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comp / comp.misc / Re: getting the most out of TWM

SubjectAuthor
* getting the most out of TWMRetrograde
+* Re: getting the most out of TWMcandycanearter07
|`* Re: getting the most out of TWMD
| `- Re: getting the most out of TWMcandycanearter07
+* Re: getting the most out of TWMMike Spencer
|+* Re: getting the most out of TWMAharon Robbins
||+* Re: getting the most out of TWMMike Spencer
|||`* Re: getting the most out of TWMAharon Robbins
||| `* Re: getting the most out of TWMMike Spencer
|||  `- Re: getting the most out of TWMJohanne Fairchild
||+* Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
|||`- Re: getting the most out of TWMBozo User
||`* xearth on xfce (was: Re: getting the most out of TWM)vallor
|| `- Re: xearth on xfce (was: Re: getting the most out of TWM)Retrograde
|`* Re: getting the most out of TWMBozo User
| `- Re: getting the most out of TWMJohn McCue
+- Re: getting the most out of TWMJohn McCue
+* Re: getting the most out of TWMScott Alfter
|`* Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
| `* Re: getting the most out of TWMDan Espen
|  `* Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
|   `* Re: getting the most out of TWMMike Spencer
|    `* Re: getting the most out of TWMThe Real Bev
|     +* Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
|     |`* Re: getting the most out of TWMThe Real Bev
|     | `* Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
|     |  +* Re: getting the most out of TWMThe Real Bev
|     |  |`- Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro
|     |  `- Re: getting the most out of TWMcandycanearter07
|     `- Re: getting the most out of TWMMike Spencer
`* Re: getting the most out of TWMScott Dorsey
 `- Re: getting the most out of TWMLawrence D'Oliveiro

Pages:12
Subject: getting the most out of TWM
From: Retrograde
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Date: Fri, 12 Jul 2024 21:35 UTC
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Subject: getting the most out of TWM
Newsgroups: comp.misc
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From the «hey, default» department:
Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11’s default window manager
Author: Thom Holwerda
Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/

Graham’s TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades or so and still isn’t
even remotely as old as TWM itself, and in 2021 they published an updated
version with even more information, tips, and tricks for TWM[2]. The Tab Window
Manager finds its origins in the lat 1980s, and has been the default window
manager for the X Windowing System for a long time, now, too. Yet, few people
know it exists – how many people even know X has a default window manager? –
and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.

OK, so TWM is fairly easy to configure but alot of people, upon seeing the
default config, scream ‘Ugh, thats awful!’ and head off to the ports tree or
their distro sources in search of the latest and greatest uber desktop
environment.

There are some hardcore TWM fans and mimimalists however who stick around and
get to liking the basic feel of TWM. Then they start to mod it and create
their own custom dekstop. All part of the fun in Unix :).
↫ Graham’s TWM page[1]

I’ll admit I have never used TWM properly, and didn’t know it could be themed
at all. I feel very compelled to spend some time with it now, because I’ve
always liked the by-now classic design where the right-click desktop menu
serves as the central location for all your interactions with the system. There
are quite a few more advanced, up-to-date forks of TWM as well, but the idea of
sticking to the actual default X window manager has a certain charm.

I almost am too afraid to ask, because the answer on OSNews to these sorts of
questions is almost always “yes” – do we have any TWM users in the audience?
I’m extremely curious to find out if TWM actually has a reason to exist at this
point, or if, in 2024, it’s just junk code in the X.org source repository,
because I’m looking at some of these screenshots and I feel a very strong urge
to give it a serious go.

Links:
[1]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm/twmrc.htm (link)
[2]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm2/Grahams_TWM_page2.html (link)

