TWM
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: twm 1.0.11
Page Index
NAME
twm - Tab Window Manager for the X Window System
SYNTAX
twm [
-display dpy ] [
-s ]
[
-f initfile ] [
-v ]
DESCRIPTION
Twm is a window manager for the X Window System.
It provides
titlebars, shaped windows,
several forms of icon management, user-defined macro functions,
click-to-type and pointer-driven keyboard focus, and user-specified
key and pointer button bindings.
This program is usually started by the user's session manager or
startup script.
When used
from xdm(1)
or xinit(1) without a session manager,
twm is frequently executed in the foreground
as the last client.
When run this way, exiting twm causes the
session to be terminated (i.e., logged out).
By default, application windows are surrounded by a ``frame'' with a
titlebar at the top and a special border around the window.
The titlebar
contains the window's name, a rectangle that is lit when the window is
receiving keyboard input, and function boxes known as ``titlebuttons'' at
the left and right edges of the titlebar.
Pressing pointer Button1 (usually the left-most
button unless it has been changed with xmodmap) on a
titlebutton will invoke the function associated with the button.
In the default interface, windows are iconified by clicking (pressing
and then immediately releasing) the left titlebutton (which looks
like a Dot).
Conversely, windows are deiconified by clicking in the
associated icon or entry in the icon manager
(see description of the variable
ShowIconManager and of the function f.showiconmgr).
Windows are resized by pressing the right titlebutton (which resembles a
group of nested squares), dragging the pointer over edge that is to be
moved, and releasing the pointer when the outline of the window is the desired
size.
Similarly, windows are moved by pressing in the title or highlight
region, dragging a window outline to the new location, and then releasing
when the outline is in the desired position.
Just
clicking in the title or highlight region raises the window without moving it.
When new windows are created, twm will honor any size and location
information requested by the user (usually through -geometry
command line argument or resources for the individual applications).
Otherwise, an outline of the window's default size, its titlebar, and lines
dividing the
window into a 3x3 grid that track the pointer are displayed.
Clicking pointer Button1
will position the window at the current position and give it the default
size.
Pressing pointer Button2 (usually the middle pointer button)
and dragging the outline
will give the window its current position but allow the sides to be resized as
described above.
Clicking pointer Button3 (usually the right pointer button)
will give the window its current position but attempt to make it long enough
to touch the bottom the screen.
OPTIONS
Twm accepts the following command line options:
- -display dpy
-
This option specifies the X server to use.
- -s
-
This option indicates that only the default screen (as specified by
-display or by the DISPLAY environment variable) should be
managed.
By default, twm will attempt to manage
all screens on the display.
- -f filename
-
This option specifies the name of the startup file to use.
By default,
twm will look in the user's home directory for files
named .twmrc.num (where num is a screen number) or .twmrc.
- -v
-
This option indicates that twm should print error messages whenever
an unexpected X Error event is received.
This can be useful when debugging
applications but can be distracting in regular use.
CUSTOMIZATION
Much of twm's appearance and behavior can be controlled by providing
a startup file in one of the following locations (searched in order for
each screen being managed when twm begins):
- $HOME/.twmrc.screennumber
-
The screennumber is a small positive number (e.g.
0, 1, etc.)
representing the screen number (e.g., the last number in the DISPLAY environment
variable host:displaynum.screennum) that would be used to contact that
screen of the display.
This is intended for displays with multiple screens of
differing visual types.
- $HOME/.twmrc
-
This is the usual name for an individual user's startup file.
- /usr/share/X11/twm/system.twmrc
-
If neither of the preceding files are found, twm will look in this
file for a
default configuration.
This is often tailored by the site administrator to
provide convenient menus or familiar bindings for novice users.
If no startup files are found, twm will use the built-in defaults
described above.
The only resource used by twm is
bitmapFilePath for a colon-separated list of directories to search
when looking for bitmap files (for more information, see the Athena
Widgets manual and xrdb(1)).
Twm startup files are logically broken up into three types of
specifications: Variables, Bindings, Menus.
The
Variables section must come first and is used to describe the
fonts, colors, cursors, border widths, icon and window placement, highlighting,
autoraising, layout of titles, warping, use of the icon manager.
The Bindings section usually comes second and is used to specify
the functions that should be
to be invoked when keyboard and pointer buttons are pressed in
windows, icons, titles, and frames.
The Menus section gives any
user-defined menus (containing functions to be invoked or
commands to be executed).
Variable names and keywords are case-insensitive.
Strings must be surrounded
by double quote characters (e.g., "blue") and are case-sensitive.
A pound sign (#) outside
of a string causes the remainder of the line in which the character appears to
be treated as a comment.
VARIABLES
Many of the aspects of twm's user interface are controlled by variables
that may be set in the user's startup file.
Some of the options are
enabled or disabled simply by the presence of a particular keyword.
Other
options require keywords, numbers, strings, or lists of all of these.
Lists are surrounded by braces and are usually separated by
whitespace or a newline.
For example:
-
AutoRaise { "emacs" "XTerm" "Xmh" }
or
-
AutoRaise
{
"emacs"
"XTerm"
"Xmh"
}
When a variable containing a list of strings representing windows is searched
(e.g., to determine whether or not to enable autoraise as shown above), a string
must be an exact, case-sensitive match to
the window's name (given by the WM_NAME window property), resource name
or class name (both given by the WM_CLASS window property).
