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[STUMP] An idea: dynamic window management
From: |
Tassilo Horn |
Subject: |
[STUMP] An idea: dynamic window management |
Date: |
Thu, 25 Jan 2007 21:14:34 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.110006 (No Gnus v0.6) Emacs/22.0.93 (gnu/linux) |
Hi all,
I play around with StumpWM since two days and I really like it, so
thanks a lot to the devs.
But one thing I don't like is that I have to manage windows and frames
on my own (splitting, assigning windows to frames, etc.). IMO this could
(and should) be done by the window manager.
A window manager which does this in an excellent way is DWM [1] and I
wonder if this style of managing windows could be implemented on top of
StumpWM as a something like a "minor mode".
Ok, this is how DWM manages frames/windows:
- The screen is divided into a Master area and a Slave area:
+--------------------+-------------+
| | |
| | Slave |
| | |
| | |
| Master +-------------+
| | |
| | Slave |
| | |
| | |
+--------------------+-------------+
In this illustration there's one window in the master area and two in
the slave area.
- Each new window creates its own frame. Closing the window deletes its
frame. So there's no real distinction between frame and window (so I
go on talking about windows). Each window is maximized as far as
possible. This implies, that you never see the root window unless you
close all windows. Another consequence is that there are no minimized
or invisible windows. All windows in the current group are either in
the master or slave area.
- You can configure how many windows fit into the Master area. By
default it's only one. If more than one windows are allowed, they will
be displayed by splitting the master area vertically.
- The windows in the slave area are stacked by splitting the slave area
vertically.
- New windows appear in the master area and get the focus. If the master
area is full, the oldest master area window is prepended to the slave
area.
- If you close a master area window, the window on top of the slave area
enters the master area.
Now you have some functions to
- permute the last selected master area window with the currently
selected window.
- grow/shrink the master area width for let's say 15 pixels
- increase/decrease the number of master area windows
I think that's nearly all.
What do you think about it?
Best wishes,
Tassilo Horn (aka tsdh on irc)
Footnotes:
[1] http://dwm.suckless.org
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