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: candycanearter07
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: the-candyden-of-code
Date: Sat, 13 Jul 2024 14:00 UTC
References: 1
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid (candycanearter07)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sat, 13 Jul 2024 14:00:04 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: the-candyden-of-code
Lines: 49
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Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> wrote at 21:35 this Friday (GMT):
> From the «hey, default» department:
> Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11’s default window manager
> Author: Thom Holwerda
> Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
> Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>
> Graham’s TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades or so and still isn’t
> even remotely as old as TWM itself, and in 2021 they published an updated
> version with even more information, tips, and tricks for TWM[2]. The Tab Window
> Manager finds its origins in the lat 1980s, and has been the default window
> manager for the X Windowing System for a long time, now, too. Yet, few people
> know it exists – how many people even know X has a default window manager? –
> and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.
>
> OK, so TWM is fairly easy to configure but alot of people, upon seeing the
> default config, scream ‘Ugh, thats awful!’ and head off to the ports tree or
> their distro sources in search of the latest and greatest uber desktop
> environment.
>
> There are some hardcore TWM fans and mimimalists however who stick around and
> get to liking the basic feel of TWM. Then they start to mod it and create
> their own custom dekstop. All part of the fun in Unix :).
> ↫ Graham’s TWM page[1]
>
> I’ll admit I have never used TWM properly, and didn’t know it could be themed
> at all. I feel very compelled to spend some time with it now, because I’ve
> always liked the by-now classic design where the right-click desktop menu
> serves as the central location for all your interactions with the system. There
> are quite a few more advanced, up-to-date forks of TWM as well, but the idea of
> sticking to the actual default X window manager has a certain charm.
>
> I almost am too afraid to ask, because the answer on OSNews to these sorts of
> questions is almost always “yes” – do we have any TWM users in the audience?
> I’m extremely curious to find out if TWM actually has a reason to exist at this
> point, or if, in 2024, it’s just junk code in the X.org source repository,
> because I’m looking at some of these screenshots and I feel a very strong urge
> to give it a serious go.
>
> Links:
> [1]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm/twmrc.htm (link)
> [2]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm2/Grahams_TWM_page2.html (link)

Interesting. I think I tried TWM during my search for "the perfect
desktop environment" and passed on it pretty quick. If it's as
customizable as claimed here, I might give it another shot.
--
user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Mike Spencer
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Date: Sat, 13 Jul 2024 21:06 UTC
References: 1
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 13 Jul 2024 18:06:51 -0300
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
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Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> writes:

> Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>
> Graham's TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades or so and
> still isn't even remotely as old as TWM itself....few people know it
> exists -- how many people even know X has a default window manager?
> -- and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.

I've been using twm since 1999. My very first Linux install (Caldera)
came up with KDE and XEmacs by default. I had used uwm -- even fewer
frills that twm -- on Unix guest accounts for a decade before that.
So real soon, switched to Slackware, GNU Emacs and twm. Never looked
back.

An annoyance I've encountered with twm is that in more recent
Linuxen, programs have specs for their own icons. So, e.g., when you
iconify xterm, Seamonkey or Firefox, you get great, huge icons rather
than minimal ones just big enough to hold the related window's title.

I keep a column of icons stacked down the left side of my screen --
emacsen, xterms some of which hold running apps such as wicd-curses,
dmesg -w or tail -f, Seamonkey etc. and a non-iconified xclock. The
icons are all small and the column tidy. Huge icons screw it up.

Tnx to Ivan Shmakov (comp.misc, 09 Sep 2017) I learned how to fix
that. In .twmrc I have:

ForceIcons
Icons {
"UXTerm" "vlines2"
"XTerm" "vlines2"
"Firefox" "vlines2"
"SeaMonkey" "vlines2"
"Emacs" "vlines2"
}

where the left column is what is returned by xprop(1) for a given
window and my be camel case:

WM_CLASS(STRING) = "Navigator", "SeaMonkey"

With this fix in .twmrc, all icons are just big enough to hold the
window title.

The only other annoyance is that some programs won't run unless they
can find a system "tray". I use wicd-curses (for which I have been
reproved somewhat snarkily) because NetworkManager(8) is one of them
and wicd-curses(8) works fine in an xterm.

I see there is some stuff about "stand-alone tray" usable with twm but
I haven't yet pursued it.

BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
if I ever had it.

> Links:
>
> [1]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm/twmrc.htm (link)
> [2]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm2/Grahams_TWM_page2.html (link)

Thanks for the pointers. Configuring twm is "easy" but the details
tend to be opaque. Examples such and those are invaluable.

--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Aharon Robbins
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: The Friends of Rational Range Interpretation
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 03:12 UTC
References: 1 2
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!usenet.goja.nl.eu.org!dotsrc.org!filter.dotsrc.org!news.dotsrc.org!not-for-mail
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
References: <6691a1ad$2$1439839$882e4bbb@reader.netnews.com> <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>
Organization: The Friends of Rational Range Interpretation
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From: arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins)
Originator: arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins)
Date: 14 Jul 2024 03:12:10 GMT
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In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
>I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
>if I ever had it.

