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.
the previous behaviour of 'menu-window'. 'menu-window' becomes the default
binding; use 'bind-mouse "1" menu-window-hidden' to restore old behaviour for
those who prefer.
OK sthen@ (long long time ago on a different version)
client search as different potential str matches are cycled through. If there's
interest, the only string that doesn't exist in the listing is the window's
class - that can be added of course, but it makes the line too long imho.
client_ctx in keypress and buttonpress event handlers; pass appropriate *ctx's
based on context.
While here, limit some globals, replace defines with appropriate variables and
fix some naming.
key press. This allows to remove a few hacks to duplicate functions only
for behaviour changes; now differing behaviours are pushed down to the
callback. Also will allow for previously unavailable actions to be bind-able
down the road.
the screen; adapted from an ancient diff from Sviatoslav Chagaev. Things
in this area will likely change, but put this in so it works now and
serves as a reminder.
mousefunc_menu_{client,cmd,group} into the respective
kbfunc_menu_{client,cmd,group} functions; simply pass a flag down from
config denoting mouse action behaviour.
active; while we already look at what's under the pointer, use this
information first, then look under the pointer (saving that round-trip).
This restores the active state to a client after restart even if the
pointer is not above it (and of course the pointer is not above another
client).