Ubuntu. I don't know how they came from. Just need to remove this from here.



Activities window










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  • I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
    – Joshua Besneatte
    2 hours ago






  • 1




    @JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
    – Kulfy
    2 hours ago










  • der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
    – Joshua Besneatte
    1 hour ago














up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1












I’m new on Ubuntu. I don't know how they came from. Just need to remove this from here.



Activities window










share|improve this question









New contributor




丹乃ひ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



















  • I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
    – Joshua Besneatte
    2 hours ago






  • 1




    @JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
    – Kulfy
    2 hours ago










  • der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
    – Joshua Besneatte
    1 hour ago












up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1






1





I’m new on Ubuntu. I don't know how they came from. Just need to remove this from here.



Activities window










share|improve this question









New contributor




丹乃ひ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I’m new on Ubuntu. I don't know how they came from. Just need to remove this from here.



Activities window







gnome-shell activities-overview






share|improve this question









New contributor




丹乃ひ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




丹乃ひ is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




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edited 15 mins ago









pomsky

23.1k77299




23.1k77299






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asked 3 hours ago









丹乃ひ

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  • I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
    – Joshua Besneatte
    2 hours ago






  • 1




    @JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
    – Kulfy
    2 hours ago










  • der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
    – Joshua Besneatte
    1 hour ago
















  • I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
    – Joshua Besneatte
    2 hours ago






  • 1




    @JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
    – Kulfy
    2 hours ago










  • der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
    – Joshua Besneatte
    1 hour ago















I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
– Joshua Besneatte
2 hours ago




I don't see what you are talking about... can you provide more information?
– Joshua Besneatte
2 hours ago




1




1




@JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
– Kulfy
2 hours ago




@JoshuaBesneatte I think the question is clear but needs some formatting. OP simply wants to remove Reboot, logout and shut down shortcuts from application menu.
– Kulfy
2 hours ago












der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
– Joshua Besneatte
1 hour ago




der! I see them now! I totally looked at that image but didn't see them.... have an upgoat on your answer :)
– Joshua Besneatte
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






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oldest

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up vote
4
down vote













If we talking about these gray colored icons:



LogoutRebootShutdown



then they are provided by session-shortcuts package.



We can hide them by copying to current user settings folder and then adding property NoDisplay=true here:



mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications/
cp /usr/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/
echo "NoDisplay=true" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop > /dev/null


then logout (and login again) or reboot.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
    – ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
    2 hours ago










  • @丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
    – pomsky
    17 mins ago










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1 Answer
1






active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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up vote
4
down vote













If we talking about these gray colored icons:



LogoutRebootShutdown



then they are provided by session-shortcuts package.



We can hide them by copying to current user settings folder and then adding property NoDisplay=true here:



mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications/
cp /usr/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/
echo "NoDisplay=true" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop > /dev/null


then logout (and login again) or reboot.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
    – ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
    2 hours ago










  • @丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
    – pomsky
    17 mins ago














up vote
4
down vote













If we talking about these gray colored icons:



LogoutRebootShutdown



then they are provided by session-shortcuts package.



We can hide them by copying to current user settings folder and then adding property NoDisplay=true here:



mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications/
cp /usr/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/
echo "NoDisplay=true" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop > /dev/null


then logout (and login again) or reboot.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
    – ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
    2 hours ago










  • @丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
    – pomsky
    17 mins ago












up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









If we talking about these gray colored icons:



LogoutRebootShutdown



then they are provided by session-shortcuts package.



We can hide them by copying to current user settings folder and then adding property NoDisplay=true here:



mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications/
cp /usr/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/
echo "NoDisplay=true" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop > /dev/null


then logout (and login again) or reboot.






share|improve this answer














If we talking about these gray colored icons:



LogoutRebootShutdown



then they are provided by session-shortcuts package.



We can hide them by copying to current user settings folder and then adding property NoDisplay=true here:



mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications/
cp /usr/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop ~/.local/share/applications/
echo "NoDisplay=true" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/logout,reboot,shutdown.desktop > /dev/null


then logout (and login again) or reboot.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 35 mins ago









David Foerster

26.3k1362106




26.3k1362106










answered 2 hours ago









Kulfy

1,2961425




1,2961425











  • Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
    – ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
    2 hours ago










  • @丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
    – pomsky
    17 mins ago
















  • Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
    – ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
    2 hours ago










  • @丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
    – pomsky
    17 mins ago















Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
– ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
2 hours ago




Thanks man 😊😊 it works like a charm
– ä¸¹ä¹ƒã²
2 hours ago












@丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
– pomsky
17 mins ago




@丹乃ひ If you find this answer useful you may consider "accepting" it (by clicking on the tick mark (✓) next to it) to indicate you've found a working solution and also so that others may more easily find it in the future.
– pomsky
17 mins ago










丹乃ひ is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









 

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