I have put xearth 1.1 up on my site: https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz.

Get it while it's hot, I may not leave it there forever.

Enjoy,

Arnold

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Mike Spencer
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 05:39 UTC
References: 1 2 3
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 14 Jul 2024 02:39:29 -0300
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
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arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:

> In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>
>> BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>> location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
>> I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
>> if I ever had it.
>
> I have put xearth 1.1 up on my site: https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz.
>
> Get it while it's hot, I may not leave it there forever.

Excellent! Splendid! Compiles and behaves as exected with my
existing markerfile and usual command line. And I'll have it if/when
the dreaded departure from the trailing edge of technology to 64 bits
occurs.

And new features to play with as well!

I usually have a north polar display (-pos "fixed 90 -63.8") with
only Nova Scotia, Ulan Bator and the pole marked.

TYVM!

--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: D
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 09:59 UTC
References: 1 2
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From: nospam@example.net (D)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 11:59:32 +0200
Organization: i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID: <6df09868-2844-33ea-5d76-990a450e29bd@example.net>
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On Sat, 13 Jul 2024, candycanearter07 wrote:

> Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> wrote at 21:35 this Friday (GMT):
>> From the «hey, default» department:
>> Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11’s default window manager
>> Author: Thom Holwerda
>> Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
>> Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>>
>> Graham’s TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades or so and still isn’t
>> even remotely as old as TWM itself, and in 2021 they published an updated
>> version with even more information, tips, and tricks for TWM[2]. The Tab Window
>> Manager finds its origins in the lat 1980s, and has been the default window
>> manager for the X Windowing System for a long time, now, too. Yet, few people
>> know it exists – how many people even know X has a default window manager? –
>> and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.
>>
>> OK, so TWM is fairly easy to configure but alot of people, upon seeing the
>> default config, scream ‘Ugh, thats awful!’ and head off to the ports tree or
>> their distro sources in search of the latest and greatest uber desktop
>> environment.
>>
>> There are some hardcore TWM fans and mimimalists however who stick around and
>> get to liking the basic feel of TWM. Then they start to mod it and create
>> their own custom dekstop. All part of the fun in Unix :).
>> ↫ Graham’s TWM page[1]
>>
>> I’ll admit I have never used TWM properly, and didn’t know it could be themed
>> at all. I feel very compelled to spend some time with it now, because I’ve
>> always liked the by-now classic design where the right-click desktop menu
>> serves as the central location for all your interactions with the system. There
>> are quite a few more advanced, up-to-date forks of TWM as well, but the idea of
>> sticking to the actual default X window manager has a certain charm.
>>
>> I almost am too afraid to ask, because the answer on OSNews to these sorts of
>> questions is almost always “yes” – do we have any TWM users in the audience?
>> I’m extremely curious to find out if TWM actually has a reason to exist at this
>> point, or if, in 2024, it’s just junk code in the X.org source repository,
>> because I’m looking at some of these screenshots and I feel a very strong urge
>> to give it a serious go.
>>
>> Links:
>> [1]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm/twmrc.htm (link)
>> [2]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm2/Grahams_TWM_page2.html (link)
>
>
> Interesting. I think I tried TWM during my search for "the perfect
> desktop environment" and passed on it pretty quick. If it's as
> customizable as claimed here, I might give it another shot.
>

Why did you pass on it?

