| Vtwm
The Virtual tab Window Manager 5.4.7 |
Powered by:![]() |
Subversion.
$ svn export
svn+ssh://cadaver.deadbeast.net/var/www/svn/vtwm/tags/5.4.7
(requires ssh access - committers only)
or access the source anonymously:
$ svn export http://cadaver.deadbeast.net/svn/vtwm/tags/5.4.7
You can also browse directly to the url above, although a
nicer interface
can be had via ViewVC.
Note: Firefox3 beta is complaining about a secure line, you can ignore this.
Vtwm today...
VTWM suports a fully configurable 3D interface.
Check out the "Vtwm and..." page for sample configuration files and
examples
of the interfaces users of Vtwm have made for you. In fact they're
using it
mostly on as daily base.
Variables and Bindings: Make VTWM work with you.
VTWM parses one of a variety of
resource
files. They are simple, plain-text
documents. Within a resource file, you may specify variables that set up overall traits like
GUI
features, auto-raising windows, screen panning, and the like. You may
also
bind nearly any combination of pointer buttons or keys to any number of
functions and contexts.
There is no configuration tool. Nobody's written one, and they
usually
end up crippling the potential, anyway.
VTWM maintains backward compatability with TWM, adds a slew of it's own
variables and functions, and can throw in m4 pre-processing, to boot!
Icon Managers: The badly-named feature.
Long before Microsoft presented the taskbar, TWM had the icon manager;
a
little window filled with buttons, each indicating the state of a
managed
window. By default, icon managers forward events to the indicated
application
window. Within this context, however, keys could be bound to navigation
functions, for fast access to managed windows. Pointer buttons can be
bound
to nearly any function you'd bind directly to an application window.
You can
have multiple icon managers, too, for visually segregated applications.
VTWM's footprint.
The virtual desktop and other features of version 5.4 haven't made it
another
bloated X client. It requires only Xlib, Xext, and Xmu, but depending
on
build configuration, also the Xpm, regex, and/or rplay libraries. It
can
still build and run under X11R4, and lose no self-supported
functionality.