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./wip/sawfish, Extensible window manager that is fully configurable in Lisp

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Branch: CURRENT, Version: 1.11, Package name: sawfish-1.11, Maintainer: pkgsrc-users

Sawfish is an extensible window manager using an Emacs Lisp-like
scripting language--all window decorations are configurable, the basic
idea is to have as much user-interface policy as possible controlled
through the Lisp language. This is no layer on top of twm, but a wholly
new architecture.

Despite this extensibility its policy is currently very minimal
compared to most window managers. Its aim is simply to manage windows
in the most flexible and attractive manner possible. As such it does
not implement desktop backgrounds, applications docks, or other things
that may be achieved through separate applications.

All high-level wm functions are implemented in Lisp for future
extensibility or redefinition. Currently this includes menus (using
GTK2+), interactive window moving and resizing, virtual workspaces,
iconification, focus/transient window policies, frame theme definitions
and much more.


Required to run:
[sysutils/desktop-file-utils] [graphics/hicolor-icon-theme] [archivers/gtar-base] [lang/librep] [devel/pango] [x11/gtk2] [x11/libXtst] [x11/rep-gtk2] [graphics/gdk-pixbuf2-xlib] [devel/pangox-compat]

Required to build:
[pkgtools/x11-links] [x11/xcb-proto] [x11/fixesproto4] [pkgtools/cwrappers] [x11/xorgproto]

Master sites:

SHA1: a2a0190ed11c5e3e8d0ca30a6a3d533efaa1b470
RMD160: 185a54b8a683d7c608519eeb468bad9ac3074b4b
Filesize: 2687.406 KB

Version history: (Expand)


CVS history: (Expand)


   2015-01-16 02:59:44 by Makoto Fujiwara | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Adding commit log candidate.

   2015-01-16 02:57:37 by Makoto Fujiwara | Files touched by this commit (8)
Log message:
(Candidate for updating wm/sawfish from 1.10 to 1.11)
Import sawfish-1.11 as wip/sawfish.

Sawfish is an extensible window manager using an Emacs Lisp-like
scripting language--all window decorations are configurable, the basic
idea is to have as much user-interface policy as possible controlled
through the Lisp language. This is no layer on top of twm, but a wholly
new architecture.

Despite this extensibility its policy is currently very minimal
compared to most window managers. Its aim is simply to manage windows
in the most flexible and attractive manner possible. As such it does
not implement desktop backgrounds, applications docks, or other things
that may be achieved through separate applications.

All high-level wm functions are implemented in Lisp for future
extensibility or redefinition. Currently this includes menus (using
GTK2+), interactive window moving and resizing, virtual workspaces,
iconification, focus/transient window policies, frame theme definitions
and much more.