On 18/08/2008, Jamie Zawinski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > There used to be at least xlock > > > > xlock was not a screen saver. You had to turn it on and off manually. > Until the late 1990s, when "xlockmore" was released, xlock was not a screen > saver by any definition. > > > > the fact that xscreensaver is the most widely used screensaver software > does not make system("xscreensaver -deactivate &") the standard solution for > disabling screensaver. > > > > It does mean exactly that, actually. Unless you have some weird and > non-useful, non-helpful definition of "standard".
So how does this solution help you when running xlockmore or not running anything at all? There are two kinds of standards: 1) de-facto standards supported by all (most) product in the industry 2) standards included in the specification of the system part/protocol in question system("xscreensaver -deactivate &") does not fall into either category for X11 screensavers. > > > > They copied that bogus faq entry into their docs as well for people > > running xscreensaver. Running "xscreensaver -deactivate" stops the > > player for tens of seconds because of bug in xscreensaver. > > > > What "bug in xscreensaver" is this? I have never heard of such a thing. #486603 > > > > The command has to be written with & so that it is executed in the > background. > > > > Ok. That's why that's what it says in my faq. What's your point? > No, it is not. It says: heartbeat-cmd="xscreensaver-command -deactivate" Thanks Michal -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]