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: candycanearter07
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: the-candyden-of-code
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 14:00 UTC
References: 1 2 3
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: candycanearter07@candycanearter07.nomail.afraid (candycanearter07)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 14:00:04 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: the-candyden-of-code
Lines: 69
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D <nospam@example.net> wrote at 09:59 this Sunday (GMT):
> This message is in MIME format. The first part should be readable text,
> while the remaining parts are likely unreadable without MIME-aware tools.
>
> --8323328-1325646568-1720951175=:17764
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>
> On Sat, 13 Jul 2024, candycanearter07 wrote:
>
>> Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> wrote at 21:35 this Friday (GMT):
>>> From the «hey, default» department:
>>> Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11’s default window manager
>>> Author: Thom Holwerda
>>> Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
>>> Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>>>
>>> Graham’s TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades or so and still isn’t
>>> even remotely as old as TWM itself, and in 2021 they published an updated
>>> version with even more information, tips, and tricks for TWM[2]. The Tab Window
>>> Manager finds its origins in the lat 1980s, and has been the default window
>>> manager for the X Windowing System for a long time, now, too. Yet, few people
>>> know it exists – how many people even know X has a default window manager? –
>>> and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.
>>>
>>> OK, so TWM is fairly easy to configure but alot of people, upon seeing the
>>> default config, scream ‘Ugh, thats awful!’ and head off to the ports tree or
>>> their distro sources in search of the latest and greatest uber desktop
>>> environment.
>>>
>>> There are some hardcore TWM fans and mimimalists however who stick around and
>>> get to liking the basic feel of TWM. Then they start to mod it and create
>>> their own custom dekstop. All part of the fun in Unix :).
>>> ↫ Graham’s TWM page[1]
>>>
>>> I’ll admit I have never used TWM properly, and didn’t know it could be themed
>>> at all. I feel very compelled to spend some time with it now, because I’ve
>>> always liked the by-now classic design where the right-click desktop menu
>>> serves as the central location for all your interactions with the system. There
>>> are quite a few more advanced, up-to-date forks of TWM as well, but the idea of
>>> sticking to the actual default X window manager has a certain charm.
>>>
>>> I almost am too afraid to ask, because the answer on OSNews to these sorts of
>>> questions is almost always “yes” – do we have any TWM users in the audience?
>>> I’m extremely curious to find out if TWM actually has a reason to exist at this
>>> point, or if, in 2024, it’s just junk code in the X.org source repository,
>>> because I’m looking at some of these screenshots and I feel a very strong urge
>>> to give it a serious go.
>>>
>>> Links:
>>> [1]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm/twmrc.htm (link)
>>> [2]: https://www.cpcnw.co.uk/twm2/Grahams_TWM_page2.html (link)
>>
>>
>> Interesting. I think I tried TWM during my search for "the perfect
>> desktop environment" and passed on it pretty quick. If it's as
>> customizable as claimed here, I might give it another shot.
>>
>
> Why did you pass on it?
> --8323328-1325646568-1720951175=:17764--

It felt kinda confusing to use, and I think the auto-startup script I
had broke on it.
--
user <candycane> is generated from /dev/urandom

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: John McCue
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 14:51 UTC
References: 1
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: jmccue@hairball.jmcunx.com (John McCue)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 14:51:58 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> wrote:
> From the ?hey, default? department:
> Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11?s default window manager
> Author: Thom Holwerda
> Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
> Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>
> Graham's TWM page[1] has been around for like two decades
> or so and still isn't

Wow, that long, does not seem like it.

> even remotely as old as TWM itself, and in 2021 they published an updated
> version with even more information, tips, and tricks for TWM[2]. The Tab Window
> Manager finds its origins in the lat 1980s, and has been the default window
> manager for the X Windowing System for a long time, now, too. Yet, few people
> know it exists ? how many people even know X has a default window manager? ?
> and even fewer people know you can actually style it, too.

With vdesk(1) you can even have pusedo separate desktops.

http://offog.org/code/vdesk.html

--
csh(1) - "An elegant shell, for a more... civilized age."
- Paraphrasing Star Wars

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Aharon Robbins
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: The Friends of Rational Range Interpretation
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 16:39 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4
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Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
References: <6691a1ad$2$1439839$882e4bbb@reader.netnews.com> <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere> <6693420a$0$711$14726298@news.sunsite.dk> <878qy4ttv2.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>
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From: arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins)
Originator: arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins)
Date: 14 Jul 2024 16:39:20 GMT
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In article <878qy4ttv2.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>
>arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:
>
>> In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
>> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>>
>>> BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>>> location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
>>> I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
>>> if I ever had it.
>>
>> I have put xearth 1.1 up on my site: https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz.
>>
>> Get it while it's hot, I may not leave it there forever.
>
>Excellent! Splendid! Compiles and behaves as exected with my
>existing markerfile and usual command line. And I'll have it if/when
>the dreaded departure from the trailing edge of technology to 64 bits
>occurs.
>
>And new features to play with as well!
>
>I usually have a north polar display (-pos "fixed 90 -63.8") with
>only Nova Scotia, Ulan Bator and the pole marked.
>
>TYVM!

