
Come join us in #xmonad on Freenode. We will make fun of you for a few
minutes for using such an ancient xmonad, then do our best to help you
out.
As for 400MB of Haskell dependencies, I'm rather surprised that you're
able to customize 0.7 without having those same dependencies. If
you've got GHC installed, you might want to consider grabbing X11,
xmonad, and xmonad-contrib from the darcs repositories (even the
bleeding edge is quite stable -- I've never had it crash) and trying
to build those.
Good luck!
~d
Quoting Chris Jones
I have been trying to customize a couple of things in xmonad 0.7 following the online tutorials to the letter and after a week of frustration, I'm beginning to think that these tutorials only cover the current release, which would explain why whatever I tried always seemed to result in bizarre undocumented errors.
The product works fine out of the box as long as you just use the defaults, but there are just a couple of things I need to change, such as some of the key bindings (which happen to clash with bindings I have defined in applications I run frequently), as well as the default terminal and the corresponding $TERM environment variable, for instance.
Besides, I would like to set up a system status bar at the bottom of the screen, and apparently this is not available by default.
This is a debian stable aka "lenny" system, and the version of xmonad is as expected pretty ancient.
I wouldn't mind installing the current stable version of xmonad, but since the version from the debian stable repository pulled something like 400 Meg of Haskell dependencies, I have a feeling this is probably not going to be straightforward.
Or should I wait till the current debian testing, aka squeeze becomes stable, and hopefully things will work as advertised?
Please advise.
CJ _______________________________________________ xmonad mailing list xmonad@haskell.org http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/xmonad