> - odd condition/test in PF lexer
> (and other lexers too)
>
> This commit rectifies earlier change:
>
> in the lex... even inside quotes, a \ followed by space or tab should
> expand to space or tab, and a \ followed by newline should be ignored
> (as a line continuation). compatible with the needs of hoststated
> (which has the most strict quoted string requirements), and ifstated
> (where one commonly does line continuations in strings).
>
> OK deraadt@, OK millert@
containing {P,US}Position requests where they are explicitly set to 'ignore' in
cwmrc(5); clients are unaware that their border will be altered (removed in
this case) when calcuating position and thus end up a factor of their original
border width off once mapped by cwm(1). cwm(1) will essentially shift the
client to the edge if the original request's position and border match.
Window offset noticed by at least Andre Stoebe via bugs@, and others since
(and likely before). Thanks!
u_exec, but the introduction of re-exec'ing the previous invocation of cwm if
'exec_wm' failed missed the 'exec' failing path. Will likely split out as a
proper fix.
Odd behaviour reported by Ve Telko.
which one may configure (wm <name> <path_and_args>) (and choose) specific
window managers to replace the running one. 'wm cwm cwm' is included by
default.
No objections and seems sensible to sthen.
into the keyrelease event, only performing what's actually needed for each;
should result in much fewer events against keyreleases. No intended behaviour
change.
Additionally, like we do for group membership, grab the keyboard only when
required for cycling.
close to cwm's 'ignore'.
Roughly based on an initial diff from Walter Alejandro Iglesias, but with
support for both Atoms and without cwm-based bindings.
re-proposed by Julien Steinhauser with an updated diff. Apparently this was in
the original calmnwm.
However, expand the original idea and let clients 'snap' to edges instead,
neatly allowing key bindings that snap to adjacent edges (i.e. corners) as
well. No default bindings assigned.
*and* window.) of mousefunc.c. When a client destroys itself while we are
moving or resizing it, XWindowEvent() blocks. Found the hard way by Anton
Lazarov, and Lea°hNeukirchen found the right bit to revert - thanks! Reverting
since the reason to switch from XMaskEvent was unclear.