The preceding
example would enable autoraise on windows named ``emacs'' as well as any
xterm (since they are of class ``XTerm'') or xmh windows
(which are of class ``Xmh'').
String arguments that are interpreted as filenames (see the Pixmaps,
Cursors, and IconDirectory below) will
prepend the user's directory
(specified by the HOME environment variable) if the first character is a
tilde (~).
If, instead, the first character is a colon (:), the name is
assumed to refer to one of the internal bitmaps that are used to
create the default titlebars symbols: :xlogo
or :delete (both refer to the X logo),
:dot or :iconify (both refer to the dot),
:resize (the nested squares used by the resize button),
:menu (a page with lines),
and :question (the question mark used for non-existent
bitmap files).
The following variables may be specified at the top of a twm startup
file.
Lists of Window name prefix strings are indicated by win-list.
Optional arguments are shown in square brackets:
- AutoRaise { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of windows that should automatically be
raised whenever the pointer enters the window.
This action can be
interactively
enabled or disabled on individual windows using the function f.autoraise.
- AutoRelativeResize
-
This variable indicates that dragging out a window size (either when
initially sizing the window with pointer Button2 or when resizing it)
should not wait until the pointer has crossed the window edges.
Instead, moving
the pointer automatically causes the nearest edge or edges to move by the
same amount.
This allows the resizing of windows that extend off
the edge of the screen.
If the pointer is
in the center of the window, or if the resize is begun by pressing a
titlebutton, twm will still wait for the pointer to cross a window
edge (to prevent accidents).
This option is
particularly useful for people who like the press-drag-release method of
sweeping out window sizes.
- BorderColor string [{ wincolorlist }]
-
This variable specifies the default color of the border to be placed around
all
non-iconified windows, and may only be given within a Color,
Grayscale or
Monochrome list.
The optional wincolorlist specifies a list
of window and color name pairs for specifying particular border colors for
different types of windows.
For example:
-
-
BorderColor "gray50"
{
"XTerm" "red"
"xmh" "green"
}
-
The default is "black".
- BorderTileBackground string [{ wincolorlist }]
-
This variable specifies the default background color in the gray pattern
used in unhighlighted borders (only if NoHighlight hasn't been set),
and may only be given within a
Color,
Grayscale or
Monochrome list.
The optional wincolorlist allows per-window colors to be specified.
The default is "white".
- BorderTileForeground string [{ wincolorlist }]
-
This variable specifies the default foreground color in the gray pattern
used in unhighlighted borders (only
if NoHighlight hasn't been set), and may only be given within a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional wincolorlist allows
per-window colors to be specified.
The default is "black".
- BorderWidth pixels
-
This variable specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding
all client window frames if ClientBorderWidth has not been specified.
This value is also used to set the border size of windows created by twm
(such as the icon manager).
The default is 2.
- ButtonIndent pixels
-
This variable specifies the amount by which titlebuttons should be
indented on all sides.
Positive values cause the buttons to be smaller than
the window text and highlight area so that they stand out.
Setting this
and the TitleButtonBorderWidth variables to 0 makes titlebuttons be as
tall and wide as possible.
The default is 1.
- ClientBorderWidth
-
This variable indicates that border width of a window's frame should be set to
the initial border width of the window, rather than to the value of
BorderWidth.
- Color { colors-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of color assignments to be made if the default
display is capable of displaying more than simple black and white.
The
colors-list is made up of the following color variables and their values:
DefaultBackground,
DefaultForeground,
MenuBackground,
MenuForeground,
MenuTitleBackground,
MenuTitleForeground,
MenuShadowColor,
MenuBorderColor,
PointerForeground, and
PointerBackground.
The following
color variables may also be given a list of window and color name pairs to
allow per-window colors to be specified (see BorderColor for details):
BorderColor,
IconManagerHighlight,
BorderTitleBackground,
BorderTitleForeground,
TitleBackground,
TitleForeground,
IconBackground,
IconForeground,
IconBorderColor,
IconManagerBackground, and
IconManagerForeground.
For example:
-
-
Color
{
MenuBackground "gray50"
MenuForeground "blue"
BorderColor "red" { "XTerm" "yellow" }
TitleForeground "yellow"
TitleBackground "blue"
}
-
All of these color variables may also be specified for the Monochrome
variable, allowing the same initialization file to be used on both color and
monochrome displays.
- ConstrainedMoveTime milliseconds
-
This variable specifies the length of time between button clicks needed to
begin
a constrained move operation.
Double clicking within this amount
of time when invoking f.move will cause the window to be moved only
in a horizontal or vertical direction.
Setting this value to 0 will disable
constrained moves.
The default is 400 milliseconds.
- Cursors { cursor-list }
-
This variable specifies the glyphs that twm should use for various
pointer cursors.
Each cursor
may be defined either from the cursor font or from two bitmap files.
Shapes from the cursor font may be specified directly as:
-
cursorname "string"
-
where cursorname is one of the cursor names listed below, and
string is the name of a glyph as found in the file
/usr/include/X11/cursorfont.h
(without the ``XC_'' prefix).
If the cursor is to be defined
from bitmap files, the following syntax is used instead:
-
cursorname "image" "mask"
-
The image and mask strings specify the names of files containing
the glyph image and mask in bitmap(1) form.
The bitmap files are located in the same manner as icon bitmap files.
