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.TH RATPOISON 1 "17 February, 2001" "ratpoison 0.0.6" RATPOISON
.SH NAME
ratpoison \- fatless X window manager
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B ratpoison
.SH DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the
.B ratpoison
window manager.
This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution
because the original program does not have a manual page.
Instead, it has documentation in the GNU Info format; see below.
.PP
\fBratpoison\fP is a simple Window Manager with no fat library
dependencies, no fancy graphics, no window decorations, and no
flashy wank. It is largely modelled after \fIGNU Screen\fP which
has done wonders in 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.
.SH KEYSTROKES
The default keystrokes are listed in the next section. However, there
are some which are bound to complex commands, and those are listed
here.
.TP
.B C\-t c
This opens a new XTerm.
.TP
.B C\-t e
This opens a new EMACS session. You will probably only need to do this
once.
.TP
.B C\-t t
Sometimes you need to send a C\-t to the current window. This command
does just that.
.TP
.B C\-t :
Enter a command line.
.SH COMMANDS
Ratpoison can be controlled with commands (so called colon-commands).
The summary of available commands is listed below:
.\" FIXME: Complete this!
.TP
.B abort
This is a pretty useless command. By default, it is bound to
\fIC\-t g\fP, and its purpose is to abort other commands.
.TP
.B clock
Show current time. Disappears after 5 seconds, like all other info bars.
In the default setup, the \fIC\-t a\fP keystroke is bound to this command.
.TP
.B delete
This deletes the current window. You can access it with the \fIC\-t k\fP
keystroke.
.TP
.B exec \fIcommand\fP
Execute a shell command. By default, \fIC\-t !\fP does this.
.TP
.B kill
This destroys the current window. Normally you should only need to
use \fBdelete\fP, but just incase you need to rip the heart out of a
misbehaving window this command should do the trick. Also available as
\fIC\-t K\fP.
.TP
.B maximize
Maximize the current window, just like \fIC\-t m\fP would do.
.TP
.B next
This jumps you to the next window in the window list. This one is
bound to three keystrokes, namely \fIC\-t n\fP, \fIC\-t space\fP,
and \fIC\-t enter\fP.
.TP
.B newwm \fIwindow\-manager\fP
This is a bad-bad command. It kills ratpoison and revives that
ugly rotten! Yuck! Avoid!
.TP
.B number \fIn\fP
This jumps you to window \fIn\fP where \fIn\fP is the window number as
shown in the Program Bar. You can do the same trick with
\fIC\-<n>\fP too.
.TP
.B other
This toggles between the current window and the last window. By
default, this is bound to \fIC\-t C\-t\fP.
.TP
.B prev
This jumps you to the previous window in the window list. By default,
this is bound to \fIC\-t p\fP.
.TP
.B select \fIwindow\-name\fP
Go to a window by name. A shourcut is \fIC\-t '\fP.
.TP
.B title \fItitle\fP
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 \fIC\-t A\fP keystroke is bound to this command.
.TP
.B version
Print ratpoison version. \fIC\-t v\fP! \fIC\-t v\fP!
.TP
.B windows
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 \fBC\-t C\-<n>\fP where \fI<n>\fP is the
number of the window. Note that only windows with numbers from 0 to 9
can be referenced.
After 5 seconds the Program Bar disappears.
This command is bound to \fIC\-t w\fP.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
The full documentation for
.B ratpoison
is maintained as a Texinfo manual. If the
.B info
and
.B ratpoison
programs are properly installed at your site, the command
.IP
.B info ratpoison
.PP
should give you access to the complete manual.
.SH AUTHOR
Ratpoison was written by Shawn Betts <sabetts@users.sourceforge.net>.
This manual page was written by Gergely Nagy <8@free.bsd.hu>.
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