You're welcome. I have some older versions as well, it seems.
Pleas email me privately if you are interested.

Arnold

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 21:21 UTC
References: 1 2 3
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 21:21:54 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 14 Jul 2024 03:12:10 GMT, Aharon Robbins wrote:

> I have put xearth 1.1 up on my site:
> https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz.

Is that different from this <https://xearth.org/>?

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Mike Spencer
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 21:22 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 14 Jul 2024 18:22:17 -0300
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arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:

> In article <878qy4ttv2.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>
>> arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:
>>
>>> In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
>>> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>>>
>>>> BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>>>> location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
>>>> I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
>>>> if I ever had it.
>>>
>>> I've put xearth 1.1 up on my site: https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz
>>
>> Excellent! Splendid! Compiles and behaves as expected with my
>> existing markerfile and usual command line. And I'll have it if/when
>> the dreaded departure from the trailing edge of technology to 64 bits
>> occurs.
>> [snip]
>>TYVM!
>
> You're welcome.

Oy! A quick look at your home page reveals an attributed quote from
Yours Truly! Fame (or is that notoriety?) comes in very tiny snippets.

A similar snippet unrelated to computers may be found on page 2 of

https://www.rockyforge.org/newsletters/rfn_v6i12.pdf

Good yarns related to otherwise inexplicable objects found in the lab
(basement, server room, wiring cabinet etc.) are less traditional than
those from the blacksmith shop but not entirely unknown (magic switch?).

> I have some older versions as well, it seems.
> Please email me privately if you are interested.

Noted, tnx.

--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Johanne Fairchild
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 00:00 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6
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From: jfairchild@tudado.org (Johanne Fairchild)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 21:00:52 -0300
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Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> writes:

> arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:
>
>> In article <878qy4ttv2.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
>> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>>
>>> arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) writes:
>>>
>>>> In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
>>>> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>>>>> location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when
>>>>> I'm eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source
>>>>> if I ever had it.
>>>>
>>>> I've put xearth 1.1 up on my site: https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz

[...]

> Oy! A quick look at your home page reveals an attributed quote from
> Yours Truly! Fame (or is that notoriety?) comes in very tiny snippets.

It's indeed nice one.

--8<-------------------------------------------------------->8---
A nice quote, by Mike Spencer: The command line is like language. The
GUI is like shopping.

Source: https://www.skeeve.com/
--8<-------------------------------------------------------->8---

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Scott Alfter
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: USS Voyager NCC-74656, Delta Quadrant
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:52 UTC
References: 1
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Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
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In article <6691a1ad$2$1439839$882e4bbb@reader.netnews.com>,
Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> wrote:
>From the "hey, default" department:
>Title: Getting the most out of TWM, X11's default window manager
>Author: Thom Holwerda
>Date: Mon, 08 Jul 2024 12:17:49 +0000
>Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/140172/getting-the-most-out-of-twm-x11s-default-window-manager/
>
>do we have any TWM users in the audience?

Bringing up a minimal Arch Linux setup the other day, I was tweaking .Xinit
(or its system-level equivalent). The stock file calls on twm, xterm, and
(IIRC) xeyes. Of the three, at least xterm needs to be installed because
the last line is "exec xterm" etc. (My plan was to run Chromium in kiosk
mode under Ratpoison.)

That said, back when I was in college in the early '90s, we had a lab full
of SPARCstation 1s (complete with those weird optical mice that needed
special pads to work) that defaulted to twm. A reasonably useful default
configuration was provided to open new xterm windows, run a few other apps,
etc.

Slightly more recently, I used twm at home closer to the mid-'90s on a
homebuilt beige-box 386SX running an early (most likely pre-1.0) version of
Linux. I had a monochrome fixed-frequency VGA monitor that was intended to
only do 640x480 at 60 Hz. I cobbled together a modeline that produced
800x600 at 50 Hz (taking a cue from the differences between NTSC and PAL)
and tweaked the vertical-hold knob until the image stopped rolling. I'd set
up twm on it similarly to how it was running on the aforementioned
SPARCstations. For 4 MB of RAM and 120 MB of disk, it wasn't bad at all. :)

--
_/_
/ v \ Scott Alfter (remove the obvious to send mail)
(IIGS( https://alfter.us/ Top-posting!
\_^_/ >What's the most annoying thing on Usenet?