The following example shows the default cursor definitions:
-
-
Cursors
{
Frame "top_left_arrow"
Title "top_left_arrow"
Icon "top_left_arrow"
IconMgr "top_left_arrow"
Move "fleur"
Resize "fleur"
Menu "sb_left_arrow"
Button "hand2"
Wait "watch"
Select "dot"
Destroy "pirate"
}
- DecorateTransients
-
This variable indicates that transient windows (those containing a
WM_TRANSIENT_FOR property) should have titlebars.
By default, transients
are not reparented.
- DefaultBackground string
-
This variable specifies the background color to be used for sizing and
information windows.
The default is "white".
- DefaultForeground string
-
This variable specifies the foreground color to be used for sizing and
information windows.
The default is "black".
- DontIconifyByUnmapping { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of windows that should not be iconified by
simply unmapping the window (as would be the case if IconifyByUnmapping
had been set).
This is frequently used to force some windows to be treated
as icons while other windows are handled by the icon manager.
- DontMoveOff
-
This variable indicates that windows should not be allowed to be moved off the
screen.
It can be overridden by the f.forcemove function.
- DontSqueezeTitle [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that titlebars should not be squeezed to their
minimum size as described under SqueezeTitle below.
If the optional window list is supplied, only those windows will be
prevented from being squeezed.
- ForceIcons
-
This variable indicates that icon pixmaps specified in the Icons
variable should override any client-supplied pixmaps.
- FramePadding pixels
-
This variable specifies the distance between the titlebar decorations (the
button and text) and the window frame.
The default is 2 pixels.
- Grayscale { colors }
-
This variable specifies a list of color assignments that should be made if
the screen has a GrayScale default visual.
See the description of Colors.
- IconBackground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the background color of icons, and may
only be specified inside of a
Color,
Grayscale or
Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "white".
- IconBorderColor string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the color of the border used for icon windows, and
may only be specified inside of a
Color,
Grayscale or
Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "black".
- IconBorderWidth pixels
-
This variable specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding
icon windows.
The default is 2.
- IconDirectory string
-
This variable specifies the directory that should be searched if
if a bitmap file cannot be found in any of the directories
in the bitmapFilePath resource.
- IconFont string
-
This variable specifies the font to be used to display icon names within
icons.
The default is "variable".
- IconForeground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the foreground color to be used when displaying icons,
and may only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "black".
- IconifyByUnmapping [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that windows should be iconified by being unmapped
without trying to map any icons.
This assumes that the user will
remap the window through the icon manager, the f.warpto function, or
the TwmWindows menu.
If the optional win-list is provided, only those windows will be
iconified by simply unmapping.
Windows that have both this and the
IconManagerDontShow options set may not be accessible if no binding
to the TwmWindows menu is set in the user's startup file.
- IconManagerBackground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the background color to use for icon manager entries,
and may only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "white".
- IconManagerDontShow [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that the icon manager should not display any
windows.
If the optional win-list is given, only those windows will
not be displayed.
This variable is used to prevent windows that are rarely
iconified (such as xclock or xload) from taking up space in
the icon manager.
- IconManagerFont string
-
This variable specifies the font to be used when displaying icon manager
entries.
The default is "variable".
- IconManagerForeground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the foreground color to be used when displaying
icon manager entries, and may only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "black".
- IconManagerGeometry string [ columns ]
-
This variable specifies the geometry of the icon manager window.
The
string argument is standard geometry specification that indicates
the initial full size of the icon manager.
The icon manager window is
then broken into columns pieces and scaled according to the number
of entries in the icon manager.
Extra entries are wrapped to form
additional rows.
The default number of columns is 1.
- IconManagerHighlight string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the border color to be used when highlighting
the icon manager entry that currently has the focus,
and can only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
See the BorderColor
variable for a complete description of the win-list.
The default is "black".
- IconManagers { iconmgr-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of icon managers to create.
Each item in the
iconmgr-list has the following format:
-
"winname" ["iconname"] "geometry" columns
-
where winname is the name of the windows that should be put into this
icon manager, iconname is the name of that icon manager window's icon,
geometry is a standard geometry specification, and columns is
the number of columns in this icon manager as described in
IconManagerGeometry.
For example:
-
-
IconManagers
{
"XTerm" "=300x5+800+5" 5
"myhost" "=400x5+100+5" 2
}
-
Clients whose name or class is ``XTerm'' will have an entry created
in the ``XTerm'' icon manager.
Clients whose name was ``myhost'' would
be put into the ``myhost'' icon manager.
- IconManagerShow { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of windows that should appear in the icon
manager.
When used in conjunction with the IconManagerDontShow
variable, only the windows in this list will be shown in the icon manager.
- IconRegion geomstring vgrav hgrav gridwidth gridheight
-
This variable specifies an area on the root window in which icons are placed
if no specific icon location is provided by the client.
The geomstring
is a quoted string containing a standard geometry specification.
If more than one
IconRegion lines are given,
icons will be put into the succeeding icon regions when the first is full.
The vgrav argument should be either North or South and
control and is used to control whether icons are first filled in from the
top or bottom of the icon region.
Similarly, the hgrav argument should
be either East or West and is used to control whether icons should
be filled in from left from the right.
Icons are laid out within the region
in a grid with cells gridwidth pixels wide and gridheight pixels
high.
- Icons { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of window names and the bitmap filenames that
should be used as their icons.
