Re: standardising X

1998-11-09 Thread AJT60
On Mon, 9 Nov 1998, Jiri Baum wrote: > Hello, > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (richard): > > This is purely an asthetic question, so all coments are welcome. I'd > > like to standardise > > my X Windows, so that they all look and operate the same. > > In X, any window can look any way it likes. That

Re: standardising X

1998-11-09 Thread Jiri Baum
Hello, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (richard): > This is purely an asthetic question, so all coments are welcome. I'd > like to standardise > my X Windows, so that they all look and operate the same. In X, any window can look any way it likes. That said, though, most X apps are written using one of

Re: standardising X

1998-11-09 Thread Leandro GFC Dutra
Frank Barknecht wrote: > > You can move xman's scrollbar with the middle mouse button if you have one. You can always emulate the middle button clicking the right and left ones together... -- Leandro Guimaraens Faria Corcete Dutra Amdocs Brasil Ltda

Re: standardising X

1998-11-09 Thread Frank Barknecht
richard hat gesagt: // richard wrote: > xman however has the scroll bar at the left hand side and buttons > that are defined by dots. The scroll-bar can only be moved by repeated > left and right mouse button clicking. which is pretty poor really. Though it won't help you dealing with the differe

RE: standardising X

1998-11-09 Thread Shaleh
The joy (and some people's grief) of X is that it allows for anything to look how it likes. The only real way to make it look standardized is to use apps that all use the same toolkit. Like pure GTk/GNOME -- which was the point of GNOME in the first place. The other thing you can do is read the