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 21:57 UTC
References: 1 2
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 21:57:37 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:52:13 GMT, Scott Alfter wrote:

> Of the three, at least xterm needs to be
> installed because the last line is "exec xterm" etc.

Does that mean that last xterm process ends up being the parent of all
the other processes?

I ask because I keep trying to make sense of this little gem from the
“Unix-Haters Handbook”:

Unix teaches us about the transitory nature of all things, thus
ridding us of samsaric attachments and hastening enlightenment.

For instance, while trying to make sense of an X initialization
script someone had given me, I came across a line that looked like
an ordinary Unix shell command with the term “exec” prefaced to
it. Curious as to what exec might do, I typed “exec ls” to a shell
window. It listed a directory, then proceeded to kill the shell
and every other window I had, leaving the screen almost totally
black with a tiny white inactive cursor hanging at the bottom to
remind me that nothing is absolute and all things partake of their
opposite.

In the past I might have gotten upset or angry at such an
occurrence. That was before I found enlightenment through Unix.
Now, I no longer have attachments to my processes. Both processes
and the disapperance of processes are illusory. The world is Unix,
Unix is the world, laboring ceaslessly for the salvation of all
sentient beings.

I kept wondering how a process that ran under the GUI could be the
parent of everything else that ran under that GUI, including obviously
the window manager.

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Dan Espen
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 00:34 UTC
References: 1 2 3
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: dan1espen@gmail.com (Dan Espen)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:34:25 -0400
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:

> On Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:52:13 GMT, Scott Alfter wrote:
>
>> Of the three, at least xterm needs to be
>> installed because the last line is "exec xterm" etc.
>
> Does that mean that last xterm process ends up being the parent of all
> the other processes?
>
> I ask because I keep trying to make sense of this little gem from the
> “Unix-Haters Handbook”:
>
> Unix teaches us about the transitory nature of all things, thus
> ridding us of samsaric attachments and hastening enlightenment.
>
> For instance, while trying to make sense of an X initialization
> script someone had given me, I came across a line that looked like
> an ordinary Unix shell command with the term “exec” prefaced to
> it. Curious as to what exec might do, I typed “exec ls” to a shell
> window. It listed a directory, then proceeded to kill the shell
> and every other window I had, leaving the screen almost totally
> black with a tiny white inactive cursor hanging at the bottom to
> remind me that nothing is absolute and all things partake of their
> opposite.
>
> In the past I might have gotten upset or angry at such an
> occurrence. That was before I found enlightenment through Unix.
> Now, I no longer have attachments to my processes. Both processes
> and the disapperance of processes are illusory. The world is Unix,
> Unix is the world, laboring ceaslessly for the salvation of all
> sentient beings.
>
> I kept wondering how a process that ran under the GUI could be the
> parent of everything else that ran under that GUI, including obviously
> the window manager.

It's not the parent, it "holds" the X session. In the case of "exec
xterm", when xterm exits, the x session ends.

Something in your .xinitrc has to keep running or X will come up and
then stop running. I've seen mostly, users using the window manager
to hold the x session.

Personally, I use xlogout. My .xinitrc ends like this:

exec xlogout -iconic

I start the window manager in a looping shell so that I can kill the
window manager without X ending and have xprompt ask me what I want to do next.

--
Dan Espen

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 01:16 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2024 01:16:45 -0000 (UTC)
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On Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:34:25 -0400, Dan Espen wrote:

> Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
>
>> I kept wondering how a process that ran under the GUI could be the
>> parent of everything else that ran under that GUI, including obviously
>> the window manager.
>
> It's not the parent, it "holds" the X session. In the case of "exec
> xterm", when xterm exits, the x session ends.

Except it didn’t. In that example, the X server kept running, but there
was no window manager or any other X clients to actually let you do
anything with it.

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Mike Spencer
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 07:14 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 17 Jul 2024 04:14:10 -0300
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Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:

> On Mon, 15 Jul 2024 20:34:25 -0400, Dan Espen wrote:
>
>> Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
>>
>>> I kept wondering how a process that ran under the GUI could be the
>>> parent of everything else that ran under that GUI, including obviously
>>> the window manager.
>>
>> It's not the parent, it "holds" the X session. In the case of "exec
>> xterm", when xterm exits, the x session ends.
>
> Except it didn't. In that example, the X server kept running, but there
> was no window manager or any other X clients to actually let you do
> anything with it.