For example:
-
-
Icons
{
"XTerm" "xterm.icon"
"xfd" "xfd_icon"
}
-
Windows that match ``XTerm'' and would not be iconified by unmapping, and
would try to use
the icon bitmap in the file ``xterm.icon''.
If ForceIcons is
specified, this bitmap will be used even if the client has requested its
own icon pixmap.
- InterpolateMenuColors
-
This variable indicates that menu entry colors should be interpolated between
entry specified colors.
In the example below:
-
-
Menu "mymenu"
{
"Title" ("black":"red") f.title
"entry1" f.nop
"entry2" f.nop
"entry3" ("white":"green") f.nop
"entry4" f.nop
"entry5" ("red":"white") f.nop
}
-
the foreground colors for
``entry1'' and
``entry2'' will be interpolated
between black and white, and the background colors between red and green.
Similarly, the foreground for ``entry4''
will be half-way between white and red,
and the background will be half-way between green and white.
- MakeTitle { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of windows on which a titlebar should be placed
and is used to request titles on specific windows when NoTitle has been
set.
- MaxWindowSize string
-
This variable specifies a geometry in which the width and height
give the maximum size for a given window.
This is typically used to
restrict windows to the size of the screen.
The default width is 32767 -
screen width.
The default height is 32767 - screen height.
- MenuBackground string
-
This variable specifies the background color used for menus,
and can only be specified inside of a
Color or Monochrome list.
The default is "white".
- MenuBorderColor string
-
This variable specifies the color of the menu border and can only be specified
inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The default is "black".
- MenuBorderWidth pixels
-
This variable specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding
menu windows.
The default is 2.
- MenuFont string
-
This variable specifies the font to use when displaying menus.
The default
is "variable".
- MenuForeground string
-
This variable specifies the foreground color used for menus,
and can only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The default is "black".
- MenuShadowColor string
-
This variable specifies the color of the shadow behind pull-down menus
and can only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The default is "black".
- MenuTitleBackground string
-
This variable specifies the background color for f.title entries in
menus, and
can only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The default is "white".
- MenuTitleForeground string
-
This variable specifies the foreground color for f.title entries in
menus and
can only be specified inside of a
Color or Monochrome list.
The default is "black".
- Monochrome { colors }
-
This variable specifies a list of color assignments that should be made if
the screen has a depth of 1.
See the description of Colors.
- MoveDelta pixels
-
This variable specifies the number of pixels the pointer
must move before the f.move function starts working.
Also
see the f.deltastop function.
The default is zero pixels.
- NoBackingStore
-
This variable indicates that twm's menus should not request backing
store to minimize repainting of menus.
This is typically
used with servers that can repaint faster than they can handle backing store.
- NoCaseSensitive
-
This variable indicates that case should be ignored when sorting icon names
in an icon manager.
This option is typically used with applications that
capitalize the first letter of their icon name.
- NoDefaults
-
This variable indicates that twm should not supply the default
titlebuttons and bindings.
This option should only be used if the startup
file contains a completely new set of bindings and definitions.
- NoGrabServer
-
This variable indicates that twm should not grab the server
when popping up menus and moving opaque windows.
- NoHighlight [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that borders should not be highlighted to track the
location of the pointer.
If the optional win-list is given, highlighting
will only be disabled for those windows.
When the border is highlighted, it will
be drawn in the current BorderColor.
When the border is not
highlighted, it will be stippled with a gray pattern using the
current BorderTileForeground and BorderTileBackground colors.
- NoIconManagers
-
This variable indicates that no icon manager should be created.
- NoMenuShadows
-
This variable indicates that menus should not have drop shadows drawn behind
them.
This is typically used with slower servers since it speeds up menu
drawing at the expense of making the menu slightly harder to read.
- NoRaiseOnDeiconify
-
This variable indicates that windows that are deiconified should not be
raised.
- NoRaiseOnMove
-
This variable indicates that windows should not be raised when moved.
This
is typically used to allow windows to slide underneath each other.
- NoRaiseOnResize
-
This variable indicates that windows should not be raised when resized.
This
is typically used to allow windows to be resized underneath each other.
- NoRaiseOnWarp
-
This variable indicates that windows should not be raised when the pointer
is warped into them with the f.warpto function.
If this option is set,
warping to an occluded window may result in the pointer ending up in the
occluding window instead the desired window (which causes unexpected behavior
with f.warpring).
- NoSaveUnders
-
This variable indicates that menus should not request save-unders to minimize
window repainting following menu selection.
It is typically used with displays
that can repaint faster than they can handle save-unders.
- NoStackMode [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that client window requests to change stacking order
should be ignored.
If the optional win-list is given, only requests on
those windows will be ignored.
This is typically used to prevent applications
from relentlessly popping themselves to the front of the window stack.
- NoTitle [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that windows should not have titlebars.
If the
optional win-list is given, only those windows will not have titlebars.
MakeTitle may be used with this option to force titlebars to be put
on specific windows.
- NoTitleFocus
-
This variable indicates that twm should not set keyboard input focus to
each window as it is entered.
Normally, twm sets the focus
so that focus and key events from the titlebar and
icon managers are delivered to the application.
If the pointer is moved
quickly and twm is slow to respond, input can be directed to the old
window instead of the new.
This option is typically
used to prevent this ``input lag'' and to
work around bugs in older applications that have problems with focus events.
- NoTitleHighlight [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that the highlight area of the titlebar, which is
used to indicate the window that currently has the input focus, should not
be displayed.
