\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename ratpoison.info @settitle ratpoison manual @setchapternewpage odd @c %**end of header @dircategory X11 @direntry * ratpoison: (ratpoison). Say good-bye to the rodent @end direntry @ifinfo This is the ratpoison user manual. Copyright @copyright{} 2000, 2001 Shawn Betts Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. @ignore Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the results, provided the printed document carries a copying permission notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual). @end ignore Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the sections entitled ``Copying'' and ``GNU General Public License'' are included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. @end ifinfo @titlepage @sp 10 @titlefont{ratpoison} @author Shawn Betts @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll Copyright @copyright{} 2000, 2001 Shawn Betts Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the sections entitled ``Copying'' and ``GNU General Public License'' are included exactly as in the original, and provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions, except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved by the Free Software Foundation. @end titlepage @node Top, About, (dir), (dir) @ifinfo This document explains how to use ratpoison. @end ifinfo @menu * 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 @chapter About ratpoison is a simple Window Manager with no fat library dependencies, no fancy graphics, no window decorations, and no flashy wank. It is largely modeled after GNU Screen which has done wonders in the virtual terminal market. All interaction with the window manager is done through keystrokes. ratpoison has a prefix map to minimize the key clobbering that cripples EMACS and other quality pieces of software. ratpoison was written by Shawn Betts (@email{sabetts@@users.sourceforge.net}). @node Contacting, General Use, About, Top @chapter Contacting ratpoison is hosted on @url{sourceforge.net}. To see the latest developments in ratpoison go to @url{http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/ratpoison} or visit the ratpoison webpage at @url{http://ratpoison.sourceforge.net}. There is also a ratpoison mailing list: @email{ratpoison-devel@@lists.sourceforge.net}. For details on subscribing 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, Splitting The Screen, Contacting, Top @chapter General Use When ratpoison starts you should see an empty X server. To open an x terminal hit @kbd{C-t c}. You can now run shell commands as you would on any terminal. Notice the terminal maximized full screen. @kbd{C-t !} will run a single shell command and saves you the effort of opening a terminal. Once you have a couple X programs running, you'll want to navigate 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 '}. ratpoison allows you to cycle through the windows with @kbd{C-t n} and @kbd{C-t p}. And That concludes a brief introduction on how to use ratpoison. Notice 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 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 has no border decorations. The default keystrokes are listed in this chapter. Not all commands are accessible by default by keys. A full list of ratpoison commands is in the next section. @table @kbd @item C-t C-t Switch to the last window. @item C-t t Sometimes you need to send a C-t to the current window. This keystroke does just that. @item C-t 0-9 Switch to the numbered window. @item C-t - Select no window, essentially hiding all windows in the current frame. @item C-t A @item C-t C-A Rename the current window. The window's new name will prevail for the rest of its lifetime. @item C-t K @item C-t C-K Send a DestroyClient event to the current window. This will terminate the application without question. @item C-t n @item C-t C-n @item C-t Return @item C-t C-Return @item C-t Space @item C-t C-Space Go to next window. @item C-t p @item C-t C-p Go to previous window. @item C-t ' @item C-t C-' Go to a window by name. You will usually only need to type the first few characters of the window name. @item C-t a @item C-t C-a Display the current time of day. @item C-t c @item C-t C-c Open a new X terminal. @item C-t : @item C-t C-: This allows you to execute a single ratpoison command. @item C-t ! Run a shell command. @item C-t C-! Run a shell command through an X terminal. @item C-t k @item C-t C-k Close the current window. @item C-t m @item C-t C-m Maximize the current window. Sometimes windows don't respond correctly to the initial maximize event and need some coaxing. This is a fancy way of saying there are still bugs in ratpoison. @kbd{C-t m} will force the current window to maximize. @item C-t v @item C-t C-v Display the version of ratpoison. @item C-t w @item C-t C-w Display the list of managed windows. The current window is highlighted. @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 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, Command Line Arguments, Keystrokes, Top @chapter ratpoison commands ratpoison can be controlled with commands (so called colon-commands). The summary of available commands is listed below: @table @command @item abort 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: @example : bind R exec ratpoison --restart @end example @item clock Show current time. Disappears after 5 seconds, like all other info bars. 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 defbarloc @var{n} Set the message bar location. @var{n} is a value between 0 and 3. 