Re: why run any window manager?
Re: why run any window manager?
- Subject: Re: why run any window manager?
- From: Randy Ford <email@hidden>
- Date: Mon, 19 May 2003 14:02:22 -0500
On Monday, May 19, 2003, at 12:30 PM, Max Waterman wrote:
Right. I, er, 'dislike' this behaviour. If I ask the window manager to
close a window, *it* should close it, not the application running in
the window.
When you click on the close button on the title of a window, you are
dealing with the window manager, not the app. The same is true if you
use a resize handle, maximize button, etc.: you are asking the window
manager to resize the window. Of course, in both cases, the window
manager will ask the app to do so. That way, the app can decide if it
needs to clean up before it closes the window, or, in the case of
resize, if it wants to allow the resize, and if it needs to move/resize
items in the window to handle the new size.
I believe that you are wanting to kill the windows connection to the X
server, not just close the window. Some windows managers provide a
mechanism to ask the X server to kill connections, but, since it may
have unintended effects, many don't. You can also use xkill(1)
yourself to ask the X server to kill the window. If you really want it
to look like quartz-wm is killing the connection, you can fool yourself
by adding xkill to the applications menu. Without parameters, it will
ask you to point and click on the window whose connection you wish to
kill.
randy.
_______________________________________________
x11-users mailing list | email@hidden
Help/Unsubscribe/Archives: http://www.lists.apple.com/mailman/listinfo/x11-users
X11 for Mac OS X FAQ: http://developer.apple.com/qa/qa2001/qa1232.html
Report issues, request features, feedback: http://developer.apple.com/bugreporter
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.