If the optional win-list is given, only those windows
will not have highlight areas.
This and the SqueezeTitle options
can be set to substantially reduce the amount of screen space required by
titlebars.
- OpaqueMove
-
This variable indicates that the f.move function should actually move
the window instead of just an outline so that the user can immediately see
what the window will look like in the new position.
This option is typically
used on fast displays (particularly if NoGrabServer is set).
- Pixmaps { pixmaps }
-
This variable specifies a list of pixmaps that define the appearance of various
images.
Each entry is a keyword indicating the pixmap to set, followed by a
string giving the name of the bitmap file.
The following pixmaps
may be specified:
-
-
Pixmaps
{
TitleHighlight "gray1"
}
-
The default for TitleHighlight is to use an even stipple pattern.
- Priority priority
-
This variable sets twm's priority.
priority should be an
unquoted, signed number (e.g., 999).
This variable has an effect only
if the server supports the SYNC extension.
- RandomPlacement
-
This variable indicates that windows with no specified geometry should
be placed in a pseudo-random location instead of having the user drag out
an outline.
- ResizeFont string
-
This variable specifies the font to be used for in the dimensions window when
resizing windows.
The default is "fixed".
- RestartPreviousState
-
This variable indicates that
twm should attempt to use the WM_STATE property on client windows
to tell which windows should be iconified and which should be left visible.
This is typically used to try to regenerate the state that the screen
was in before the previous window manager was shutdown.
- SaveColor { colors-list }
-
This variable indicates a list of color assignments to be stored as pixel
values in the root window property _MIT_PRIORITY_COLORS.
Clients may elect
to preserve these values when installing their own colormap.
Note that
use of this mechanism is a way an for application to avoid the "technicolor"
problem, whereby useful screen objects such as window borders and titlebars
disappear when a programs custom colors are installed by the window
manager.
For example:
-
-
SaveColor
{
BorderColor
TitleBackground
TitleForeground
"red"
"green"
"blue"
}
-
This would place on the root window 3 pixel values for borders and titlebars,
as well as the three color strings, all taken from the default colormap.
- ShowIconManager
-
This variable indicates that the icon manager window should be displayed when
twm is started.
It can always be brought up using the
f.showiconmgr function.
- SortIconManager
-
This variable indicates that entries in the icon manager should be
sorted alphabetically rather than by simply appending new windows to
the end.
- SqueezeTitle [{ squeeze-list }]
-
This variable indicates that twm should attempt to use the SHAPE
extension to make titlebars occupy only as much screen space as they need,
rather than extending all the way across the top of the window.
The optional squeeze-list
may be used to control the location of the squeezed titlebar along the
top of the window.
It contains entries of the form:
-
"name" justification num denom
-
where name is a window name, justification is either left,
center, or right, and num and denom
are numbers specifying a ratio giving the relative position about which
the titlebar is justified.
The ratio is measured from left to right if
the numerator is positive, and right to left if negative.
A denominator
of 0 indicates that the numerator should be measured in pixels.
For
convenience, the ratio 0/0 is the same as 1/2 for center and -1/1
for right.
For example:
-
-
SqueezeTitle
{
"XTerm" left 0 0
"xterm1" left 1 3
"xterm2" left 2 3
"oclock" center 0 0
"emacs" right 0 0
}
-
The DontSqueezeTitle list can be used to turn off squeezing on
certain titles.
- StartIconified [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that client windows should initially be left as
icons until explicitly deiconified by the user.
If the optional win-list
is given, only those windows will be started iconic.
This is useful for
programs that do not support an -iconic command line option or
resource.
- TitleBackground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the background color used in titlebars,
and may only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
The default is "white".
- TitleButtonBorderWidth pixels
-
This variable specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding
titlebuttons.
This is typically set to 0 to allow titlebuttons to take up as
much space as possible and to not have a border.
The default is 1.
- TitleFont string
-
This variable specifies the font to be used for displaying window names in
titlebars.
The default is "variable".
- TitleForeground string [{ win-list }]
-
This variable specifies the foreground color used in titlebars, and
may only be specified inside of a
Color, Grayscale or Monochrome list.
The optional win-list is a list of window names and colors so that
per-window colors may be specified.
The default is "black".
- TitlePadding pixels
-
This variable specifies the distance between the various buttons, text, and
highlight areas in the titlebar.
The default is 8 pixels.
- UnknownIcon string
-
This variable specifies the filename of a bitmap file to be
used as the default icon.
This bitmap will be used as the icon of all
clients which do not provide an icon bitmap and are not listed
in the Icons list.
- UsePPosition string
-
This variable specifies whether or not twm should honor
program-requested locations (given by the PPosition flag in the
WM_NORMAL_HINTS property) in the absence of a user-specified position.
The argument string may have one of three values: "off"
(the default)
indicating that twm
should ignore the program-supplied position,
"on" indicating that the position
should be used, and
"non-zero" indicating that the position should used if
it is other than (0,0).
The latter option is for working around a bug in
older toolkits.
- WarpCursor [{ win-list }]
-
This variable indicates that the pointer should be warped into windows when
they are deiconified.
If the optional win-list is given, the pointer
will only be warped when those windows are deiconified.
- WindowRing { win-list }
-
This variable specifies a list of windows along which the f.warpring
function cycles.
- WarpUnmapped
-
This variable indicates that the f.warpto function should deiconify
any iconified windows it encounters.
