/*!
Different focus policies:
<ul>
<li>ClickToFocus - Clicking into a window activates it. This is
also the default.
<li>FocusFollowsMouse - Moving the mouse pointer actively onto a
normal window activates it. For convenience, the desktop and
windows on the dock are excluded. They require clicking.
<li>FocusUnderMouse - The window that happens to be under the
mouse pointer becomes active. The invariant is: no window can
have focus that is not under the mouse. This also means that
Alt-Tab won't work properly and popup dialogs are usually
unsable with the keyboard. Note that the desktop and windows on
the dock are excluded for convenience. They get focus only when
clicking on it.
<li>FocusStrictlyUnderMouse - this is even worse than
FocusUnderMouse. Only the window under the mouse pointer is
active. If the mouse points nowhere, nothing has the focus. If
the mouse points onto the desktop, the desktop has focus. The
same holds for windows on the dock.
Note that FocusUnderMouse and FocusStrictlyUnderMouse are not
particulary useful. They are only provided for old-fashined
die-hard UNIX people ;-)
</ul>
*/
FocusPolicy=ClickToFocus | FocusFollowsMouse | FocusUnderMouse | FocusStrictlyUnderMouse
/**
Different Alt-Tab-Styles:
<ul>
<li> KDE - the recommended KDE style. Alt-Tab opens a nice icon
box that makes it easy to select the window you want to tab
to. The order automatically adjusts to the most recently used
windows. Note that KDE style does not work with the
FocusUnderMouse and FocusStrictlyUnderMouse focus
policies. Choose ClickToFocus or FocusFollowsMouse instead.
<li> CDE - the old-fashion CDE style. Alt-Tab cycles between
the windows in static order. The current window gets raised,
the previous window gets lowered.
</ul>
*/
AltTabStyle=KDE | CDE
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=54010
pasted everything from kwm. It works.
However, I don't know if this fits the new design or not. Maybe some
of the functions are accomplished elsewhere? I think Matthias needs
to take a look at this...
But like I said, it does work :-)
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=49849
which is called at the same places.
Mosfet: This is necessary because we are converting to not use QLayout
in clients. Without this, you can't get the right size for your windows.
Just implement it in your client and do your layout in it (surprise, eh ?)
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=49143
* title bar now tries to avoid to become completely obscured by other windows ;)
* moving of title bar flicker free (at least on my machine)
* all repaint problems fixed (those I knew of course), even the one on resize
* mousePosition (those arrowed cursors) now complete
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=48189
which want to be permanently visible.
I've used an XAtom called '_NET_AVOID_SPEC'. This of course can change
if need be. I think it's correct according to the wm spec, but the
wm spec seems to be empty on gnome.org, so who knows.
Windows can choose to be avoided by setting an XTextProperty
with one value, which can be either 'N', 'S', 'E', or 'W', according
to which screen edge they are anchored to.
kwin then sets its 'clientArea' rect appropriately, so that (in
theory at least) clients will not enter this area in some circumstances,
such as when being mapped for the first time.
You can see that this actually works if you start lots of konsoles. They
don't appear over the panel. I don't know what happens if you move the
panel, but I presume things will be screwed up, because I haven't
looked at that yet.
If you maximise a window, it'll still fill the screen, because the
implementation of maximise in kwin/client.cpp doesn't take account
of the workspace's clientArea rect. This is easy to fix, but I've
been awake for too long, so I'll do it after 42 winks.
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=46772
"Mouse emulation" (defaults to F12 currently) provides mouse emulation with
[Ctrl|Alt]-ArrowKeys. Unfortunatly, dragging isn't (technically) possible with
X, but at least normal clicks work with Space or Return.
svn path=/trunk/kdebase/kwin/; revision=35919