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author | sabetts <sabetts> | 2001-09-04 07:12:18 +0000 |
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committer | sabetts <sabetts> | 2001-09-04 07:12:18 +0000 |
commit | 0e7d9b826cde5600447cddf2c7ca6d5cbf795ac4 (patch) | |
tree | c6d8c82cd3b50d821930b5bbc5f3016aa238280f /doc | |
parent | 5ba92aaaafc8a545f1faa5563c23abfbb9e8fa03 (diff) | |
download | ratpoison-0e7d9b826cde5600447cddf2c7ca6d5cbf795ac4.zip |
new commands. split screen section. command line section.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ratpoison.texi | 154 |
1 files changed, 146 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ratpoison.texi b/doc/ratpoison.texi index e81897e..75e7ee8 100644 --- a/doc/ratpoison.texi +++ b/doc/ratpoison.texi @@ -82,9 +82,14 @@ This document explains how to use ratpoison. * About:: What is ratpoison? * Contacting:: How do I contact the ratpoison developers? * General Use:: How does this thing work?? +* Splitting The Screen:: When you want to see more than one window * Keystrokes:: Key commands and functionality * Commands:: ratpoison commands +* Command Line Arguments:: ratpoison command-line actions * Startup file:: They threatened me...with violence! + + + @end menu @node About, Contacting, Top, Top @@ -114,7 +119,7 @@ and for the list archives go to the ratpoison sourceforge.net project. There is a #ratpoison irc channel on irc.openprojects.net. -@node General Use, Keystrokes, Contacting, Top +@node General Use, Splitting The Screen, Contacting, Top @chapter General Use When ratpoison starts you should see an empty X server. To open an x @@ -128,7 +133,7 @@ between windows. To see what windows are being managed hit @kbd{C-t w}. Each window has a number. You can jump to a window by hitting @kbd{C-t} followed by the window's number. This assumes the the window's number is one digit. You can also switch to a window by typing in part -of its name. To do this hit @kbd{C-t A}. +of its name. To do this hit @kbd{C-t '}. ratpoison allows you to cycle through the windows with @kbd{C-t n} and @kbd{C-t p}. @@ -138,8 +143,29 @@ how we didn't have to drag a single window, or click a single maximize button? Beautiful wasn't it? Felt fast? Cool? Its modern computing at its best boys and girls. - -@node Keystrokes, Commands, General Use, Top +@node Splitting The Screen, Keystrokes, General Use, Top +@chapter Splitting The Screen +Sometimes you may want to see two or more windows at the same +time. ratpoison allows you to split the screen into frames. Each frame +can then contain 1 window. To split the current frame horizontally use +@kbd{C-t s}. To split the current frame vertically use @kbd{C-t S}. If +you have enough windows, you'll notice that the new frame will find a +window for itself. You can now use the normal navigation commands to +switch windows in the frame. Note, however, that if you switch by name +or number to a window that is already in another frame, you'll switch +to that frame. + +Before too long, you'll probably want to switch to another frame. Use +@kbd{C-t tab} to cycle through the frames. If you want to remove a +frame use @kbd{C-t R}. ratpoison automatically adjusts the size of the +other frames to take up the free space. Unfortunately ratpoison may +not always fill it in the way you might like it to. + +Finally, when you've had enough of the splitting and you just want +good ol' full screen ratpoison press @kbd{C-t Q} to remove all splits +and leave you with the current window full screen. + +@node Keystrokes, Commands, Splitting The Screen, Top @chapter Keystrokes ratpoison is a very simple window manager. Each window is maximized and @@ -223,23 +249,37 @@ Display the version of ratpoison. @item C-t C-w Display the list of managed windows. The current window is highlighted. -@item C-t S +@item C-t s Split the current window horizontally in two. The last accessed window not occupying a frame will be the second window. -@item C-t C-S +@item C-t S Split the current window vertically in two. The last accessed window not occupying a frame will be the second window. +@item C-t tab +Cycle through ratpoison's frames. + @item C-t Q Kill all frames but the current one. @item C-t R Kill the current frame. This is a no-op if there is only one frame. +@item C-t b +@item C-t C-b +Banish the mouse to the lower right corner of the screen. + +@item C-t ? +Display a help screen + +@item C-t f +@item C-t C-f +Indicate which frame is the current frame. + @end table -@node Commands, Startup file, Keystrokes, Top +@node Commands, Command Line Arguments, Keystrokes, Top @chapter ratpoison commands ratpoison can be controlled with commands (so called colon-commands). @@ -251,11 +291,18 @@ The summary of available commands is listed below: This is a pretty useless command. By default, it is bound to @kbd{C-t g}, and its purpose is to abort other commands. +@item banish +Banish the mouse