This is typically used to make a key
binding that will pop a particular window (such as xmh), no matter
where it is.
The default is for f.warpto to ignore iconified windows.
- XorValue number
-
This variable specifies the value to use when drawing window outlines for
moving and resizing.
This should be set to a value that will result in a
variety of
of distinguishable colors when exclusive-or'ed with the contents of the
user's typical screen.
Setting this variable to 1 often gives nice results
if adjacent colors in the default colormap are distinct.
By default,
twm will attempt to cause temporary lines to appear at the opposite
end of the colormap from the graphics.
- Zoom [ count ]
-
This variable indicates that outlines suggesting movement of a window
to and from its iconified state should be displayed whenever a window is
iconified or deiconified.
The optional count argument specifies the
number of outlines to be drawn.
The default count is 8.
The following variables must be set after the fonts have been
assigned, so it is usually best to put them at the end of the variables
or beginning of the bindings sections:
- DefaultFunction function
-
This variable specifies the function to be executed when a key or button
event is received for which no binding is provided.
This is typically
bound to f.nop, f.beep, or a menu containing window operations.
- WindowFunction function
-
This variable specifies the function to execute when a window is selected
from the TwmWindows menu.
If this variable is not set, the window
will be deiconified and raised.
BINDINGS
After the desired variables have been set, functions may be attached
titlebuttons and key and pointer buttons.
Titlebuttons may be added
from the left or right side and appear in the titlebar from left-to-right
according to the
order in which they are specified.
Key and pointer button
bindings may be given in any order.
Titlebuttons specifications must include the name of the pixmap to use in
the button box and the function to be invoked when a pointer button is
pressed within them:
-
LeftTitleButton "bitmapname" = function
or
-
RightTitleButton "bitmapname" = function
The bitmapname may refer to one of the built-in bitmaps
(which are scaled to match TitleFont) by using the appropriate
colon-prefixed name described above.
Key and pointer button specifications must give the modifiers that must
be pressed, over which parts of the screen the pointer must be, and what
function is to be invoked.
Keys are given as strings containing the
appropriate
keysym name; buttons are given as the keywords Button1-Button5:
-
"FP1" = modlist : context : function
Button1 = modlist : context : function
The modlist is any combination of the modifier names shift,
control, lock, meta, mod1, mod2, mod3,
mod4, or mod5 (which may be abbreviated as
s, c, l, m, m1, m2, m3, m4,
m5, respectively) separated by a vertical bar (|).
Similarly, the context is any combination of
window,
title,
icon,
root,
frame,
iconmgr, their first letters (iconmgr abbreviation is m),
or all,
separated by a vertical bar.
The function is any of the f.
keywords described below.
For example, the default startup
file contains the following bindings:
-
Button1 = : root : f.menu "TwmWindows"
Button1 = m : window | icon : f.function "move-or-lower"
Button2 = m : window | icon : f.iconify
Button3 = m : window | icon : f.function "move-or-raise"
Button1 = : title : f.function "move-or-raise"
Button2 = : title : f.raiselower
Button1 = : icon : f.function "move-or-iconify"
Button2 = : icon : f.iconify
Button1 = : iconmgr : f.iconify
Button2 = : iconmgr : f.iconify
A user who wanted to be able to manipulate windows from the keyboard could
use the following bindings:
-
"F1" = : all : f.iconify
"F2" = : all : f.raiselower
"F3" = : all : f.warpring "next"
"F4" = : all : f.warpto "xmh"
"F5" = : all : f.warpto "emacs"
"F6" = : all : f.colormap "next"
"F7" = : all : f.colormap "default"
"F20" = : all : f.warptoscreen "next"
"Left" = m : all : f.backiconmgr
"Right" = m | s : all : f.forwiconmgr
"Up" = m : all : f.upiconmgr
"Down" = m | s : all : f.downiconmgr
Twm provides many more window manipulation primitives than can be
conveniently stored in a titlebar, menu, or set of key bindings.
Although
a small set of defaults are supplied (unless the NoDefaults is
specified), most users will want to have their most common operations
bound to key and button strokes.
To do this, twm associates names
with each of the primitives and provides user-defined functions for
building higher level primitives and menus for interactively selecting
among groups of functions.
User-defined functions contain the name by which they are referenced in
calls to f.function and a list of other functions to execute.
For
example:
-
Function "move-or-lower" { f.move f.deltastop f.lower }
Function "move-or-raise" { f.move f.deltastop f.raise }
Function "move-or-iconify" { f.move f.deltastop f.iconify }
Function "restore-colormap" { f.colormap "default" f.lower }
The function name must be used in f.function exactly as it appears in
the function specification.
In the descriptions below, if the function is said to operate on the selected
window, but is invoked from a root menu, the cursor will be changed to
the Select cursor and the next window to receive a button press will
be chosen:
- ! string
-
This is an abbreviation for f.exec string.
- f.autoraise
-
This function toggles whether or not the selected window is raised whenever
entered by the pointer.
See the description of the variable AutoRaise.
- f.backiconmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the previous column in the
current icon manager, wrapping back to the previous row if necessary.
f.beep -
This function sounds the keyboard bell.
- f.bottomzoom
-
This function is similar to the f.fullzoom function, but
resizes the window to fill only the bottom half of the screen.
- f.circledown
-
This function lowers the top-most window that occludes another window.
