Christopher Barry wrote: > When I was using Windows 95 I downloaded the "power toy" quickres and I > was able to switch between multiple color depths and resolutions on the > fly and all the windows would properly resize themselves. If I was using > 1600x1200 and with Netscape maximised on screen and came to a web page > with a lot of fine print, I could just quickres to 1280x1024 and > Netscape would automatically be maximised on screen. You don't need to > cram 1024 points into 640, you just need the mode switching in X up to > Windows 95 standards for God's sake so that it is intelligent enough to > resize windows for you.
This is what we lose by separating X into components like X servers and window managers. The components arn't too closely tied together and cannot communicate in some ways - for example a window manager doesn't get notified when you change resolutions in X [1]. We gain a hell of a lot though. Choices of different window managers. Even the ability to run the X server on one computer and the window manager on another. I think it's worth it. -- see shy jo [1] I assume - I don't know X internals. As you may tell by my probable misuse of the term "X server" ;-) -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null