Windows staying put on their workspace

Hi gang, I was wondering if it's possible to do the following things: 1) I'm finding that windows are popping up on my current workspace when they were generated by a window in a different workspace. These are very distracting. I'd like them to stay over there. 2) Right now, if I launch a big application (say, amarok or openoffice) on a workspace and change workspaces the window will pop up on the second workspace I am at now. Instead, I'd like to launch the application on it's own workspace, then go to a different workspace to do some work then come back after it's launched. Cheers! Jevin

Hi Jvin,
1) I'm finding that windows are popping up on my current workspace when they were generated by a window in a different workspace. These are very distracting. I'd like them to stay over there.
Well, I think so far the only answer to your first request is contained in the answer to your second request. Read on
2) Right now, if I launch a big application (say, amarok or openoffice) on a workspace and change workspaces the window will pop up on the second workspace I am at now. Instead, I'd like to launch the application on it's own workspace, then go to a different workspace to do some work then come back after it's launched.
You can use the ManageHook to achieve this. You can define your own ManageHook like this: myManageHook = composeAll [ className =? "MPlayer" --> doFloat , className =? "Firefox" --> doF (W.shift wsWeb) , className =? "Eclipse" --> doF (W.shift wsCode') , className =? "Opera" »··· --> doF (W.shift wsDoc) , className =? "Gimp" --> doFloat , className =? "Gimp" --> doF (W.shift "7") , resource =? "desktop_window" --> doIgnore , resource =? "kdesktop" --> doIgnore ] <+> manageDocks By just adding another className =? "Something" --> doF(W.shift aWorkSpace) where aWorkSpace is one of your work spaces (like 1 2 3 4 ...) you can force all windows with a particular window class name to pop up on that work space. This (typically) includes message dialogs, or new windows (can work for gaim^Wpidgin, too). You can find out the class name of a window like this: xprop | grep WM_CLASS and then click on the window. This is documented in the standard xmonad.hs file. Aleks
participants (2)
-
Jevin Maltais
-
Александър Л. Димитров