- f.circleup
-
This function raises the bottom-most window that is occluded by another window.
- f.colormap string
-
This function rotates the colormaps (obtained from the WM_COLORMAP_WINDOWS
property on the window) that twm will display when the pointer
is in this window.
The argument string may have one of the following
values: "next", "prev", and "default".
It should be noted
here that in general, the installed colormap is determined by keyboard focus.
A pointer driven keyboard focus will install a private colormap upon entry
of the window owning the colormap.
Using the click to type model, private
colormaps will not be installed until the user presses a mouse button on
the target window.
- f.deiconify
-
This function deiconifies the selected window.
If the window is not an icon,
this function does nothing.
- f.delete
-
This function sends the WM_DELETE_WINDOW message to the selected window if
the client application has requested it through the WM_PROTOCOLS window
property.
The application is supposed to respond to the message by removing
the indicated window.
If the window has not requested
WM_DELETE_WINDOW messages, the keyboard bell will be rung indicating that
the user should choose an alternative method.
Note this is very different
from f.destroy.
The intent here is to delete a single window, not
necessarily the entire application.
- f.deltastop
-
This function allows a user-defined function to be aborted if the pointer has
been moved more than MoveDelta pixels.
See the example definition
given for Function "move-or-raise" at the beginning of the section.
- f.destroy
-
This function instructs the X server to close the display connection of the
client that created the selected window.
This should only be used as a last
resort for shutting down runaway clients.
See also f.delete.
- f.downiconmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the next row in the current icon manger,
wrapping to the beginning of the next column if necessary.
f.exec string -
This function passes the argument string to /bin/sh for execution.
In multiscreen mode, if string starts a new X client without
giving a display argument, the client will appear on the screen from
which this function was invoked.
- f.focus
-
This function toggles the keyboard focus of the server to the
selected window, changing the focus rule from pointer-driven if necessary.
If the selected window already was focused, this function executes an
f.unfocus.
- f.forcemove
-
This function is like f.move except that it ignores the DontMoveOff
variable.
- f.forwiconmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the next column in the current icon
manager, wrapping to the beginning of the next row if necessary.
f.fullzoom -
This function resizes the selected window to the full size of the display or
else restores the original size if the window was already zoomed.
- f.function string
-
This function executes the user-defined function whose name is specified
by the argument string.
- f.hbzoom
-
This function is a synonym for f.bottomzoom.
- f.hideiconmgr
-
This function unmaps the current icon manager.
- f.horizoom
-
This variable is similar to the f.zoom function except that the
selected window is resized to the full width of the display.
- f.htzoom
-
This function is a synonym for f.topzoom.
- f.hzoom
-
This function is a synonym for f.horizoom.
- f.iconify
-
This function iconifies or deiconifies the selected window or icon,
respectively.
- f.identify
-
This function displays a summary of the name and geometry of the
selected window.
If the server supports the SYNC extension, the priority
of the client owning the window is also displayed.
Clicking the pointer or pressing a key in the window
will dismiss it.
- f.lefticonmgr
-
This function similar to
f.backiconmgr except that wrapping does not
change rows.
- f.leftzoom
-
This variable is similar to the f.bottomzoom function but causes
the selected window is only resized to the left half of the display.
- f.lower
-
This function lowers the selected window.
- f.menu string
-
This function invokes the menu specified by the argument string.
Cascaded menus may be built by nesting calls to f.menu.
- f.move
-
This function drags an outline of the selected window (or the window itself
if the OpaqueMove variable is set) until the invoking pointer button
is released.
Double clicking within the number of milliseconds given by
ConstrainedMoveTime warps
the pointer to the center of the window and
constrains the move to be either horizontal or vertical depending on which
grid line is crossed.
To abort a move, press another button before releasing the
first button.
- f.nexticonmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the next icon manager containing any windows
on the current or any succeeding screen.
f.nop -
This function does nothing and is typically used with the DefaultFunction
or WindowFunction variables or to introduce blank lines in menus.
- f.previconmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the previous icon manager containing any
windows on the current or preceding screens.
f.priority string -
This function sets the priority of the client owning the selected window to
the numeric value of the argument string, which should be a signed
integer in double quotes (e.g., "999" ).
This function has an effect only
if the server supports the SYNC extension.
- f.quit
-
This function causes twm to restore the window's borders and exit.
If
twm is the first client invoked from xdm, this will result in a
server reset.
- f.raise
-
This function raises the selected window.
- f.raiselower
-
This function raises the selected window to the top of the stacking order if
it is occluded by any windows, otherwise the window will be lowered.
- f.refresh
-
This function causes all windows to be refreshed.
- f.resize
-
This function displays an outline of the selected window.
Crossing a border
(or setting AutoRelativeResize) will cause the outline to begin to
rubber band until the invoking button is released.
To abort a resize,
press another button before releasing the first button.
- f.restart
-
This function kills and restarts twm.
- f.startwm string
-
This function kills twm and starts another window manager, as
specified by string.
- f.righticonmgr
-
This function is similar to
f.nexticonmgr except that wrapping does
not change rows.
- f.rightzoom
-
This variable is similar to the f.bottomzoom function except that
the selected window is only resized to the right half of the display.
- f.saveyourself
-
This function sends a WM_SAVEYOURSELF message to the selected window if it
has requested the message in its WM_PROTOCOLS window property.
Clients that
accept this message are supposed to checkpoint all state associated with the
window and update the WM_COMMAND property as specified in the ICCCM.