0 is the top left and the values move clockwise around the screen to the bottom left which is 3. @item defbartimeout @var{n} Set the bar's timeout in seconds. @item defborder @var{n} Set the border width for all windows. @item deffont @var{font} Set the font. @var{font} is a font string like @samp{9x15bold}. @item definputwidth @var{n} Set the width of the input window. @item defmaxsizepos @var{x} @var{y} Set the default alignment for windows with maxsize hints. See the @command{pos} command. @item defpadding @var{left} @var{top} @var{right} @var{bottom} Set the padding around the edge of the screen. @item deftranspos @var{x} @var{y} Set the default alignment for transient windows. See the @command{pos} command. @item defwaitcursor @var{n} Set whether the rat cursor should change into a square when waiting for a key. A non-zero number means change the cursor. Zero means don't change the cursor. @item defwinfmt @var{fmt} Set the default window format for the @command{windows} command. By default it is @samp{N-W}. The following is a list of valid format characters: @table @samp @item N The window number @item - Window status (current window, last window, etc) @item W Window Name @item w Window res name @item c Window res class @item n X11 Window ID @end table @item defwinname @var{name} There are three resources ratpoison can get a window's name from: the WMNAME hint, the res_name from the WMCLASS hint, or the res_class from the WMCLASS hint. @var{name} can be @samp{title} which is what most window managers put in the title bar, @samp{name} which is the res_name, or @samp{class} which is the res_class. @item defwinpos @var{x} @var{y} Set the default alignment for normal windows. See the @command{pos} command. @item deffgcolor @var{color} Set the foreground color for all text ratpoison displays. @var{color} is any valid X11 color. @item defbgcolor @var{color} Set the background color for all text ratpoison displays. @var{color} is any valid X11 color. @item delete This deletes the current window. You can access it with the @kbd{C-t k} keystroke. @item escape @var{key} Set the prefix to to @var{key}. For example @samp{escape C-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. @item kill This destroys the current window. Normally you should only need to use @command{delete}, but just in case you need to rip the heart out of a misbehaving window this command should do the trick. Also available as @kbd{C-t K}. @item maximize Maximize the current window, just like @kbd{C-t m} would do. @item next This jumps you to the next window in the window list. This one is bound to three keystrokes, namely @kbd{C-t n}, @kbd{C-t space}, and @kbd{C-t enter}. @item newwm @var{window-manager} 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 only Kill all frames but the current one. @item other This toggles between the current window and the last window. By default, this is bound to @kbd{C-t C-t}. @item pos @var{x} @var{y} Change the alignment of the current window. A normal window will default to aligning itself to the top-left corner of the screen, but it can also be aligned to, say, the bottom-right. Valid values for @var{x} are @samp{left}, @samp{center}, and @samp{right}. Valid values for @var{y} are @samp{top}, @samp{center}, @samp{bottom}. @var{x} and @var{y} can be abbreviated to the first letter. @item prev 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 remove Kill the current frame. This is a no-op if there is only one frame. @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 @command{C-@var{n}} too. To select no window, blanking the current frame, type @samp{select -}. @item select @var{window-name} Go to a window by name. A shortcut is @kbd{C-t '}. @item source @var{file} Read a text file containing ratpoison commands. @item split @item hsplit Split the current window horizontally in two. The last accessed window not occupying a frame will be the second window. @item title @var{title} 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}. @item vsplit Split the current window vertically in two. The last accessed window not occupying a frame will be the second window. @item windows @var{fmt} This displays the Program Bar which displays the windows you currently have running. The number before each window name is used to jump to that window. You can do this by typing @kbd{C-t @var{n}} where @var{n} is the number of the window. Note that only windows with numbers from 0 to 9 can be referenced using this keystroke. To reach windows with numbers greater than 9, use @kbd{C-t '} and type the number at the prompt. After 5 seconds the Program Bar disappears. This command is bound to @kbd{C-t w} by default. When invoked from the command-line like this, @example $ ratpoison -c windows @end example Instead of a message bar, you will get a list of the windows printed to stdout. This allows you to write more advanced scripts than simple keyboard macros. This is where @var{fmt} comes into play. If @command{windows} is given an arg it treats it as the format string as described in @command{defwinfmt}. @end table @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 old file I forgot about. You're probably wondering, ``say, didn't he say there was no configuration file to customize?''. Okay, ya got me. But lets be honest here: ratpoison is so pure and fast-acting, customization is barely worth the extra effort. In the off chance that you need to make ratpoison your own, we now support it. On startup ratpoison looks for @file{~/.ratpoisonrc} and runs it through the command parser. If @file{~/.ratpoisonrc} does not exist, ratpoison tries @file{/etc/ratpoisonrc}. This means any command you can bind a key to or run at the command prompt (@kbd{C-t :}) you can execute in this rc file. @bye