I've only excountered something similar to what you describe twice,
both apparently (but not certainly) caused by Netscape Navigator 4.76
(which I was using long ago but more recently than any normal person
:-).

The screen blanked and there was no response to *any* mouse or keyboard
events. Fixed by telnet over LAN from another computer in the same
room which revealed X still running. Killing X from the telnet login
returned the affected machine to the original login console.

That was with a system configured to use startx from the command line,
not a GUI X login at boot. That may make a difference -- I've never
done it that way except on Unix machines which someone else maintained.

Except for those two occasions, terminating the xterm started on the
last line of ~/.xinitrc by:

exec xterm -geometry 80x30+1+1 "#+1+40" -iconic -name 'X-login'

has always killed X cleanly and returned to the console.

It's my usual practice to launch anything not launched by .xinitrc
from that xterm.

--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Scott Dorsey
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Former users of Netcom shell (1989-2000)
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 14:50 UTC
References: 1
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From: kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 17 Jul 2024 14:50:40 -0000
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I ran systems at a facility that had a number of Vaxstations using VMS
with the VWS windowing system as well as a few Sun machines running SunView.
These were both windowing systems without access to remote windows on
other systems, and without X behind them. Instead they used proprietary
ystems calls for window displays, and people liked the UIs.

We got X11r3 on some of the Sun systems, and I don't remember where we got
the kit from but it wasn't sunfreeware.com and it did some as a binary kit
that sat in /usr/local/X11. I started up the X server and got a nice grey
screen and couldn't do a damn thing with it. So I figured out that I needed
a script that started up a window manager and what came with it was twm.
But when I did this, I hardly got any more.

After looking into the man pages for a while, I figured out how to configure
a .twmrc file, and I did it with SunView in mind and set the thing up to
look as much like SunView as possible with a similar background, similar
menus and submenus, and similar mouse button operations. It was pretty good,
and people who were used to SunView liked it.

I thought of X11 at the time not as a windowing environment but as a kit
that you could use to build a winding environment. That's not how I had
started out thinking about it, but it's how I ended up.

I think it's still reasonable to think of twm this way. You can make it
however you want it, but it doesn't come with much. Man, it is so much
faster than struggling with gnome, though.
--scott

--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 22:12 UTC
References: 1 2
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 22:12:56 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
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On 17 Jul 2024 14:50:40 -0000, Scott Dorsey wrote:

> I ran systems at a facility that had a number of Vaxstations using VMS
> with the VWS windowing system as well as a few Sun machines running
> SunView. These were both windowing systems without access to remote
> windows on other systems, and without X behind them. Instead they used
> proprietary ystems calls for window displays, and people liked the UIs.

DEC were one of the prime sponsors of the initial development of X11. Not
too surprising they were so quick to abandon their own proprietary product
in favour of an X Windows-based one (which they did call “DEC Windows”).

Talking of Sun, did you ever have anybody use NeWS?

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: The Real Bev
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: None, as usual
Date: Sun, 21 Jul 2024 22:11 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: bashley101@gmail.com (The Real Bev)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 21 Jul 2024 15:11:10 -0700
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On 7/17/24 12:14 AM, Mike Spencer wrote:

> That was with a system configured to use startx from the command line,
> not a GUI X login at boot. That may make a difference -- I've never
> done it that way except on Unix machines which someone else maintained.

I've done it that way since 1995. My experience with Windows indicated
that you should ALWAYS have a command line so you can fix whatever shit
the GUI is spewing.

--
Cheers, Bev
Buckle Up. It makes it harder for the aliens
to suck you out of your car.

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Sun, 21 Jul 2024 23:50 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Sun, 21 Jul 2024 23:50:54 -0000 (UTC)
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On Sun, 21 Jul 2024 15:11:10 -0700, The Real Bev wrote:

> My experience with Windows indicated
> that you should ALWAYS have a command line so you can fix whatever shit
> the GUI is spewing.

Unfortunately, the Windows command line often requires the use of Registry
edits, with those cryptic UUID keys, instead of simple, straightforward
*nix-style text config files. This makes things way too fiddly and error-
prone, even for Windows experts.