If
the selected window has not selected for this message, the keyboard bell
will be rung.
- f.showiconmgr
-
This function maps the current icon manager.
- f.sorticonmgr
-
This function sorts the entries in the current icon manager alphabetically.
See the variable SortIconManager.
- f.title
-
This function provides a centered, unselectable item in a menu definition.
It
should not be used in any other context.
- f.topzoom
-
This variable is similar to the f.bottomzoom function except that
the selected window is only resized to the top half of the display.
- f.unfocus
-
This function resets the focus back to pointer-driven.
This should be used
when a focused window is no longer desired.
- f.upiconmgr
-
This function warps the pointer to the previous row in the current icon
manager, wrapping to the last row in the same column if necessary.
f.vlzoom -
This function is a synonym for f.leftzoom.
- f.vrzoom
-
This function is a synonym for f.rightzoom.
- f.warpring string
-
This function warps the pointer to the next or previous window (as indicated
by the argument string, which may be "next" or "prev")
specified in the WindowRing variable.
- f.warpto string
-
This function warps the pointer to the window which has a name or class
that matches string.
If the window is iconified, it will be deiconified
if the variable WarpUnmapped is set or else ignored.
- f.warptoiconmgr string
-
This function warps the pointer to the icon manager entry
associated with the window containing the pointer in the icon manager
specified by the argument string.
If string is empty (i.e., ""),
the current icon manager is chosen.
- f.warptoscreen string
-
This function warps the pointer to the screen specified by the
argument string.
String may be a number (e.g., "0" or
"1"), the word "next" (indicating the current screen plus 1,
skipping over any unmanaged screens),
the word "back" (indicating the current screen minus 1, skipping over
any unmanaged screens), or the word
"prev" (indicating the last screen visited.
- f.winrefresh
-
This function is similar to the f.refresh function except that only the
selected window is refreshed.
- f.zoom
-
This function is similar to the f.fullzoom function, except that
the only the height of the selected window is changed.
MENUS
Functions may be grouped and interactively selected using pop-up
(when bound to a pointer button) or pull-down (when associated
with a titlebutton) menus.
Each menu specification contains the name of the
menu as it will be referred to by f.menu, optional default
foreground and background colors, the list of item names and the functions
they should invoke, and optional foreground and background colors for
individual items:
-
Menu "menuname" [ ("deffore":"defback") ]
{
string1 [ ("fore1":"backn")] function1
string2 [ ("fore2":"backn")] function2
.
.
.
stringN [ ("foreN":"backN")] functionN
}
The menuname is case-sensitive.
The optional deffore and defback arguments specify the foreground
and background colors used on a color display
to highlight menu entries.
The string portion
of each menu entry will be the text which will appear in the menu.
The optional fore and back arguments specify the foreground
and background colors of the menu entry when the pointer is not in
the entry.
These colors will only be used on a color display.
The
default is to use the colors specified by the
MenuForeground and MenuBackground variables.
The function portion of the menu entry is one of the functions,
including any user-defined functions, or additional menus.
There is a special menu named TwmWindows which contains the names of
all of the client and twm-supplied windows.
Selecting an entry will
cause the
WindowFunction to be executed on that window.
If WindowFunction
hasn't been set, the window will be deiconified and raised.
ICONS
Twm supports several different ways of manipulating iconified windows.
The common pixmap-and-text style may be laid out by hand or automatically
arranged as described by the
IconRegion variable.
In addition, a
terse grid of icon names, called an icon manager, provides a more efficient
use of screen space as well as the ability to navigate among windows from
the keyboard.
An icon manager is a window that contains names of selected or all
windows currently on the display.
In addition to the window name,
a small button using the default iconify symbol will be displayed to the
left of the name when the window is iconified.
By default, clicking on an
entry in the icon manager performs f.iconify.
To change the actions taken in the icon manager, use the
the iconmgr context when specifying button and keyboard bindings.
Moving the pointer into the icon manager also directs keyboard focus to
the indicated window (setting the focus explicitly or else sending synthetic
events NoTitleFocus is set).
Using the f.upiconmgr, f.downiconmgr
f.lefticonmgr, and
f.righticonmgr functions,
the input focus can be changed between windows directly from the keyboard.
BUGS
The resource manager should have been used instead of all of the window
lists.
The IconRegion variable should take a list.
Double clicking very fast to get the constrained move function will sometimes
cause the window to move, even though the pointer is not moved.
If IconifyByUnmapping is on and windows are listed in
IconManagerDontShow but not in DontIconifyByUnmapping,
they may be lost if they are iconified and no bindings to
f.menu "TwmWindows" or f.warpto are setup.
FILES
$HOME/.twmrc.<screen number>
$HOME/.twmrc
/usr/share/X11/twm/system.twmrc
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
- DISPLAY
-
This variable is used to determine which X server to use.
It is also set
during f.exec so that programs come up on the proper screen.
- HOME
-
This variable is used as the prefix for files that begin with a tilde and
for locating the twm startup file.
SEE ALSO
X(7),
Xserver(1),
xdm(1),
xrdb(1)
AUTHORS
Tom LaStrange, Solbourne Computer; Jim Fulton, MIT X Consortium;
Steve Pitschke, Stardent Computer; Keith Packard, MIT X Consortium;
Dave Sternlicht, MIT X Consortium; Dave Payne, Apple Computer.