Details which are missing: A command to hide/show all floating clients,
moving/resizing clients with your mouse holding Mod1 (click anywhere
in the client, not just on its borders), resize/move by keyboard, select
next/previous client by keyboard
We abuse (1 << 8) as mode_switch bit, which is in the range of the
filtered state bits (see previous commit). Therefore, we need to
filter first and then check for mode_switch.
Furthermore, we used 0x2 before, which was just wrong. So, use our
bitmask, not the normal one (0x2).
We abuse (1 << 8) as mode_switch bit, which is in the range of the
filtered state bits (see previous commit). Therefore, we need to
filter first and then check for mode_switch.
Furthermore, we used 0x2 before, which was just wrong. So, use our
bitmask, not the normal one (0x2).
Sometimes, when the mouse button gets stuck, state contains the bit for
BUTTON_MASK_1 (or other buttons). We filter them out to continue processing
keys correctly.
Sometimes, when the mouse button gets stuck, state contains the bit for
BUTTON_MASK_1 (or other buttons). We filter them out to continue processing
keys correctly.
Killing a dock client and having destroyed workspace 1 before (or the workspace
on which the dock client was started when it was not auto-started) crashed i3 before
this bugfix.
This is a relatively big change, however all cases should be handled by
now.
Because the function to do graphical resizing got rather large, I’ve created
a new file src/resize.c for it.
This fixes ticket #35.
This is a relatively big change, however all cases should be handled by
now.
Because the function to do graphical resizing got rather large, I’ve created
a new file src/resize.c for it.
This fixes ticket #35.
When you disable a Xinerama screen (think of removing a video projector),
the workspaces of that screen need to be re-assigned to another screen.
Previously, the clients affected by this re-assignment did not get re-
configured, which made them appear on the next screen which got configured
at the position of the old one again if you did not switch to the reassigned
workspace before.
So, to reproduce it:
xrandr --output VGA --mode 1280x1024 --right-of LVDS
move windows to the new workspace
xrandr --output VGA --off
xrandr --output VGA --mode 1280x1024 --right-of LVDS
This fixes ticket #36