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Mike Spencer
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: Bridgewater Institute for Advanced Study - Blacksmith Shop
Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2024 21:13 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere (Mike Spencer)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: 22 Jul 2024 18:13:34 -0300
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The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com> writes:

> On 7/17/24 12:14 AM, Mike Spencer wrote:
>
>> That was with a system configured to use startx from the command line,
>> not a GUI X login at boot. That may make a difference -- I've never
>> done it that way except on Unix machines which someone else maintained.
>
> I've done it that way since 1995. My experience with Windows indicated
> that you should ALWAYS have a command line so you can fix whatever shit
> the GUI is spewing.

Yeah, agree fully.

Just to be clear on "that way", it's the full-X, X-only logins I've
never done at home. As a guest on the Athena system many years ago,
fixing a system problem was far out of my league and mentioning such a
problem could result in a hacker demigod or two lurking over my carrel,
asking to see it repeated.

> Buckle Up. It makes it harder for the aliens
> to suck you out of your car.

Nice one.

https://www.newyorker.com/cartoons/daily-cartoon/wednesday-may-10th-roswell-trump

--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: The Real Bev
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: None, as usual
Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2024 03:52 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: bashley101@gmail.com (The Real Bev)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2024 20:52:55 -0700
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On 7/21/24 4:50 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Jul 2024 15:11:10 -0700, The Real Bev wrote:
>
>> My experience with Windows indicated
>> that you should ALWAYS have a command line so you can fix whatever shit
>> the GUI is spewing.
>
> Unfortunately, the Windows command line often requires the use of Registry
> edits, with those cryptic UUID keys, instead of simple, straightforward
> *nix-style text config files. This makes things way too fiddly and error-
> prone, even for Windows experts.

I miss the days when each program had its own .ini file which could be
fixed if you did something stupid.

--
Cheers, Bev
"...so she told me it was either her or the ham radio, over."

Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
From: Lawrence D'Oliv
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2024 04:34 UTC
References: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Path: eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence D'Oliveiro)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: Re: getting the most out of TWM
Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2024 04:34:32 -0000 (UTC)
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On Mon, 22 Jul 2024 20:52:55 -0700, The Real Bev wrote:

> On 7/21/24 4:50 PM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
>
>> Unfortunately, the Windows command line often requires the use of
>> Registry edits, with those cryptic UUID keys, instead of simple,
>> straightforward *nix-style text config files. This makes things way too
>> fiddly and error- prone, even for Windows experts.
>
> I miss the days when each program had its own .ini file which could be
> fixed if you did something stupid.

Text-based config files are clearly the way to go, which is why *nix
systems have stuck with them to this day.

Trouble is, Windows had no standard place to put them. So developers
scattered them all over the place. The Registry was Microsoft’s attempt to
get the mess under control. So now you have a mess of keys scattered all
over the Registry instead.

Subject: xearth on xfce (was: Re: getting the most out of TWM)
From: vallor
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2024 06:44 UTC
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From: vallor@cultnix.org (vallor)
Newsgroups: comp.misc
Subject: xearth on xfce (was: Re: getting the most out of TWM)
Date: 24 Jul 2024 06:44:35 GMT
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On 14 Jul 2024 03:12:10 GMT, arnold@freefriends.org (Aharon Robbins) wrote
in <6693420a$0$711$14726298@news.sunsite.dk>:

> In article <87ttgtf1ck.fsf@enoch.nodomain.nowhere>,
> Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
>>BTW, I run XEarth for my root window. Does anybody have/know the
>>location of the source code for XEarth? I'd hate to give it up when I'm
>>eventually forced into 64 bits and I seem to have lost the source if I
>>ever had it.
>
> I have put xearth 1.1 up on my site:
> https://www.skeeve.com/xearth-1.1.tar.gz.
>
> Get it while it's hot, I may not leave it there forever.
>
> Enjoy,
>
> Arnold

I'd love to run this on my root X window, but xfce seems
to want to cover it up with its own desktop. Even
tried a transparent image as a background, but it still
covered the root window with a solid color.

Does anyone know how to get xfce to get out of the way,
and let me see the root X window in all its glory?

Also: did a diff -r with the code from xearth.org, and
it's all the same code. (That's a good thing. :)

Thanks,

--
-v System76 Thelio Mega v1.1 x86_64 NVIDIA RTX 3090 Ti
OS: Linux 6.9.10 Release: Mint 21.3 Mem: 258G
"Figures won't lie, but liars will figure."

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