to the lower right corner of the screen. + @item bind @var{Key} @var{command} Bind a key to a ratpoison command. This command takes two arguments: the key to bind and the command to run. For example, to bind @kbd{C-t R} to restart ratpoison: +@item blank +Blank the current frame. All windows in the current frame will be +hidden. + @example : bind R exec ratpoison --restart @end example @@ -267,6 +314,9 @@ In the default setup, the @kbd{C-t a} keystroke is bound to this command. @item colon @var{command} Run a ratpoison command. +@item curframe +Indicate which frame is the current frame. + @item delete This deletes the current window. You can access it with the @kbd{C-t k} keystroke. @@ -275,9 +325,18 @@ keystroke. Set the prefix to to @var{key}. For example @samp{escape ^b} sets the prefix key to @key{C-b}. +@item focus +cycle through ratpoison's frames. + @item generate Send a @kbd{C-t} to the current window. +@item help +Display a help screen that lists all bound keystrokes. + +@item echo @var{text} +Display @var{text} as a message. + @item exec @var{command} Execute a shell command. By default, @kbd{C-t !} does this. @@ -299,6 +358,10 @@ and @kbd{C-t enter}. This is a bad-bad command. It kills ratpoison and revives that ugly rodent! Yuck! Avoid! +@item number @var{n} +Set the current window's number to @var{n}. If another window occupies +the requested number already, then the windows' numbers are swapped. + @item other This toggles between the current window and the last window. By default, this is bound to @kbd{C-t C-t}. @@ -307,6 +370,45 @@ default, this is bound to @kbd{C-t C-t}. This jumps you to the previous window in the window list. By default, this is bound to @kbd{C-t p}. +@item quit +Quit ratpoison. + +@item rudeness @var{n} +The rudeness command lets you decide what windows pop-up automatically +and when. This is often useful for those deep hack sessions when you +absolutely can't be disturbed. + +There are two kinds of windows: normal windows (like an xterm) and +transient windows (generally pop-up dialog boxes). When a client +program wants to display a new window it makes a requests to +ratpoison. ratpoison then decides whether to grant the request and +display the window or ignore it. A client program can also request +that one of its windows be raised. You can customize ratpoison to +either honour these requests (the default operation) or ignore them. + +@var{n} is a number from 0 to 15. Each of the four bits determine +which requests ratpoison grants. + +@table @asis +@item Bit 0 +Tells ratpoison to grant raise requests on transient windows + +@item Bit 1 +Tells ratpoison to grant raise requests on normal windows + +@item Bit 2 +Tells ratpoison to grant display requests on new transient windows + +@item Bit 3 +Tells ratpoison to grant display requests on new normal windows +@end table + +For example, if you wanted only wanted to grant transient windows +raise requests and display requests you would type @samp{rudeness +5}. If a request is not granted ratpoison will tell you about the +request with a message like @samp{Raise request from window 1 +(emacs)}. + @item select @var{n} This jumps you to window @var{n} where @var{n} is the window number as shown in the Program Bar. You can do the same trick with @@ -323,6 +425,9 @@ Rename the currently active window. This name will remain for the duration of the window's life, unless you change it again. By default, the @kbd{C-t A} keystroke is bound to this command. +@item unbind @var{key} +Unbind a keystroke. + @item version Print ratpoison version. By default, this is bound to @kbd{C-t v}. @@ -356,7 +461,40 @@ Kill the current frame. This is a no-op if there is only one frame. @end table -@node Startup file, , Commands, Top +@node Command Line Arguments, Startup file, Commands, Top +@chapter Command Line Arguments +ratpoison supports command line arguments to request various actions +when invoking ratpoison. + +@table @code +@item -h, --help +Display this help screen + +@item -v, --version +Display the version + +@item -r, --restart +Restart ratpoison + +@item -k, --kill +Kill ratpoison + +@item -c, --command +Send ratpoison a colon-command. This allows you to control ratpoison +from the command-line. with the @option{-c} option you can script +ratpoison using any programming language that can spawn a +process. Some commands behave differently when invoked this +way. Currently the only command that behaves differently is the +@code{windows} command. Instead of displaying the window list in a +message window, it is printed to stdout. The output can then be +captured and used in the ratpoison script. For instance, this could be +used to check whether a program is running and if it is switch to its +window otherwise launch it. + +@end table + + +@node Startup file, , Command Line Arguments, Top @chapter Startup file Now you've probably read the web page, and you've no doubt dug up some |